Page 288 - The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous
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                                                THE KEYS OF THE KINGDOM             273
                                 me more. I stayed up all night reading that book.
                                 For me it was a wonderful experience. It explained so
                                 much I had not understood about myself, and, best of
                                 all, it promised recovery if I would do a few simple
                                 things and be willing to have the desire to drink re­
                                 moved. Here was hope. Maybe I could find my way
                                 out of this agonizing existence. Perhaps I could find
                                 freedom and peace, and be able once again to call my
                                 soul my own.
                                    The next day I received a visit from Mr. T., a re­
                                 covered alcoholic. I don’t know what sort of person
                                 I was expecting, but I was very agreeably surprised to
                                 find Mr. T. a poised, intelligent, well-groomed, and
                                 mannered gentleman. I was immediately impressed
                                 with his graciousness and charm. He put me at ease
                                 with his first few words. Looking at him, I found it
                                 hard to believe he had ever been as I was then.
                                    However, as he unfolded his story for me, I could
                                 not help but believe him. In describing his suffering,
                                 his fears, his many years of groping for some answer
                                 to that which always seemed to remain unanswerable,
                                 he could have been describing me, and nothing short
                                 of experience and knowledge could have afforded him
                                                                                1
                                 that much insight! He had been dry for  2 ⁄ years2
                                 and had been maintaining his contact with a group of
                                 recovered alcoholics in Akron. Contact with this group
                                 was extremely important to him. He told me that
                                 eventually he hoped such a group would develop in
                                 the Chicago area but that so far this had not been
                                 started. He thought it would be helpful for me to visit
                                 the Akron group and meet many like himself.
                                    By this time, with the doctor’s explanation, the rev­
                                 elations contained in the book, and the hope-inspiring
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