Page 287 - The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous
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                                     272            ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
                                     you are pretty well known to the medical profession.
                                     Every doctor gets his quota of alcoholic patients.
                                     Some of us struggle with these people because we
                                     know that they are really very sick, but we also know
                                     that, short of some miracle, we are not going to help
                                     them except temporarily and that they will inevitably
                                     get worse and worse until one of two things happens.
                                     Either they die of acute alcoholism or they develop
                                     wet brains and have to be put away permanently.”
                                       He further explained that alcohol was no respecter
                                     of sex or background but that most of the alcoholics
                                     he had encountered had better-than-average minds
                                     and abilities. He said the alcoholics seemed to possess
                                     a native acuteness and usually excelled in their fields,
                                     regardless of environmental or educational advantages.
                                       “We watch the alcoholic performing in a position of
                                     responsibility, and we know that because he is drinking
                                     heavily and daily, he has cut his capacities by  50
                                     percent, and still he seems able to do a satisfactory
                                     job. And we wonder how much further this man could
                                     go if his alcoholic problem could be removed and he
                                     could throw 100 percent of his abilities into action.
                                       “But, of course,” he continued, “eventually the
                                     alcoholic loses all of his capacities as his disease gets
                                     progressively worse, and this is a tragedy that is
                                     painful to watch: the disintegration of a sound mind
                                     and body.”
                                       Then he told me there was a handful of people in
                                     Akron and New York who had worked out a tech­
                                     nique for arresting their alcoholism. He asked me to
                                     read the book  Alcoholics Anonymous, and then he
                                     wanted me to talk with a man who was experiencing
                                     success with his own arrestment. This man could tell
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