Page 250 - The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous
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Alco_1893007162_6p_01_r5.qxd 4/4/03 11:17 AM Page 235
JIM’S STORY 235
He could do nothing about it. On the other hand, I
got quite a different picture farther south. Economic
conditions had a great deal to do with it, because I’ve
often heard my father say that his mother would take
one of the old-time flour sacks and cut a hole through
the bottom and two corners of it and there you’d have
a gown. Of course, when Father finally came to Vir
ginia to work his way through school, he resented the
southern “cracker,” as he often called them, so much
that he didn’t even go back to his mother’s funeral. He
said he never wanted to set foot in the Deep South
again, and he didn’t.
I went to elementary and high school in Washing
ton, D.C., and then to Howard University. My intern
ship was in Washington. I never had too much trouble
in school. I was able to get my work out. All my trou
bles arose when I was thrown socially among groups
of people. As far as school was concerned, I made fair
grades throughout.
This was around 1935, and it was about this time
that I actually started drinking. During the years
1930 to 1935, due to the Depression and its aftermath,
business went from bad to worse. I then had my own
medical practice in Washington, but the practice
slackened and the mail-order business started to
fall off. Dad, due to having spent most of his time in
a small Virginia town, didn’t have any too much
money, and the money he had saved and the property
he had acquired were in Washington. He was in his
late fifties, and all that he had undertaken fell upon
my shoulders at his death in 1928. For the first couple
of years it wasn’t too bad because the momentum
kept things going. But when things became crucial,