I'm not a huge fan of popular things. I confess to a tendency to not like stuff that other people like. I confess to a tendency to swim upstream, against the crowd. If you tell me to do it then I can almost guarantee I'll do something else, usually the exact opposite.
Which brings me to Dr. Paul's story in the Big Book; originally it was called Doctor, Addict, Alcoholic but has been since changed to Acceptance Is The Answer. It is very, very popular and oft quoted in meetings. As I've been reading back through the story section of the Big Book I finally got to this story and I steeled myself against it. I was prepared to dislike it.
First of all, the dude is really funny. Here are some quips that made me laugh out loud.
"I had sent Max (his wife) to four consecutive psychiatrists and not one of them had gotten me sober."
A reminder that it's always me. It's never them. No matter how much I want it to be them it's always me.
As his estimation of her mental health got worse and worse he eventually contacted a psychiatric hospital: "So, when it ended up in a psycho ward, I wasn't that surprised. But then when that steel door slammed shut, and she was the one that went home, I was amazed."
Part of his treatment plan included group activities: "They wanted me to make leather belts, of all things! Had I gone to school all those years just to sit and make leather belts? Besides, I couldn't understand the instructions. The girl had explained them to me four times, and I was too embarrassed to ask her again."
So if anyone ever makes a comment about drugs not being an appropriate topic in Alcoholics Anonymous let's at least remember that one of our most beloved stories had "Addict" in the title and there are a ton of highly descriptive passages about his drug use and they are uniformly hilarious. Here's a sampling:
"The pep pills affected my hearing. I couldn't listen fast enough to hear what I was saying. I'd think, 'I wonder why I'm saying that again - I've already said it three times.' Still, I couldn't turn my mouth off."
"The pep pills affected my hearing. I couldn't listen fast enough to hear what I was saying. I'd think, 'I wonder why I'm saying that again - I've already said it three times.' Still, I couldn't turn my mouth off."
"I found it hard to practice good medicine while shooting morphine. At night I would put the needle in my vein and then try to figure out exactly how much medication to inject to overcome the pep pills while adding to the sleeping pills while ignoring the tranquilizers, in order to get just enough to be able to pull out the needle, jerk the tourniquet, throw it in the car, slam the car door shut, runs down the hall, and fall in bed before I fell asleep."
Dr. Paul, of course, began to see the light and to be truthful with himself. For most of us, being honest with ourselves is one of the highest hurdles to overcome. "I never in my life took a tranquilizer, sedative, or pep pill because I was a pill head. I always took it because I had the symptom that only that pill would relieve. For me, pills don't produce the desire to swallow a pill; they produce the symptoms that require that the pill be taken for relief. I had a pill for every ill, and I was sick a lot."
His epiphany about his drug use led him to this conclusion: "Today, I feel I have used up my right to chemical peace of mind."