Good Housekeeping January 1960
"When the ones they love are Alcoholics" |
|
Most people know about the work
done by AA (Alcoholics Anonymous), an organization in which alcoholics help
one another overcome their drinking problems. Fewer realize there is a
somewhat similar group devoted to helping the families of alcoholics.
Al-Anon Family Groups have no
official connection with AA, though the two organizations work closely
together. Like AA, Al-Anon is a nonprofit, voluntary association. The family
groups sprang up informally when wives and husbands of AA members met to
discuss mutual problems. In 1951, Al-Anon Family Groups headquarters were
set up to serve as a clearinghouse for the exchange of ideas and
information. The member groups, however, remain autonomous and decide their
own rules and procedures. At present there are some 1,300 groups-about 1,000
in the U.S. and Canada, with the remainder scattered throughout 20 foreign
countries. The average group has an active membership of about 25.
Membership is open to anyone
with an alcoholic relative or friend; even teen-agers are welcomed. (In some
communities, teen-age children of alcoholics have set up their own groups,
called Alateens.) Most members are women, largely because there are many
more men alcoholics than women. There are no bylaws or dues; members make
small, voluntary contributions to cover the rental of a meeting place and
the cost of refreshments. In addition, each member is encouraged to
contribute a dollar twice a year for the support of the national
headquarters.
Most groups meet once a week
or twice a month. A typical meeting might open with a nondenominational
prayer for serenity, followed by the introduction of new members. Next might
come a group discussion, an address by an outside speaker (a doctor,
psychiatrist, or clergyman), or a reading of inspirational literature.
Typical problems discussed might be: how to protect the children from the
impact of alcoholism; whether the wife (if the husband is the alcoholic)
should go to work to ease the financial situation; or what the basic cause
of excessive drinking is.
The heart of most Al-Anon
meetings, however, is the "personal story" period, in which two or three
members recount their own experiences in living with an alcoholic and either
ask the group’s help in easing some of the problems or recount the methods
they themselves have found successful. Members are encouraged to be frank
but urged to withhold particularly intimate or emotional problems for
private discussion with individual members.
Basic to Al-Anon’s philosophy
is the idea that the family of an alcoholic is powerless to control his
drinking. But a nonalcoholic can control himself, and the Al-Anon
program tries to help its members by urging them to live one day at a time;
to accept the idea that alcoholism is a disease; to examine their own
consciences and try to remove from their conduct toward the alcoholic any
trace of self-righteousness, resentment, or irritation; and to live full
lives themselves, even if that means developing interests and activities the
alcoholic cannot share. In carrying out this program, Al-Anon, like AA,
stresses the need for reliance on spiritual help.
Al-Anon promises no miracles.
About ten percent of its new members usually drop out after two or three
meetings, when they discover the organization does not attempt to solve the
basic problem of alcoholism itself. In other cases, the alcoholic relative
bitterly resents having his problems discussed with strangers. Often the
Al-Anon program just does not take. But even more often, Al-Anon says, its
members are greatly helped by simply being able to talk over their problems
with others in the same situation. As they struggle to overcome their own
resentment, fear, or despair, they make at least their own lives more
bearable. And in some instances, the resulting improvement in home life
encourages the alcoholic relative to seek help himself from doctors,
psychiatrists, clergymen, or AA.
For further information, write
to Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc., Post Office Box 182, Madison
Square Station, New York 10, New York.
Return to AA
Periodicals
Submit an article you have
to A.A. Periodicals or
report typos, mistakes or anything that is not correct to,
aalinkspage@columbus.rr.com
[Home
Page] [AA
Meetings by State] [International
AA Meetings] [AA
Central Offices, Official, Intergroups, & Area Sites Sites] [Personal
& Misc. Pages] [AA
Conference & Conventions] [Big
Book Online & Downloads] [Recovery]
[News Groups]
[AA Items for Sale]
[Online AA
Meetings & Chat] [Workshops]
[History & Research]
[Clubs]
[Submit Your Site]
[Articles in
Periodicals] [Online
Support] [AA
Vacations]