Page 285 - The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous
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                                     270            ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
                                     compulsion to drink that was completely beyond my
                                     control. I couldn’t stop drinking. I would hang on to
                                     sobriety for short intervals, but always there would
                                     come the tide of an overpowering necessity to drink,
                                     and, as I was engulfed in it, I felt such a sense of panic
                                     that I really believed I would die if I didn’t get that
                                     drink inside.
                                       Needless to say, this was not pleasurable drinking. I
                                     had long since given up any pretense of the social
                                     cocktail hour. This was drinking in sheer despera­
                                     tion, alone and locked behind my own door. Alone in
                                     the relative safety of my home because I knew I dare
                                     not risk the danger of blacking out in some public
                                     place or at the wheel of a car. I could no longer gauge
                                     my capacity, and it might be the second or the tenth
                                     drink that would erase my consciousness.
                                       The next three years saw me in sanitariums, once in
                                     a ten-day coma, from which I very nearly did not re­
                                     cover, in and out of hospitals or confined at home with
                                     day and night nurses. By now I wanted to die but
                                     had lost the courage even to take my life. I was
                                     trapped, and for the life of me I did not know how or
                                     why this had happened to me. And all the while my
                                     fear fed a growing conviction that before long it would
                                     be necessary for me to be put away in some institu­
                                     tion. People didn’t behave this way outside of an asy­
                                     lum. I had heartsickness, shame, and fear bordering
                                     on panic, and no complete escape any longer except in
                                     oblivion. Certainly, now, anyone would have agreed
                                     that only a miracle could prevent my final breakdown.
                                     But how does one get a prescription for a miracle?
                                       For about one year prior to this time, there was one
                                     doctor who had continued to struggle with me. He
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