Page 296 - The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous
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                                                    THE MISSING LINK                285
                                 years, it wasn’t working. But I decided to tell him how
                                 I had been searching through my life for that missing
                                 link and had come up with only one thing I had never
                                 told him: that I drank. He began asking me ques-
                                 tions—he asked about quantities, frequency, what I
                                 drank. Before he was even halfway through, I broke
                                 down and began sobbing. I cried, “Do you think I
                                 have a problem with drinking?” He replied, “I think
                                 that is quite obvious.” I then asked, “Do you think I’m
                                 an alcoholic?” And he answered, “You are going to
                                 have to find out for yourself.” He pulled a list of
                                 Alcoholics Anonymous meetings out of his desk
                                 drawer; he had already highlighted the young people’s
                                 meetings.
                                    He told me to go home and not drink at all for the
                                 rest of the day. He would call me at nine p.m. and
                                 wanted to hear that I hadn’t taken a drink. It was
                                 rough, but I went home and locked myself in my
                                 room, sweating it out until he called. He asked if I had
                                 had a drink. I told him I had not and asked what I
                                 should do next. He told me to do the same thing to-
                                 morrow, except tomorrow I should also go to the first
                                 meeting on the list he had highlighted. The next day I
                                 went to my first meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous. I
                                 was eighteen years old.
                                    In the parking lot, I sat in my car for about fifteen
                                 minutes before the meeting started, trying to work up
                                 the courage to go in and face myself. I remember fi-
                                 nally working up the nerve to open the door and get
                                 out, only to close the door, dismissing the notion of
                                 going into the meeting as ridiculous. This dance of in-
                                 decisiveness went on about fifty times before I went
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