The Doctor's Nightmare
I WAS BORN in a small New England village of about seven thousand
souls. The general moral standard was, as I recall it, far above the
average. No beer or liquor was sold in the neighborhood, except at the
State liquor agency where perhaps one might procure a pint if he could
convince the agent that he really needed it. Without this proof the
expectant purchaser would be forced to depart empty handed with none of
what I later came to believe was the great panacea for all human ills.
Men who had liquor shipped in from Boston or New York by express were
looked upon with great distrust and disfavor by most of the good
townspeople. The town was well supplied with churches and schools in
which I pursued my early educational activities. My father was a
professional man of recognized ability and both my father and mother
were most active in church affairs. Both father and mother were
considerably above the average in intelligence.
Unfortunately for me, I was the only child, which
perhaps engendered the selfishness which played such an important part
in bringing on my alcoholism. From childhood through high school I was
more or less forced to go to church, Sunday School and evening service,
Monday night Christian Endeavor and sometimes to Wednesday evening
prayer meeting. This had the effect of making me resolve that when I
was free from parental domination, I would never again darken the doors
of a church. This resolution I kept steadfastly for the next forty
years, except when circumstances made it seem unwise to absent myself.
After high school came four years in one of the best
colleges in the country where drinking seemed to be a major
extra-curricular activity. Almost everyone seemed to do it. I did it
more and more, and had lots of fun without much grief, either physical
or financial. I seemed to be able to snap back the next morning better
than most of my fellow drinkers, who were cursed (or perhaps blessed)
with a great deal of morning-after nausea. Never once in my life have I
had a headache, which fact leads me to believe that I was an alcoholic
almost from the start. My whole life seemed to be centered around doing
what I wanted to do, without regard for the rights, wishes, or
privileges of anyone else; a state of mind which became more and more
predominant as the years passed. I was graduated “summa cum laude” in
the eyes of the drinking fraternity, but not in the eyes of the Dean.
The next three years I spent in Boston, Chicago, and
Montreal in the employ of a large manufacturing concern, selling
railway supplies, gas engines of all sorts, and many other items of
heavy hardware. During these years, I drank as much as my purse
permitted, still without paying too great a penalty, although I was
beginning to have morning jitters at times. I lost only a half day’s
work during these three years.
My next move was to take up the study of medicine,
entering one of the largest universities in the country. There I took
up the business of drinking with much greater earnestness than I had
previously shown. On account of my enormous capacity for beer, I was
elected to membership in one of the drinking societies, and soon became
one of the leading spirits. Many mornings I have gone to classes, and
even though fully prepared, would turn and walk back to the fraternity
house because of my jitters, not daring to enter the classroom for fear
of making a scene should I be called on for recitation.
This went from bad to worse until Sophomore spring
when, after a prolonged period of drinking, I made up my mind that I
could not complete my course, so I packed my grip and went South to
spend a month on a large farm owned by a friend of mine. When I got the
fog out of my brain, I decided that quitting school was very foolish
and that I had better return and continue my work. When I reached
school, I discovered the faculty had other ideas on the subject. After
much argument they allowed me to return and take my exams, all of which
I passed creditably. But they were much disgusted and told me they
would attempt to struggle along without my presence. After many painful
discussions, they finally gave me my credits and I migrated to another
of the leading universities of the country and entered as a Junior that
fall.
There my drinking became so much worse that the boys in the
fraternity house where I lived felt forced to send for my father, who
made a long journey in the vain endeavor to get me straightened around.
This had little effect however for I kept on drinking and used a great
deal more hard liquor than in former years.
Coming up to final exams I went on a particularly strenuous spree.
When I went in to write the examinations, my hand trembled so I could
not hold a pencil. I passed in at least three absolutely blank books. I
was, of course, soon on the carpet and the upshot was that I had to go
back for two more quarters and remain absolutely dry, if I wished to
graduate. This I did, and proved myself satisfactory to the faculty,
both in deportment and scholastically.
I conducted myself so creditably that I was able to secure a much
coveted internship in a western city, where I spent two years. During
these two years I was kept so busy that I hardly left the hospital at
all. Consequently, I could not get into any trouble.
When those two years were up, I opened an office downtown. I had
some money, all the time in the world, and considerable stomach
trouble. I soon discovered that a couple of drinks would alleviate my
gastric distress, at least for a few hours at a time, so it was not at
all difficult for me to return to my former excessive indulgence.
By this time I was beginning to pay very dearly physically and, in
hope of relief, voluntarily incarcerated myself at least a dozen times
in one of the local sanitariums. I was between Scylla and Charybdis
now, because if I did not drink my stomach tortured me, and if I did,
my nerves did the same thing. After three years of this, I wound up in
the local hospital where they attempted to help me, but I would get my
friends to smuggle me a quart, or I would steal the alcohol about the
building, so that I got rapidly worse.
Finally my father had to send a doctor out from my home
town who managed to get me back there in some way, and I was in bed
about two months before I could venture out of the house. I stayed
about town a couple of months more and then returned to resume my
practice. I think I must have been thoroughly scared by what had
happened, or by the doctor, or probably both, so that I did not touch a
drink again until the country went dry.
With the passing of the Eighteenth Amendment I felt
quite safe. I knew everyone would buy a few bottles, or cases, of
liquor as their exchequers permitted, and that it would soon be gone.
Therefore it would make no great difference, even if I should do some
drinking. At that time I was not aware of the almost unlimited supply
the government made it possible for us doctors to obtain, neither had I
any knowledge of the bootlegger who soon appeared on the horizon. I
drank with moderation at first, but it took me only a relatively short
time to drift back into the old habits which had wound up so
disastrously before.
During the next few years, I developed two distinct
phobias. One was the fear of not sleeping, and the other was the fear
of running out of liquor. Not being a man of means, I knew that if I
did not stay sober enough to earn money, I would run out of liquor.
Most of the time, therefore, I did not take the morning drink which I
craved so badly, but instead would fill up on large doses of sedatives
to quiet the jitters, which distressed me terribly. Occasionally, I
would yield to the morning craving, but if I did, it would be only a
few hours before I would be quite unfit for work. This would lessen my
chances of smuggling some home that evening, which in turn would mean a
night of futile tossing around in bed followed by a morning of
unbearable jitters. During the subsequent fifteen years I had sense
enough never to go to the hospital if I had been drinking, and very
seldom did I receive patients. I would sometimes hide out in one of the
clubs of which I was a member, and had the habit at times of
registering at a hotel under a fictitious name. But my friends usually
found me and I would go home if they promised that I should not be
scolded.
If my wife was planning to go out in the afternoon, I would get a
large supply of liquor and smuggle it home and hide it in the coal bin,
the clothes chute, over door jambs, over beams in the cellar and in
cracks in the cellar tile. I also made use of old trunks and chests,
the old can container, and even the ash container. The water tank on
the toilet I never used, because that looked too easy. I found out
later that my wife inspected it frequently. I used to put eight or
twelve ounce bottles of alcohol in a fur lined glove and toss it onto
the back airing porch when winter days got dark enough. My bootlegger
had hidden alcohol at the back steps where I could get it at my
convenience. Sometimes I would bring it in my pockets, but they were
inspected, and that became too risky. I used also to put it up in four
ounce bottles and stick several in my stocking tops. This worked nicely
until my wife and I went to see Wallace Beery in “Tugboat Annie,” after
which the pant-leg and stocking racket were out!
I will not take space to relate all my hospital or sanitarium
experiences.
During all this time we became more or less ostracized by our
friends. We could not be invited out because I would surely get tight
and my wife dared not invite people in for the same reason. My phobia
for sleeplessness demanded that I get drunk every night, but in order
to get more liquor for the next night, I had to stay sober during the
day, at least up to four o’clock. This routine went on with few
interruptions for seventeen years. It was really a horrible nightmare,
this earning money, getting liquor, smuggling it home, getting drunk,
morning jitters, taking large doses of sedatives to make it possible
for me to earn more money, and so on ad nauseam. I used to promise my
wife, my friends, and my children that I would drink no more— promises
which seldom kept me sober even through the day, though I was very
sincere when I made them.
For the benefit of those experimentally inclined, I
should mention the so-called beer experiment. When beer first came
back, I thought that I was safe. I could drink all I wanted of that. It
was harmless; nobody ever got drunk on beer. So I filled the cellar
full, with the permission of my good wife. It was not long before I was
drinking at least a case and a half a day. I put on thirty pounds of
weight in about two months, looked like a pig, and was uncomfortable
from shortness of breath. It then occurred to me that after one was all
smelled up with beer nobody could tell what had been drunk, so I began
to fortify my beer with straight alcohol. Of course, the result was
very bad, and that ended the beer experiment.
About the time of the beer experiment I was thrown in with a crowd
of people who attracted me because of their seeming poise, health, and
happiness. They spoke with great freedom from embarrassment, which I
could never do, and they seemed very much at ease on all occasions and
appeared very healthy. More than these attributes, they seemed to be
happy. I was self conscious and ill at ease most of the time, my health
was at the breaking point, and I was thoroughly miserable. I sensed
they had something I did not have, from which I might readily profit. I
learned that it was something of a spiritual nature, which did not
appeal to me very much, but I thought it could do no harm. I gave the
matter much time and study for the next two and a half years, but still
got tight every night nevertheless. I read everything I could find, and
talked to everyone who I thought knew anything about it.
My wife became deeply interested and it was her interest that
sustained mine, though I at no time sensed that it might be an answer
to my liquor problem. How my wife kept her faith and courage during all
those years, I'll never know, but she did. If she had not, I know I
would have been dead a long time ago. For some reason, we alcoholics
seem to have the gift of picking out the world’s finest women. Why they
should be subjected to the tortures we inflict upon them, I cannot
explain.
About this time a lady called up my wife one Saturday afternoon,
saying she wanted me to come over that evening to meet a friend of hers
who might help me. It was the day before Mother’s Day and I had come
home plastered, carrying a big potted plant which I set down on the
table and forthwith went upstairs and passed out. The next day she
called again. Wishing to be polite, though I felt very badly, I said,
“Let’s make the call,” and extracted from my wife a promise that we
would not stay over fifteen minutes.
We entered her house at exactly five o’clock and it was eleven
fifteen when we left. I had a couple of shorter talks with this man
afterward, and stopped drinking abruptly. This dry spell lasted for
about three weeks; then I went to Atlantic City to attend several days’
meeting of a national society of which I was a member. I drank all the
scotch they had on the train and bought several quarts on my way to the
hotel. This was on Sunday. I got tight that night, stayed sober Monday
till after the dinner and then proceeded to get tight again. I drank
all I dared in the bar, and then went to my room to finish the job.
Tuesday I started in the morning, getting well organized by noon. I did
not want to disgrace myself so I then checked out. I bought some more
liquor on the way to the depot. I had to wait some time for the train.
I remember nothing from then on until I woke up at a friend’s house, in
a town near home. These good people notified my wife, who sent my newly
made friend over to get me. He came and got me home and to bed, gave me
a few drinks that night, and one bottle of beer the next morning.
That was June 10, 1935, and that was my last drink. As
I write nearly four years have passed.
The question which might naturally come into your mind
would be: “What did the man do or say that was different from what
others had done or said?” It must be remembered that I had read a great
deal and talked to everyone who knew, or thought they knew anything
about the subject of alcoholism. But this was a man who had experienced
many years of frightful drinking, who had had most all the drunkard’s
experiences known to man, but who had been cured by the very means I
had been trying to employ, that is to say the spiritual approach. He
gave me information about the subject of alcoholism which was
undoubtedly helpful. Of far more importance was the fact that he was
the first living human with whom I had ever talked, who knew what he
was talking about in regard to alcoholism from actual experience. In
other words, he talked my language. He knew all the answers, and
certainly not because he had picked them up in his reading.
It is a most wonderful blessing to be relieved of the
terrible curse with which I was afflicted. My health is good and I have
regained my self-respect and the respect of my colleagues. My home life
is ideal and my business is as good as can be expected in these
uncertain times.
I spend a great deal of time passing on what I learned
to others who want and need it badly. I do it for four reasons:
1.
Sense of duty.
2.
It is a pleasure.
3.
Because in so doing I am paying my debt to the man who took time to pass
it on to me.
4.
Because every time I do it I take out a little more insurance for myself
against a possible slip.
Unlike most of our crowd,
I did not get over my craving for liquor much during the first two and
one-half years of abstinence. It was almost always with me. But at no time
have I been anywhere near yielding. I used to get terribly upset when I
saw my friends drink and knew I could not, but I schooled myself to
believe that though I once had the same privilege, I had abused it so
frightfully that it was withdrawn. So it doesn’t behoove me to squawk
about it for, after all, nobody ever had to throw me down and pour liquor
down my throat.
If you think you are an atheist, an agnostic, a
skeptic, or have any other form of intellectual pride which keeps you from
accepting what is in this book, I feel sorry for you. If you still think
you are strong enough to beat the game alone, that is your affair. But if
you really and truly want to quit drinking liquor for good and all, and
sincerely feel that you must have some help, we know that we have an
answer for you. It never fails, if you go about it with one half the zeal
you have been in the habit of showing when you were getting another drink.
Your Heavenly Father will never let you down!
