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William White's book is a history of the alcoholism treatment and recovery
effort in the U.S., written for treatment professionals and laypersons. It
has a wonderful cover photo showing nearly a hundred gentlemen of the 19th
century posed under a sign that says "THE LAW MUST RECOGNIZE A LEADING FACT,
MEDICAL NOT PENAL TREATMENT REFORMS THE DRUNKARD." It is one of those
delightful history books that are heavy on detail and light on argument, so
that even if you don't share the author's bias you can find lots of nuggets.
It is commendable also in that the author has a broader social eye than
the average, and includes Native Americans, Blacks, women and other
historically neglected people in his chronicle from the outset. Indeed, he
is quotable; he says about the African slaves, for example, that there is
little evidence of a liquor problem among them, and "the major alcohol
problem for early African Americans was the risk they faced when Whites
drank it." And did you know that the very earliest recorded mutual
self-help societies of alcoholics
were
created by Native Americans? "Our first evidence of individuals turning
their own negative experiences with alcohol into a social movement of
mutual support occurs within Native American tribes." That was as early as
1772, and perhaps goes to explain why a successful mutual support group
today can evoke the feeling of belonging to a special kind of close-knit
tribe. [Photo left: George Copway (Kah-ge-ga-gah-bowh),
Ojibway temperance reformer, from the book.]
A good history makes us humble by showing us how little there is in our
strivings that is genuinely new. White's is a good history. The concept of
alcoholism as a disease, which some people claim is as modern as Saran
Wrap, was already articulated by Benjamin Rush, the Surgeon General of
George Washington's revolutionary armies, in a pamphlet dated 1784. Rush
was also one of the first to prescribe total abstinence from spirits as
the sole remedy: "taste not, handle not, touch not." He saw treatment of
drunkenness as a political issue: "A nation corrupted by alcohol can never
be free." He had a very modern multi-factorial view of alcoholism's causes
and he articulated a multiple-pathway model of recovery. Although some of
his measures were archaic by current standards -- massive doses of
medicine and copious bleeding -- he was a hugely insightful and modern
figure.
Older than the disease theory itself is the opposition to it. When Rush
advanced his theses, he was conscious of getting "a cold reception."
Drinking in colonial America was an everyday habit, and penurious
inebriates were flogged or jailed, never hospitalized. The consensus of
religious leaders was that moderate drinking was a gift of God, but
drunkenness was a vice and a sin. Fast forward a century. A group of 14
physicians and their supporters met in New York in November 1870 to found
the American Association for the Cure of Inebriates, and published a
manifesto whose opening sentence was "Intemperance is a disease." Vehement
debate within the ranks followed, and months later the directors of the
Franklin Reformatory Home for Inebriates in Philadelphia resigned from the
association, stating "We do not, either in our name or management,
recognize drunkenness as the effect of a diseased impulse; but regard it
as a habit, sin and crime; we do not speak of cases being cured, as in a
hospital, but 'reformed.'" [p. 26]. The wonderful cover photograph with
its slogan, so evocative of our current debate over the "War on Drugs,"
dates from the early 1890s.
Equally old is the debate between the religious and the secular paths
of recovery. The very first mutual self-help movement among European
Americans was the Washingtonians. Six artisans and workingmen started the
"Washingtonian Total Abstinence Society" in a Baltimore tavern on April 2,
1840. The movement took off like a rocket. It celebrated its first
anniversary with a parade of 5,000 people. Two years later, a public
meeting of the Society in Boston drew 12,000 people. At its peak, it
reached many hundreds of thousands, including an active women's division
("Total abstinence or no husband!" went one slogan) and a weekly
newspaper. Abraham Lincoln addressed one of its meetings. The
Washingtonians operated as "secular missionaries." They went to taverns to
recruit. They divided the cities into wards and had committees assigned to
recruit the drunks in each area to come to meetings and take the pledge.
Washingtonians, or most of them, "believed that social camaraderie was
sufficient to sustain sobriety and that a religious component would only
discourage drinkers from joining." [13]. Clergy were excluded from the
meetings, and some accused the Washingtonians of "the heresy of humanism
-- elevating their own will above God's by failing to include religion in
their meetings." This was in 1842!
[Photo below: Washingtonian Home, Chicago, 1850s; from the book.]
The Washingtonians were hugely important in shaping future self-help
movements. It was they who introduced among white men the practice at
meetings of sharing experiences, in lieu of making abstract speeches. It
was they who first held closed, alcoholics-only meetings. It was they who
first enlisted the reformed drunkard as missionary to the drinker,
pioneering the concept of service as a tool of self-recovery. They
sustained members' sobriety through regular weekly fellowship meetings,
encouraged all manner of sober recreation, involved women and other family
members in their process, and founded some of the first "homes" where
drunkards could go to dry out and live in sober communities.
The Washingtonians were also totally disorganized. They had no central
authority through which the movement's philosophy or program could be
defined and sustained against diversion. For example, two leading speakers
on the national stage who portrayed themselves as spokesmen of this vastly
popular cause held pro-religious views at variance with the consensus of
the movement's membership, and used the movement's fame to line their own
pockets with lecture fees -- and the Society had no effective means to
prevent it. Because of their "organizational ineptitude," their message
became confused; they could not articulate a sustained road forward, they
failed to raise up sustainable leadership, and their energy and numbers
dissipated almost as quickly as they had risen. But their substantive
legacy is alive today in every LifeRing Secular Recovery meeting, and in
every other alcoholics' and addicts' self-help meeting as well.
After the disintegration of the Washingtonians came the fraternal
temperance societies and reform clubs. Their day was the middle decades of
the 1800s. The fraternal societies provided the reformed drunkard with a
sober support system. They were secret. They were organized hierarchically
and they offered stability. These early sobrietists' fraternities, such as
the Sons of Temperance, the Good Templars, the Good Samaritans and others
were secular. They did not rely on religious conversion as the sole means
of personal reform, but focused more on mutual social support and
surveillance as means of achieving and maintaining sobriety. The Good
Samaritans broke new ground by admitting all races.
As the fraternal societies dwindled, the Reform Clubs rose. These were
largely businessmen's abstinence clubs -- although a few had moderation as
their goal -- and their fortunes rose and fell with their individual
leaders. Most of these were gone by the dawn of the 20th century. It seems
fair to say, in retrospect, that virtually every trend and tendency we see
in the alcohol-recovery universe around us today was already present a
century ago.
White really warms to his subject in Section II of the book, which
deals with early treatment institutions and approaches. We learn here
about the 19th century medical researchers -- it was a Swedish physician,
Magnus Huss, who first applied the term alcoholism to the syndrome -- and
about the first asylums, homes, farms, colonies and other institutions for
dipsomaniacs. The bad blood that sometimes exists today between the
addiction field and psychiatry is traced back to an early institutional
conflict. Heads of the insane asylums did not want to have inebriates
there, because it would damage the reputation of their facilities. Heads
of inebriate treatment facilities equally did not want to send inebriates
to the early insane asylums, where free and liberal use of whiskey, opium
and other drugs, both among patients and staff, were more the rule than
the exception.
There was a vast array of conflicting opinions in the addiction
treatment field, each one propounded with an air of total authority. White
deserves credit for seeing the patient's viewpoint amidst this dogmatic
cacophony. He quotes one opiate addict in the 1880s:
I have borne the most unfair comments and insinuations from people
utterly incapable of comprehending for one second the smallest part of
my suffering, or even knowing that such could exist. Yet they claim to
deliver opinions and comments as though better informed on the subject …
than anybody else in the world. I have been stung by their talk as by
hornets, and have been driven to solitude to avoid the fools.
There is a lovely chapter examining these institutions from the inside.
Many patients stayed on as paid workers there, and the debate over the
relative merits of former addicts v. non-addict professionals was already
a live one then. Among the patients at the typical center, physicians,
lawyers, engineers, druggists, journalists, artists, students, reporters,
clergymen and actors were the most frequently represented occupations, in
that order. Etiology was hotly debated. One prominent theorist defined
"drunkenness" as a moral vice of the lower classes requiring punishment,
whereas "inebriety" was a disease of the higher classes, meriting rest and
renewal. There was a full panoply of treatment methods, many of them not
very different from today's. Outcomes varied greatly and information was
sparse, with claimed but not widely credited 5-year abstinence rates of
one third to two thirds. And around this time inebriety among women first
penetrated public notice, and a halting start was made at comprehension
and treatment. The author adds four chapters that examine individual
treatment centers of this era in particular detail.
By 1925 most of these treatment centers had collapsed. They represented
the first cohesive institutional attempt to treat addiction as a medical
problem. They pioneered physiological explanations of inebriety and
physical methods of treatment. They shifted the dialogue from moral and
religious failings to medical vulnerability. Yet they failed to articulate
any cohesive and demonstrably effective treatment philosophy that could
seduce public opinion away from the conviction that the way to deal with
drunkards was to outlaw alcohol and to throw offenders in jail. The
enactment of Prohibition was the death knell of these pioneer addiction
treatment institutes.
There
is an interesting chapter on the Keeley Institutes, a hugely successful
chain of privately owned miracle cure centers purveying injections of a
secret formula allegedly based on chlorides of gold, which supposedly took
away all desire to drink or use drugs or tobacco. [Photo right: Keeley
League No. 1, Dwight, IL. 1898, book cover photo]. The formula was
later shown to be placebo. The Keeley Institutes helped many thousands of
alcoholics to achieve long-term abstinence in the 1890s and later. The
secret formula, says the author, was "a gimmick that engaged addicts'
propensity for magical thinking and helped them through the early weeks
and months of recovery." The real curative power lay in the spirit of
mutual support and self-respect engendered by the Institutes' treatment
and post-treatment protocols.
In
this era, there was also a plethora of other alleged magic cures for
inebriety, unaccompanied by the costlier treatment and support regimen
available to the more affluent. Most of the miracle potions contained, not
surprisingly, alcohol, cocaine and opiates. They were gradually driven
back by legislation. [Photo left, Advertisement for Miracle Cure,
from the book.]
Religious conversion as a treatment method earns a special chapter in
the book. Religious leaders had been preaching since time immemorial that
what the alcoholic needed was to find God, and alcoholics have been
testifying to salvation through faith as long as there have been revival
meetings. As America's urban problems worsened toward the end of the
century, a few religious converts determined to bring God to the
alcoholic. This chapter details the work of Jerry McAuley, an ex-convict
and ex-Catholic who became a born-again evangelical Protestant and
launched numerous Skid Row rescue missions. He became a beloved figure
because he reached out to the homeless and destitute alcoholics whom the
established churches considered as undeserving of God's grace. Evangelical
Protestantism also created the Salvation Army, which has worked since the
1890s to bring deliverance to the alcoholic "through submission of the
total personality to the Lordship of Jesus Christ." William James' 1902
essay, "The Varieties of Religious Experience," was an influential
philosophical statement of the religious conversion theory of alcoholism
treatment. James described in detail the accoutrements of a conversion
experience (voices, visions, lights, awareness of superior power,
raptures, etc.) and concluded, in a famous epigram, "the only cure for
dipsomania is religiomania." The chapter concludes with a too-brief review
of early criticisms of the religious conversion theory. Religious leaders
of less charismatic or evangelical leanings pointed out that conversion
experiences occur to only a small number of believers. Others worried that
religious conversion would be turned into merely a tool to achieve
sobriety, rather than an end in itself. A Connecticut state report
expressed concern that religious conversion could be more harmful than
beneficial inasmuch as it frequently had the unhealthy side effect of
promoting religious fanaticism.
Two chapters of this encyclopedic work discuss, respectively, the
physical and the psychological treatment approaches to alcoholism found in
the American arsenal prior to World War II. Here is discussion of
sterilization, various nutritional regimes, exercise, leisure, work, sun
baths, a great variety of water cures, early drug therapies (frequently
involving morphine!), electrical and chemical convulsion therapy,
lobotomy, and miscellaneous others, including infecting alcoholics with
gonorrhea because this allegedly reduced their craving to drink. The eye
then turns toward the psychological approaches. There is a remarkably
balanced discussion of psychoanalysis (judged worthless as therapy but
indirectly helpful as a philosophy because it helped to legitimize therapy
by lay persons), and the work of prominent psychologically informed
medical specialists of the 1930s. There is an extended discussion of
aversion therapy as practiced by Shadel and his followers; this had good
reported outcomes and was the most enduring behavioral technique in the
first six decades of this century. The focus then turns to other drug
addictions, chronicling the influence of Freud in legitimizing cocaine as
a "cure" for opiate addiction, and detailing the medical profession's loss
of control over these drugs as the federal government intervened to
criminalize their use.
The author then turns to Alcoholics Anonymous, whose history and impact
occupy the following four chapters. When White's historical panorama
reaches the 1930s, the period of the founding of Alcoholics Anonymous,
there is a marked softening in the focus. It is always most difficult to
write about the things one is closest to, and there is much evidence in
the book that the author is very close to AA indeed.
Nevertheless, this is not merely history as "lives of the saints."
Indeed, there is much in the work that will make the shuttered
dodecamaniac intensely uncomfortable. White cites evidence, for example,
that at the time of the famous conversion experience in which AA founder
Bill W. saw a blinding white light and felt a "hot flash," he was taking
medication containing belladonna, a drug which is psychoactive and
produces hallucinations in some patients. White chronicles in some detail
also Bill W.'s later experimentation with LSD (which was then a legal and
even respectable drug thought to have miraculous properties) in an effort
to replicate his religious conversion flash. It was also believed that use
of LSD worked to break down AA-aversion among resistant drunks. (One
patient is quoted as saying after an LSD trip, "I now find I understand
the AA program."!) And much else. But these are just small sidelights to
the main story, which proceeds in a predictable, conventional manner.
Wilson emerges here neither as devil nor saint but as a rather likeable,
self-effacing human, surely a towering figure in the cultural history of
the United States, and indirectly, as White shows later, in its politics
as well.
White touches all the bases of AA's early history in a readable and
useful if not novel way. The real reason to read White is in his extended
discussion of the historic interplay between AA and the treatment
industry. White has worked as an addiction treatment counselor or in
related capacities for the past thirty years, and lived through this
history himself. At the core of the dialectic is AA's tradition of
anonymity. As the early AA members became involved in the worthy cause of
helping to set up hospital facilities for drying out, there developed what
White calls the "Knickerbocker Paradox." This refers to a small hospital
wing of the 1940s which was set up with AA money, staffed by AA members,
whose patients came in entirely via AA referrals, and who could only leave
if checked out by AA sponsors. Yet it was forbidden to refer to
Knickerbocker as an AA institution. In the public eye, it was completely
independent and no AA connection was ever publicly admitted.
Now take this microcosm and fast forward twenty years to the election
of Lyndon Baines Johnson and the commencement of the "War on Poverty." LBJ,
since 1948 a member of the National Council on Alcoholism (another
Knickerbocker-style "independent" body), shepherded through Congress a
number of huge appropriation bills and set up a triad of major federal
agencies devoted to alcoholism and drug addiction research, policy
formulation, and treatment (NIAAA, NIMH and NIDA). With boomlike
suddenness, there emerged on the scene what even its benevolent godfather,
recovered alcoholic (and undoubtedly AA member) Sen. Harold Hughes later
referred to as "the alcoholism and drug abuse industrial complex." In the
same political climate, the insurance industry (led by James Kemper, a
recovered alcoholic and head of Kemper Insurance) gradually dropped its
systematic discrimination against alcoholics and, prodded by the AMA's
proclamation of alcoholism as a disease, began underwriting alcoholism and
addiction treatment. White quite rightly calls this the "critical center
upon which the entire modern industry of addiction treatment has turned."
This sudden opening of the public and private purses for alcoholism and
addiction treatment led to an "explosive growth" in the treatment industry
in the 1960s and 70s. This was a historic victory, as White rightly points
out, for the "invisible army" -- the legions of anonymous foot soldiers
(and, we should add, many of much higher rank) who had been trained to do
the work of AA without using the AA name. It was Knickerbocker writ huge.
Rich in significant detail, White's work affords insights into
nonprofit mega-institutes like Hazelden and Lutheran General and others,
where millions in public funds went to subsidize and disseminate a
treatment philosophy (the Minnesota Model) that has religious conversion
and referral to AA as one of its components. And his light also
illuminates the for-profit recovery industry, in which the higher
operatives pocketed and pocket millions, processing alcoholics as a crop
to be harvested for profit; and this, too, although White refrains from
saying so, is just another variant of the Knickerbocker paradigm.
But this was not the end of the dialectic of anonymity. The "Knickerbocker
Paradox" plainly required the participants to wear two hats, their "AA"
hat and their "independent" hat. To put it less charitably, it required
them to deny who and what they really were. Massive and widespread role
confusion was the result. White speaks in vivid detail of the
institutional leaders who attempted, strenuously but often in vain, to
clarify for the counseling staff what was "AA work" and what was
"counseling work," what they were supposed to give away and what they were
being paid for. Numerous and tragic have been the relapses among the army
of confused, unsupervised, overworked and underpaid 12-Step "professionals
by experience" who were inducted as the corporals and sergeants of the new
treatment juggernaut.
The inexorable demand for an institutional program that was definable
and replicable (hence insurable and bankable) meant that the 12 Steps,
initially sketched as a suggested path of personal spiritual
transformation, became transmogrified and blenderized into a compulsory
top-down treatment protocol. It was a great victory for the invisible
army, but it turned the legions of America's alcoholics and addicts, and
many who were neither but happened to be caught in a urine test, into
dispirited prisoners of war.
When Knickerbocker was just a small wing of a single hospital, it must
have seemed clever to the small guerrilla band of inspired volunteers that
all the patients were channeled straight to AA meetings on their release.
Today, when virtually every hospital, treatment center, court and prison
mandates AA referral, the result is that many AA meetings are overrun "by
a growing assortment of sullen, recalcitrant men and women mandated to
attend AA meetings by their employers, judges and probation and parole
officers," who outnumber the core members by two or three to one on a
given night (p. 278). I have heard other informal estimates that put the
number of what I am calling "POW members" of AA at more than 70 per cent
of the current AA membership. It is not uncommon to hear AA members
complain that AA has lost its soul. White cites one such effort, by the
widely respected AA historian Ernest Kurtz, to recover "the real AA."
And the story continues. For just as the burgeoning "inebriate asylums"
of the 1870s were suddenly swept away by the advent of Prohibition, the
"recovery boom" of the 60s and 70s gave way, around the middle 80s, to the
Reagan backlash. Where LBJ had publicly pronounced addiction a disease,
the Reagan rhetoric returned the pendulum toward criminalization. Fueled
by popular works that challenged the central assumptions of the recovery
boom (Fingarette, Peele), and by law-and-order rhetoric, and by the
excesses of the movement itself, the right-wing ascendancy began
tightening the public purse strings. The "managed care" movement effected
the same constriction in the private sector. After taking a cold hard look
at what was really being accomplished, insurance companies virtually
stopped paying for inpatient treatment, the most lucrative sector of the
industry. Today, the recovery boom has gone, or is going, bust. Just as
the anonymous footsoldiers of the modern Knickerbocker juggernaut were
achieving a measure of professional status and salary, many of them
received their pink slips. In 1998, the number of treatment opportunities
of any kind available to alcoholics, other than those with private means,
is much smaller than two decades ago and continues to constrict. Poorer
addicts and minorities, especially, are much more likely today than two
decades ago to be sent to jail rather than to any kind of treatment.
Highly worth reading also are White's chapters on the origins of what
is called the "modern alcoholism movement." I will just sketch this
briefly. After the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, the bloodied and beaten
"Drys" sought for a new paradigm. Out of their severe financial crisis
emerged what is called "Bowman's compromise," which dropped the
traditional barrage against "alcohol" in favor of concern with
"alcoholism." The problem was redefined; it no longer lay in the bottle
but in the man. White fearlessly cites mounting evidence that alcohol
industry money was one of the inducements and one of the rewards for this
paradigm shift. One of the most influential institutions in shaping and
disseminating what became the Minnesota Model, the summer schools of the
Yale Institute of Alcohol Studies, was funded by liquor industry money. In
White's words, "The industry saw Alcoholics Anonymous as a potential ally
because the organization focused on a small percentage of late-stage
drinkers and had little to say about the drinking habits of most
Americans. … AA located the problem of alcohol in the person, not in the
bottle." (p. 195). White notes that liquor industry representatives sat on
national and local alcoholism councils across the country -- bodies that
were typically "Knickerbocker"-style extensions of AA. A careful
historian, White notes that evidence about the extent of liquor industry
involvement in the modern alcoholism movement is still very scanty. His
discussion of the problem is nuanced, detailed, cautious, and never
degenerates into sloganeering. There is an illuminating discussion of the
ethical and credibility issues involved in liquor industry sponsorship of
alcoholism research, although more could be said.
Aficionados of the "disease theory" debate will find this work an
invaluable reference. I pointed earlier to the revolutionary doctor
Benjamin Rush's pioneering insights, and touched on the first wave of
institutional efforts to treat alcoholism as a disease, namely the
turn-of-the-century inebriate asylums and the Keeley Institutes. White's
well-documented history absolutely obliterates the fallacy that the
disease theory was invented by AA. White also quotes both William Miller
and Ernest Kurtz, surely authorities on the history of AA, as
categorically rejecting any claim that the origin of the disease concept
is to be found in AA. According to White, the original AA
conceptualization of alcoholism is "emotional and spiritual
maladjustment." When AA did use medical terminology, it was "primarily for
their metaphoric value -- more for sense-making than for science."
That having been said, however, there is no doubt that AA later became,
and is today, perhaps inextricably interwoven with the disease concept in
the public mind and perhaps in its own mind as well. The principal weaver
of these threads was the indomitable Marty Mann, the first woman to
attribute her recovery to AA. Sponsored by the Yale Institute and promoted
by AA, she tirelessly crisscrossed the country making thousands of
speeches popularizing the disease concept. She portrayed the alcoholic not
as a bad person who should be punished but as a good person who was sick
and could be helped. What White adds to this story is strong evidence that
Mann's presentation ran far ahead of anything that scientific research at
that time could support; indeed Dr. Tiebout, one of the seminal thinkers
of AA, reflected in 1955 that he trembled to think "how little we have to
back up our claims. We are all skating on pretty thin ice." There is much
other material as well on several sides of the question in White's
account; one comes to the disease debate only half-armed if one has not
read this volume.
The reader might think from the foregoing review that William White's
book is in some way an expose or indictment of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Nothing could be further from the truth. White only presents the "dots,"
the lines between them are mostly mine. Apart from some rather veiled
passages possibly revealing inner doubts, White is 100 per cent "with the
program." I would surmise that his own views on recovery are of the
amorphous but intense religious kind that is often called "spiritual" for
want of a better word. He introduces the hugely revealing "Knickerbocker
Paradox" without a hint of negativity. His chapter on the AA program is a
bland and one-dimensional recitation of the usual happyface psychological
doubletalk. There is not a hint of awareness here that the supposed
autonomy of the post-conversion personality can be as much a fiction as
was the independence of the Knickerbocker alky ward. He recites the views
of various AA critics only for the sake of historical completeness, and
without a trace of sympathy. He avoids any direct answer to the question
posed by Bill Wilson at AA's 30th anniversary: "What happened to the six
hundred thousand who approached AA and left?" He does not discuss AA's own
membership surveys of the 1980s. He does not point out that AA prohibits
scientific studies of its effectiveness in promoting recovery. He draws a
veil of silence over the rather huge question of the outcome of AA
participation, and finds surprising the recent Project Match result that
there was no substantial difference in outcomes between 12-Step
facilitation and secular treatment modalities. There is an obvious myopia
in this area, or perhaps a failure of courage. But this is a minor and not
uncommon defect in the book's character. AA, in any event, is only one
part of this encyclopedic volume. There are excellent vignettes on many
other programs and individuals in the panorama of the modern recovery
movement, including Synanon, the Nation of Islam, Glide Memorial, the
codependence
movements, Women for Sobriety, and many others. [Photo left: Jean
Kirkpatrick, founder of Women for Sobriety; from the book.]
The great strengths of this book are two. One, an obvious thirst for
and delight in the raw material of historical evidence. This is a writer
who loves historical fact and has an eye for the significant quote and
anecdote. This is a rich tapestry that rewards many return trips. And at
390 full-size pages, you get a lot for your money. There's even a section
of fine photographs in the middle (sampled here).
Two, the man is honest. There shines through his writing an emotional
directness and "there-ness" that is the mark of the very best people I
have met in addiction treatment and recovery, or anywhere. I said at the
outset that he is quotable. I should add that he can be eloquent when he
speaks about what he knows best, the life of the addiction treatment
counselor. His ending sounds like a commencement speech at a counselor
school, but a moving one. Here are some excerpts from his final words:
As a culture, we have heaped pleas, profanity, prayers,
punishment, and all manner of professional manipulations on the
alcoholic and addict, often with little result. With our two centuries
of accumulated knowledge and the best available treatments, there still
exists no cure for addiction, and only a minority of addicted clients
achieve sustained recovery following our intervention in their lives. …
Given this perspective, addiction professionals who claim universal
superiority for their treatment disqualify themselves as scientists and
healers by the very grandiosity of that claim. The meager results of our
best efforts -- along with our history of doing harm in the name of good
-- calls for us to approach each client, family and community with
respect, humility, and a devotion to the ultimate principle of ethical
practice, 'First, do no harm.'
I also liked very much this passage from his last page, where he tries
to formulate in a sentence or two the accumulated therapeutic wisdom of
the counseling profession as he understands it. It expresses beautifully
something that our LifeRing Handbook also tries to say in our own
vocabulary:
Above all, recognize that what addiction professionals have done
for more than a century and a half is to create a setting and an opening
in which the addicted can transform their identity and redefine every
relationship in their lives, including their relationship with alcohol
and other drugs. What we are professionally responsible for is creating
a milieu of opportunity, choice and hope. What happens with that
opportunity is up to the addict and his or her god. We can own neither
the addiction nor the recovery, only the clarity of the presented
choice, the best clinical technology we can muster, and our faith in the
potential for human rebirth.
That's well said. It expresses with great lucidity the same idea as Dr.
Ruth Herman's manifesto-like thesis that each person "must be the author
and arbiter of her own recovery." The job of the self-help organization is
not to try to fix the person, not to try to own the person or their
recovery, but to "create a setting and an opening in which the addicted
can transform" themselves -- ourselves.
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