More from the Plain Language Big Book . . . And I'd like to repeat myself and reaffirm that I am really enjoying this version of our literature. I do not find it alarming or heretical in any way. It has been fun imagining how a big group of alcoholics must have behaved when trying to modernize some of the 100 year old language in our literature. I bet there were some bruised feelings and offended sensibilities. I am one of those odd ducks who loves change and newness and adventure but it still drives me crazy. This quote is from the start of How It Works which many of us have heard hundreds and even thousands of times. The Steps follow this introductory section and I assure you that not one word has been changed there.
"Alcoholism is a confusing and powerful condition that is unlike anything else in the world Alcohol is extremely complicated, tricky, and difficult. Without help, beating alcoholism is too much for one person to handle."
Now compare this to the text as it was originally written: "Remember that we deal with alcohol - cunning, baffling, powerful! Without help it is too much for us."
Nothing alarming there that I can see.
Here's something for the math freaks reading . . .
A rough calculation for me is that I've attended somewhere between 7,000 and 8,000 meetings in my life. I'm a bit of a liar so let's go with 7,000 and that may even be a lie but humor me, anyway. I've listened to the opening passage of How It Works 7,000 times. I'm not saying I've paid attention to the reading of the opening passage 7,000 times but my ass has been in the seat while it has been read. Let's say it takes five minutes to read this passage plus the 12 Traditions. 7,000 X 5 = 35,000 minutes. At 60 minutes to the hour that works out to just under 600 hours. To that I must say: "Are you fucking kidding me?" If I spent a 40 hour A.A. work week just listening to How It Works being read it would take me 15 weeks of doing nothing but listening to someone reading How It Works.
That's hilarious and very weird. Four months of my life sitting and listening to this simple passage. I'm looking for a glyph of a human head exploding.
But consider the life that A.A. has given me! When I was being flushed down the Toilet of Despair at the end of my drinking I would have jumped at the chance to trade four months of my time to get the life I have today.
Someday I'll try to figure out how many weeks of my life I spent drooling on my couch, drunk and stoned, watching a TV program that I wouldn't recall the next day. THAT would put that 4 months in perspective.
Wait . . . it gets worse . . . or it gets better . . . uh . . . it . . . well, some more math!
7,000 meetings X 2 hours/meeting = 14,000 hours. 14,000/40 = 350 40 hour work weeks. 350/52 = 6.7 years.
This is probably an underestimate when you add up all the time I've spent listening to other alcoholics drone on and on about the uninteresting, mundane, trivial minutia of their unimportant lives. That has to be several weeks just there!
And how many hours other alcoholics have spent listening to me drone on and on a bout all the interesting, exceptional, uber-important minutia of my life!