Guest guest Posted October 29, 1999 Report Share Posted October 29, 1999 This is from a post that appeared on APA Div 50. I will later post my response to it on that forum, which I think you might like to consider Apple for the aadeprogramming site. Pete --- Begin Forwarded Message --- ======= Whilst the Big Book might be " psychological " (read " secular " ) it is also deeply spiritual/religious, making it truely " eclectic " . But, for agnostic or atheistic listmembers, i would guess they don't have ears to hear about the breadth of the eclecticism. As I've argued elsewhere (see excerpts below), there are two groups called Alcoholics Anonymous: group 1 is secular AA, and group 2 is spiritual/religious AA. Please accept my apologies in advance for any offense that is taken from what I've written below. My intent is to express my opinion, not to upset anyone. <snip> I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and clinicians are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or tacit beliefs that provide the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality in the human sciences known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical positivism. As a consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions about transcendent dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise red flags of suspicion and distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. So be it. I believe there are two branches of Alcoholics Anonymous: Authentic AA and Pseudo-AA. The spiritually (religiously) based 12-step program described in the Big Book (Alcoholics Anonymous, 1976) of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) describes authentic AA. As documented by AA historians Ernie Kurtz (1991, 1993), and Dick B. (1997) recovering alcoholics who met at AA meetings in the 1940s and 50s spent most of their time supporting each other in mutual attempts to understand and practise the planned program of spiritual growth and rediscovery embodied by the 12-steps. Unfortunately, 60 years later, there is often quite a large schism between what happens in the human fellowship component of AA on the one side (i.e., the meetings) and the spiritual component (ie., 12-steps) on the other side. Thus, in effect, there are currently two diverging branches of AA. I have taken the liberty of labelling the first branch " authentic AA, " which concerns itself primarily with using the planned program of recovery (the 12-steps) as a vehicle for developing a relationship with a God of ones understanding (or " Higher Power " ). In contrast, I refer to the second branch as " pseudo AA, " because it concerns itself primarily with fostering interpersonal relationships and human power. A suitable synonym for this latter branch of AA might be secular AA. Evidence there is a schism between these two branches is clearly visible to anyone who any clean and sober recovering alcoholic who has attended a reasonable number of AA meetings and who is involved in the planned program of recovery embodied in the steps. Indeed, at least in the USA, the schism has grown to such proportions thatspiritually and religiously oriented AA members are increasingly banding together to create an informal type of underground AA comprising of unofficial home-based Big Book meetings centered on spiritual themes outlined in the text Alcoholics Anonymous. Members of this secret underground have not completely defected because they will often attend official AA meetings in an effort to pass-on the core essential message of AA, which is that human power alone (ie., " social support " ) is not an effective solution. Occasionally, these renegades will also recruit people they meet at conventional AA meetings, usually AA members whom they judge as showing a strong desire to grow in Spirit. Given that their are really two AA programs, it is a misconception to think that all, or even most, recovering alcoholics who attend AA meetings sanctioned by Intergroup lists are necessarily concerned with spiritual awakening through the 12-steps. Many, perhaps even most AAs, are secular through and through. Obviously, the degree of concern with achieving spiritual awakening differs for different individuals and for groups in different geographic locations. This, however, does not negate the observation that there are many agnostics and atheists attending Intergroup sanctioned AA meetings: people whos chief goal is to stay dry - on human power alone. Abstaining from alcohol consumption is the overriding concern for this subgroup of secular AA members, and they simply want nothing to do with God, Higher Power or spiritual growth. By definition, these recovering alcoholics do not adhere to the 12-step program of spiritual growth as documented in conference approved AA literature. It is possible that this failure to differentiate between authentic-AA and pseudo-AA may have contributed to a widespread misconception among university based alcohol researchers concerning the real purpose of AA. Many scholars falsely believe that the outcome of prime significance to the 12-steps of AA is physical sobriety. It is likely that excessive concern with alcohol consumption as the primary outcome of AA derives mostly from writings of agnostically-oriented Ph.D-level researchers who naturally tend to dwell excessively upon pseudo (secular) AA. This widespread neglect for non-drinking outcomes (eg., spiritual growth) appears to mirror the metatheoretical bias of this group of investigators, a bias which favors philosophical materialism and logical positivism. While physical abstinence is important, authentic AA emphasizes the importance of achieving a deep and effective spiritual experience that will revolutionize ones whole attitude toward life, toward other people and toward Gods universe. Thus, subscribers to this list should realize that one of the major objectives for recovering alcoholics who practise the 12-steps is to achieve a measure of spiritual awakening, which, according to the Big Book, is considered the sufficient cause of both physical sobriety and emotional sobriety. As expressed in the 12th step, emotional sobriety is understood as consisting of the qualities of wisdom, joy and altruism. These traits of character stand in stark contrast to the dry drunk syndrome, in which the alcoholic is physically abstinent from alcohol, but restless, irritable and discontented due to narcissistic preoccupation with the selfish concerns. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 1999 Report Share Posted October 29, 1999 Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively priceless! This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the first time I saw " Duck Soup! " Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... -- wally PS: Are you going to give this character a name? PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing myself by trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the Vienna Circle " ... What do you think? >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and clinicians >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or tacit beliefs that provide > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality in the human sciences >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical positivism. As a >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions about transcendent >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise red flags of suspicion and >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. So be it.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 1999 Report Share Posted October 30, 1999 wally--that's a lot of pee pee! Pete-- thems a heap o'big words, could you mebbe put it in english for us'n who ain't so smart? " wally t. " wrote: original article: /group/12-step-free/?start=8934 > Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively priceless! > > This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the first > time I saw " Duck Soup! " > > Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... > > -- wally > > PS: Are you going to give this character a name? > PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing myself by > trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the Vienna > Circle " ... What do you think? > > > >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and > clinicians > >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or tacit > beliefs that provide > > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality in the > human sciences > >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical > positivism. As a > >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions about > transcendent > >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise red > flags of suspicion and > >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. So be > it.... > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 1999 Report Share Posted October 30, 1999 Hi Wally, folks I'm pretty sure you know this already, but just in case you don't, that wasn't a parody - it was written in sincerity by a member of APA Div50. Pete " wally t. " wrote: original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8934 > Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively priceless! > > This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the first > time I saw " Duck Soup! " > > Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... > > -- wally > > PS: Are you going to give this character a name? > PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing myself by > trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the Vienna > Circle " ... What do you think? > > > >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and > clinicians > >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or tacit > beliefs that provide > > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality in the > human sciences > >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical > positivism. As a > >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions about > transcendent > >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise red > flags of suspicion and > >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. So be > it.... > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 1999 Report Share Posted October 30, 1999 jackandj-@... wrote: original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8944 > wally--that's a lot of pee pee! > Pete-- thems a heap o'big words, could you mebbe put it in english for > us'n who ain't so > smart? Well as I said to Wally, I'm not the author. What the guy is saying is basically " The Philosophy of Science doesn't permit a spiritual dimension to alcohol recovery. " Pete > " wally t. " wrote: > original article: /group/12-step-free/?start=89 34 > > Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively > priceless! > > > > This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the > first > > time I saw " Duck Soup! " > > > > Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... > > > > -- wally > > > > PS: Are you going to give this character a name? > > PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing > myself by > > trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the > Vienna > > Circle " ... What do you think? > > > > > > >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and > > clinicians > > >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or > tacit > > beliefs that provide > > > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality > in the > > human sciences > > >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical > > positivism. As a > > >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions > about > > transcendent > > >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise > red > > flags of suspicion and > > >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. > So be > > it.... > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 1999 Report Share Posted October 30, 1999 jackandj-@... wrote: original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8944 > wally--that's a lot of pee pee! > Pete-- thems a heap o'big words, could you mebbe put it in english for > us'n who ain't so > smart? Well as I said to Wally, I'm not the author. What the guy is saying is basically " The Philosophy of Science doesn't permit a spiritual dimension to alcohol recovery. " Pete > " wally t. " wrote: > original article: /group/12-step-free/?start=89 34 > > Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively > priceless! > > > > This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the > first > > time I saw " Duck Soup! " > > > > Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... > > > > -- wally > > > > PS: Are you going to give this character a name? > > PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing > myself by > > trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the > Vienna > > Circle " ... What do you think? > > > > > > >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and > > clinicians > > >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or > tacit > > beliefs that provide > > > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality > in the > > human sciences > > >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical > > positivism. As a > > >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions > about > > transcendent > > >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise > red > > flags of suspicion and > > >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. > So be > > it.... > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 1999 Report Share Posted October 30, 1999 jackandj-@... wrote: original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8944 > wally--that's a lot of pee pee! > Pete-- thems a heap o'big words, could you mebbe put it in english for > us'n who ain't so > smart? Well as I said to Wally, I'm not the author. What the guy is saying is basically " The Philosophy of Science doesn't permit a spiritual dimension to alcohol recovery. " Pete > " wally t. " wrote: > original article: /group/12-step-free/?start=89 34 > > Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively > priceless! > > > > This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the > first > > time I saw " Duck Soup! " > > > > Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... > > > > -- wally > > > > PS: Are you going to give this character a name? > > PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing > myself by > > trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the > Vienna > > Circle " ... What do you think? > > > > > > >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and > > clinicians > > >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or > tacit > > beliefs that provide > > > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality > in the > > human sciences > > >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical > > positivism. As a > > >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions > about > > transcendent > > >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise > red > > flags of suspicion and > > >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. > So be > > it.... > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 More from APA Div 50. My reply follows. --- Begin Forwarded Message --- I would invite Mr. Watts to ask an alcoholic who is recovering with the help of Alcoholics Anonymous, and has been sober for five to ten years to explain to him the difference between religiosity and spirituality in the practice of the AA program. While he is at it, he might also inquire as to the paradoxical nature of the First Step: that is, when admitting one is powerless over alcohol, it makes one a stronger person and improves one's self-efficacy. Yes, the following Steps Two and Three encourage one to believe in a Higher Power and turn one's life over to him (or her, or Him or Her, or it or It : one's Higher Power really IS a personal choice). My personal vision of a Higher Power helps me to grow stronger (by staying sober and developing a healthier personality (losing those " defects of character " ). Certainly, as head of a household and substance abuse counselor for ten years I have a much greater sense of self-efficacy than I did in the mid to late 1970's as a chronic alcoholic and cocaine addict with agoraphobia who only came out of his rat-infested unheated mobile home ($75/month, a real steal) to buy or sell drugs or replenish my supplies of alcohol. As to my assertion that Alcoholics Anonymous uses RET: certainly Dr. Ellis's theories are not mentioned specifically in the AA " Big Book " - Ellis did not publish them until later. I never meant to imply that Bill and Mr. Ellis were ideological soulmates. By all accounts, Ellis was an irascible old bastard. But please Mr. Watts, take the time to explain RET to that AA member: I think you will find he understands Ellis's principles and utilizes them on a daily basis, though as he may not be as " eddicated " you and so not know who Ellis is. Certainly Bill was a very religious man but he knew all to well the dangers of religiosity. Today, AA members I know, call it changing addictions: from alcohol to religion. From what I have seen, both are about equally destructive. You write that AA functions like a Rorschach test; maybe so. You read my letter and saw a religious nut, whereas that other fellow described me as a member of the " secular AA " which he and his secret society within AA itself wish to overthrow with the power of their conection with the Godhead. Live and let live. Some are sicker than others. I really hate to tell you all this, Mr. Watts, but AA WORKS. It helps hopeless alcoholics get sober and become productive citizens at a higher success rate than anything all the APA researchers hve been able to come up with yet. While the great American father of behavioral psychology was abusing babies, screwing his research assistant, and developng the principles of the advertising business, Bill was learning how to help himself and many, many others, to arrest a terrible, fatal illness. No, I do not agree with all I hear at AA; there are still some ignorant people who tell schizophrenics they do not need their medication, just AA, but most of us know better and do a pretty good job of heading off that kind of thing. " Take what you need and leave the rest. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 More from APA Div 50. My reply follows. --- Begin Forwarded Message --- I would invite Mr. Watts to ask an alcoholic who is recovering with the help of Alcoholics Anonymous, and has been sober for five to ten years to explain to him the difference between religiosity and spirituality in the practice of the AA program. While he is at it, he might also inquire as to the paradoxical nature of the First Step: that is, when admitting one is powerless over alcohol, it makes one a stronger person and improves one's self-efficacy. Yes, the following Steps Two and Three encourage one to believe in a Higher Power and turn one's life over to him (or her, or Him or Her, or it or It : one's Higher Power really IS a personal choice). My personal vision of a Higher Power helps me to grow stronger (by staying sober and developing a healthier personality (losing those " defects of character " ). Certainly, as head of a household and substance abuse counselor for ten years I have a much greater sense of self-efficacy than I did in the mid to late 1970's as a chronic alcoholic and cocaine addict with agoraphobia who only came out of his rat-infested unheated mobile home ($75/month, a real steal) to buy or sell drugs or replenish my supplies of alcohol. As to my assertion that Alcoholics Anonymous uses RET: certainly Dr. Ellis's theories are not mentioned specifically in the AA " Big Book " - Ellis did not publish them until later. I never meant to imply that Bill and Mr. Ellis were ideological soulmates. By all accounts, Ellis was an irascible old bastard. But please Mr. Watts, take the time to explain RET to that AA member: I think you will find he understands Ellis's principles and utilizes them on a daily basis, though as he may not be as " eddicated " you and so not know who Ellis is. Certainly Bill was a very religious man but he knew all to well the dangers of religiosity. Today, AA members I know, call it changing addictions: from alcohol to religion. From what I have seen, both are about equally destructive. You write that AA functions like a Rorschach test; maybe so. You read my letter and saw a religious nut, whereas that other fellow described me as a member of the " secular AA " which he and his secret society within AA itself wish to overthrow with the power of their conection with the Godhead. Live and let live. Some are sicker than others. I really hate to tell you all this, Mr. Watts, but AA WORKS. It helps hopeless alcoholics get sober and become productive citizens at a higher success rate than anything all the APA researchers hve been able to come up with yet. While the great American father of behavioral psychology was abusing babies, screwing his research assistant, and developng the principles of the advertising business, Bill was learning how to help himself and many, many others, to arrest a terrible, fatal illness. No, I do not agree with all I hear at AA; there are still some ignorant people who tell schizophrenics they do not need their medication, just AA, but most of us know better and do a pretty good job of heading off that kind of thing. " Take what you need and leave the rest. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 My reply: --- Begin Forwarded Message --- > I would invite Mr. Watts to ask an alcoholic who is recovering with the help > of Alcoholics Anonymous, and has been sober for five to ten years to explain > to him the difference between religiosity and spirituality in the practice > of the AA program. I have heard the claimed difference explained ad nauseum, including on this very list. The fact that the claim exists however, does not mean it is legitimate. It appears to hang on a misunderstanding of what the word " religion " means - or at least what it used to mean until it became politically incorrect. If one consults an indifferent dictionary, it usually simply defines it as " Belief in God " . Reading the 12 steps of AA, then it indubitably meets this criterion. You can choose your own God " as you understand Him " but it's still a God of some kind or other. The definition is a poor one of course, as some religions either don't have a God (e.g. Buddhism) or are Pantheistic or Polytheistic and hence do not really fit this mold. So, as a Social Scientist, I will turn to that often used by Sociologists: essentially a belief in a non-material being, power, or plane of existence. Again, the AA philosophy imo clearly meets that definition. It is worth noting that in modern times many ppl routinely deny that they are religious when by all normal standards they clearly are: nowadays it seems quite common for self-proclaimed Christians to deny that they are religious. I have even seen the Bible described as a non-religious book. In a Sociology program by the UK Open University called " What is Religion " Jews, Moslems, and Hindus interviewed all denied their faith was a religion. Rather like the phenomenon that Denial appears to be a characteristic of addiction, it also appears to be a characteristic of religiosity. I once joked on a Psychology of Religion list that in the light of this the fact that Scientologists campaigned to have Scientology accepted as a religion is evidence that it is not, to the annoyance of the listowner, who was one. I mollified her with the assurance that the sociologist Wallace defined Scientology as a kind of religion called " World-Affirming Sect " - but withheld the fact these are sometimes also referred to as " cults " . I would say from Wallace's classification of new religions that AA has characteristics of both Word-Affirming and World-Accepting Sects , i.e. It is partly advocating a life-enhacing philosophy like Scientology (World Affirming), but lacks the commercial aspect typical of such groups, and was derived from a revivalist Protestant sect when it was part of the Oxford Group Movement (World Accepting). The fact that it does not fit neatly into either category completely does not detract from its status a sect, as Wallace himself wrote that such religions almost never fit exactly into one of his categories. > While he is at it, he might also inquire as to the > paradoxical nature of the First Step: that is, when admitting one is > powerless over alcohol, it makes one a stronger person and improves one's > self-efficacy. Again, I am more than familiar with the Orwellian doublethink " Powerlessness is Strength " which might have graced the exterior of the Ministry of Truth in '1984', and again, I don't buy it. It is often forgotten, not least by AA members themselves in discussions such as this one, that the powerlessness concept as described in the AA literature does not refer to merely an inability to drink moderately, but also an inability to remain ABSTINENT. This point is hammered home time and time again in the Big Book, and that " probably no human power could relieve us of our alcohol obsession " . In other words, medical assistance is futile, and also, merely belonging to a self-help group, a " secular AA " is *also* futile since this is strictly a human power as Ken Hart describes it: " but God could, and would, if God were sought. " i.e. if religious devotion is practiced. > Yes, the following Steps Two and Three encourage one to > believe in a Higher Power and turn one's life over to him (or her, or Him or > Her, or it or It : one's Higher Power really IS a personal choice). The phrase is " God was we understood Him " i.e. the very word indicates a patriarchal, monotheistic God. Of course, this is routinely softened for public consumption as " Higher Power " but the basic text remains unchanged.Perhaps a legitimate criticism of my position is that the program is not so much a religion as instructions to have a religion, including your own private one if desired. Perhaps it could be called a " meta-religion " - a religion abt religion. However, from discussion with ppl calling themselves Christians, it is clear that there is just the same variability of belief within the traditional denominations, especially Protestant. In the 80s there was a furore when the Anglican Bishop of Durham mocked the notion of a Virgin Birth and other traditional Christian miracles. > My > personal vision of a Higher Power helps me to grow stronger (by staying > sober and developing a healthier personality (losing those " defects of > character " ). Certainly, as head of a household and substance abuse > counselor for ten years I have a much greater sense of self-efficacy than I > did in the mid to late 1970's as a chronic alcoholic and cocaine addict with > agoraphobia who only came out of his rat-infested unheated mobile home > ($75/month, a real steal) to buy or sell drugs or replenish my supplies of > alcohol. I am sure you have made a great improvement in your life. However, to the extent that attribute that to a power other than yourself, I would say you *don't* have high self-efficacy in a literal sense. There is a paradox here of course, in that in all other respects other than the religious belief, you probably do. My point is that you seemed to have arrived at it by a very circuitous route. If you had used a non-religious approach to your recovery, you might have done even better perhaps. > As to my assertion that Alcoholics Anonymous uses RET: certainly > Dr. Ellis's theories are not mentioned specifically in the AA " Big Book " - > Ellis did not publish them until later. I never meant to imply that Bill > and Mr. Ellis were ideological soulmates. By all accounts, Ellis was > an irascible old bastard. ....And was a swindler and hypocritical womanizer. Both his swindling and his womanizing are fairly well accepted by AA's prior to his stopping drinking; what is not acknowledged is that they seem to have continued after he stopped. AA-commentator Chaz Bufe claims in his new book to have evidence that from the records of early AA that some of its money seems to have disappeared into 's pocket. As for his womanizing, this definitely continued; apparently his wife Lois has written abt this, but you wont find that book on the AA conference-approved list. had a long-term affair with a woman in the General Service Office, and left her money in his will, of which there was eventually a great deal, from Big Book royalties. In addition he actually suffered from severe depression for some 15 years after he stopped drinking, and said that the Steps were no help whatsoever in overcoming it. All this would not matter much but what really sticks in the craw is the hypocrisy of claiming that God had made him " happy, joyous and free " , and that one ought to eschew adultery as a 'defect of character' and finally, that he wrote the chapter " To Wives " while *Pretending to be an alcoholic's wife*, much to his own wife's understandable fury. He said it was important the whole book was written in the same style. But why then, did he not write as *himself?* Why did he pretend to be the wife of an alcoholic? This kind of deception I notice is an extremely common technique in the propagation of 12-step programs , of which pretending it isn't religious is the most glaring. I have seen a 12-step practitioner on a list refer someone asking for help to *himself*, pretending he was a third party. ...And all this from members of what is supposed to be a program of 'rigorous honesty'! > But please Mr. Watts, take the time to explain > RET to that AA member: I think you will find he understands Ellis's > principles and utilizes them on a daily basis, though as he may not be as > " eddicated " you and so not know who Ellis is. He, like you, might *claim* to, particularly if he thought it would make me think more highly of AA. Where he would be wrong, imo, is that program is concerned with " moral inventories " - in other words, it is not abt getting rid of *irrational* thoughts and behavior, like RET, but supposedly " immoral " ones, and hence is NOT a similar thing at all. > Certainly Bill was a > very religious man but he knew all to well the dangers of religiosity. I'm not at all sure he did. What he learned was how ineffective it was in bringing in recruits, especially in cosmopolitan New York, unlike the much more fertile Bible-belt earth of his partner in Akron. He was also aware that the Catholic church might forbid its members to participate in a non-Catholic religious organization, and hence proceeded to bowdlerize its program, removing all references to Jesus, sins, and confession, etc - those are clearly what were being invoked by " God " , " Defects of Character " , and " Admitted to God, ourselves and another human being " . This also, of course, allows self-declared atheists and agnostics to just abt come up with some convoluted accommodation to it. > Today, AA members I know, call it changing addictions: from alcohol to > religion. From what I have seen, both are about equally destructive. They miss that their program is itself a religion, and don't appreciate how destructive *that* can be; the list 12-step-free has many members who can testify to this. > You write that AA functions like a Rorschach test; maybe so. Actually, a dedicated AA member wrote that. I merely commented that the *AA program* appears to have functioned like that in your case. > You read my > letter and saw a religious nut, I did not say this. I saw a religious *person*. > whereas that other fellow described me as a > member of the " secular AA " which he and his secret society within AA itself > wish to overthrow with the power of their connection with the Godhead. Live > and let live. Some are sicker than others. So, are you suggesting a practitioner of " authentic AA " - that clearly intended by , and the good old-timers - is showing a sign of *sickness*? What a radical thought! > I really hate to tell you all > this, Mr. Watts, but AA WORKS. I would hope you would have refrained from such petty sarcasm. What you actually hate is that I don't automatically accept this claim. > It helps hopeless alcoholics get sober and > become productive citizens at a higher success rate than anything all the > APA researchers hve been able to come up with yet. Could I have citations please? Because AA routinely refuses to allow systematic investigation of it, there cannot possibly be scientific justification for this claim. There is however, some evidence it isn't true. Just one example: By one of AA's own triennial surveys, only 5% of newcomers are still in AA at the one year point, and 73% are still drinking. More ppl recover spontaneously. Stanton Peele is of course a much better authority than me on such matters. When I used these statistics from AA's survey on addict-l, an AA practitioner said that he would report back to the AA literature committee that the statistics were being " misrepresented " and they should not be made generally available anymore; and from one report this appears to have happened. Such is the AA confidence in their program. > While the great American > father of behavioral psychology was abusing babies, screwing his research > assistant, and developing the principles of the advertising business, Bill > was learning how to help himself and many, many others, to arrest a > terrible, fatal illness. ....While screwing the woman in the GSO, and apparently, screwing the AA membership too (of their money). > No, I do not agree with all I hear at AA; there > are still some ignorant people who tell schizophrenics they do not need > their medication, just AA, but most of us know better and do a pretty good > job of heading off that kind of thing. " Take what you need and leave the > rest. " ....And how is the person supposed to be able to tell the difference? You seem to use this phrase as an excuse for the fact that dangerous nonsense remains propogated by AA without being addressed by it. They also tell severely depressed non-schizophrenic ppl that not only do they not need their antidepressants but they are " alcohol in pill form " , that they can never take benzodiazepines or painkillers, no matter how long sober, and so on and so on. Relying on just a few ppl to happen to be around to correct these myths is not good enough; and in fact many AA clinicians *perpetuate* these myths. I correspond with a former AA member who suffers chronic pain. He asked his doctor for painkillers, who proceeded to ask his [the doctor's] father, *because he was an AA member* whether this was advisable for a recovered alcoholic, who replied " No " and the prescription was refused! My friend changed his doctor and is able to use painkillers appropriately as would any other responsible patient. The only relevant AA literature, an obscure pamphlet called, IIRC, " The AA member and Drugs " is essentially a fudge document essentially allowing both those with pro- and anti-med positions to draw on it in support of their case, and appears to essentially function to shore up AA unity. It also talks abt medicines and street drugs in the same breath as if they are somehow comparable, which I think is outrageous from physicians, as the authors apparently are. AA/NA members often love to pretend that there is really no difference between the two, usually smugly, as if party to a great insight, while puffing on a cigarette with one hand and swilling industrial strength coffee with the other. Methadone Maintenance Treatment is highly researched and showed effective, and evidence for the efficacy of Naltrexone for use with alcohol dependents as well as opiate dependents is gaining fast - yet AA/NA members frequently show open hostility to these treatments to the great detriment of those who can benefit from them. Watts Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 Hi Pete; The excerpt from your reply below shows, I believe, where AA plays fast and loose with statistics. **************************************************************** example: By one of AA's own triennial surveys, only 5% of newcomers are still in AA at the one year point, and 73% are still drinking. More ppl recover spontaneously. ******************************************************************* In 1989, I was in a Hazelden affiliated treatment center. Being an old con, I got as chummy as possible with one of the upper level therapists in order to make life a bit easier on myself. About the eigth or ninth day I was there, she was bemaoning the low recovery rate of a bit over 3% for one year and about 2% for two years. The graph was pretty flat after two years. This was a hardass beat you over the head with your sins, other folks sins against you don't matter, 12step center. In other words a carbon copy of Hazelden. The stats were overall for Hazelden and affiliates is my understanding. I told here Gee, this could be turned into a motivational message. Our class was 37, which ONE of the 37 would get a year. It wasn't me, I got 4 months, counting the month in treatment. Even as low as these stats are, they were massaged to get them that good. First, no incompletes were counted. Second, no one unavailable by telephone or letter after a year was counted. Now who would be more likely to move with no forwarding or telephone, a sober person or one drinking? Doesn't take a rocket scientist. However, even accepting their stats, let's look at it from a different angle. If you started a cancer treatment and remission with one year results was 3% and for two Years 2%, what would the medical community say about your treatment? I'm no doctor, but I'll bet they'd say the treatment was ineffective and those recovering were Spontaeous Remissions and shut you down. Basically that has happened in Iowa via Insurance companies, who discovered that the same 300 to 500 people were keeping a 40 bed treatment center in business. Insurance Companies deal in real world stats to make money. I'd give a lease against next summers wages to see their stats on 12 step treatment programs. I believe AA admits that about 4% of alcoholics quit drinking after being lectured by their family doctor. Hmmm. I can fully understand that because my doctor got on me about my weight and I dumped 60 pounds over the next three years. He's the same doctor that laughed at the idea I couldn't use pain relievers properly because I'm an alcoholic. He's been right on both counts, I have no problem with #4 tylenol and I feel better at this weight. The few AA's, percentage wise who stay sober look like a large number until you consider the 30 odd million that have come through their doors in ten years or so and about a million sober at any given time. I think if they burned all their books and traditions and just had get togethers, the recovering rate would go up. The power of a peer group is well documented and having a place to be, with other non drinking people for a social structure, would IMO do more good. The twelve steps and present AA structure use three bad ideas. Shame, fear and if one doesn't work take two or maybe 6 or 14. If 14 doesn't work, YOU are defective. To abuse survivors already up to their asses in the twin alligators of shame and fear, AA is like going home with no escape and as alcoholics we are very familiar with, if one doesn't work take six, because we've been doing that with alcohol and drugs. Really I think the term " Drydrunk " applies to all who are working the AA program and living it's way of life. It is after all, just the same methods we used while drinking. That I believe is why AA's can twist their belief system to fit all new or old pronouncements from the GSO and folks like Clancy Imusland. Or as I used to hear jibed at folks in prison " If you'll stand for that, you'll bend over for this! " Insurance companies here in Iowa will now pay for an inpatient treatment, if you fail at outpatient and only if you satisfactorily completed the outpatient. You get two outpatient and one inpatient per lifetime. Of course this policy put the centers out of business. I doubt now that there are more than 6 centers in Iowa, that are not State institutions. The disadvantage to State treatment is its' 6 month length. Not too many folks ready to do six months in a veritable jail. Few go twice, though some do each winter. So here, for the most part, things are back to pre 1970. I did one of those six months shots in 62-63 and wished I'd have gone to jail instead. Though I admit I enjoyed the roller skating, Dances and nine hole golf course. I stayed sober the first day after getting out. Just long enough to find a place to live. I drank some while I was in there, but that's another story. So here in The Bible Belt as you called it, the 12 step star is descending. Naturally with few treatments to send fresh blood to AA, it is also dimishing. Next time I'm in Des Moines, I'll stop at The Central Office and get a Des Moines meeting schedule, just to see how many of the 3 or 400 are left from the eighties. I was around AA for 30 years and as a treatment, IMO, it is a failure. Personally I didn't stay off alcohol till I got away and stayed away from AA, in 1990. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 Hi Pete; The excerpt from your reply below shows, I believe, where AA plays fast and loose with statistics. **************************************************************** example: By one of AA's own triennial surveys, only 5% of newcomers are still in AA at the one year point, and 73% are still drinking. More ppl recover spontaneously. ******************************************************************* In 1989, I was in a Hazelden affiliated treatment center. Being an old con, I got as chummy as possible with one of the upper level therapists in order to make life a bit easier on myself. About the eigth or ninth day I was there, she was bemaoning the low recovery rate of a bit over 3% for one year and about 2% for two years. The graph was pretty flat after two years. This was a hardass beat you over the head with your sins, other folks sins against you don't matter, 12step center. In other words a carbon copy of Hazelden. The stats were overall for Hazelden and affiliates is my understanding. I told here Gee, this could be turned into a motivational message. Our class was 37, which ONE of the 37 would get a year. It wasn't me, I got 4 months, counting the month in treatment. Even as low as these stats are, they were massaged to get them that good. First, no incompletes were counted. Second, no one unavailable by telephone or letter after a year was counted. Now who would be more likely to move with no forwarding or telephone, a sober person or one drinking? Doesn't take a rocket scientist. However, even accepting their stats, let's look at it from a different angle. If you started a cancer treatment and remission with one year results was 3% and for two Years 2%, what would the medical community say about your treatment? I'm no doctor, but I'll bet they'd say the treatment was ineffective and those recovering were Spontaeous Remissions and shut you down. Basically that has happened in Iowa via Insurance companies, who discovered that the same 300 to 500 people were keeping a 40 bed treatment center in business. Insurance Companies deal in real world stats to make money. I'd give a lease against next summers wages to see their stats on 12 step treatment programs. I believe AA admits that about 4% of alcoholics quit drinking after being lectured by their family doctor. Hmmm. I can fully understand that because my doctor got on me about my weight and I dumped 60 pounds over the next three years. He's the same doctor that laughed at the idea I couldn't use pain relievers properly because I'm an alcoholic. He's been right on both counts, I have no problem with #4 tylenol and I feel better at this weight. The few AA's, percentage wise who stay sober look like a large number until you consider the 30 odd million that have come through their doors in ten years or so and about a million sober at any given time. I think if they burned all their books and traditions and just had get togethers, the recovering rate would go up. The power of a peer group is well documented and having a place to be, with other non drinking people for a social structure, would IMO do more good. The twelve steps and present AA structure use three bad ideas. Shame, fear and if one doesn't work take two or maybe 6 or 14. If 14 doesn't work, YOU are defective. To abuse survivors already up to their asses in the twin alligators of shame and fear, AA is like going home with no escape and as alcoholics we are very familiar with, if one doesn't work take six, because we've been doing that with alcohol and drugs. Really I think the term " Drydrunk " applies to all who are working the AA program and living it's way of life. It is after all, just the same methods we used while drinking. That I believe is why AA's can twist their belief system to fit all new or old pronouncements from the GSO and folks like Clancy Imusland. Or as I used to hear jibed at folks in prison " If you'll stand for that, you'll bend over for this! " Insurance companies here in Iowa will now pay for an inpatient treatment, if you fail at outpatient and only if you satisfactorily completed the outpatient. You get two outpatient and one inpatient per lifetime. Of course this policy put the centers out of business. I doubt now that there are more than 6 centers in Iowa, that are not State institutions. The disadvantage to State treatment is its' 6 month length. Not too many folks ready to do six months in a veritable jail. Few go twice, though some do each winter. So here, for the most part, things are back to pre 1970. I did one of those six months shots in 62-63 and wished I'd have gone to jail instead. Though I admit I enjoyed the roller skating, Dances and nine hole golf course. I stayed sober the first day after getting out. Just long enough to find a place to live. I drank some while I was in there, but that's another story. So here in The Bible Belt as you called it, the 12 step star is descending. Naturally with few treatments to send fresh blood to AA, it is also dimishing. Next time I'm in Des Moines, I'll stop at The Central Office and get a Des Moines meeting schedule, just to see how many of the 3 or 400 are left from the eighties. I was around AA for 30 years and as a treatment, IMO, it is a failure. Personally I didn't stay off alcohol till I got away and stayed away from AA, in 1990. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 Hi , The treatment surveys are so flawed it's pitiful. As a graduate of many programs here is how I answered the surveys. If I was drinking which I always was within 30 days of treatment I would either lie and say I was sober or I would not respond. Since non-responders never are counted you can see how useless these statistics are. Artie n a message dated 10/31/99 10:27:09 AM Central Standard Time, pachy2@... writes: > Hi Pete; > > The excerpt from your reply below shows, I believe, where AA > plays fast and loose with statistics. > > **************************************************************** > example: By one of AA's own > triennial surveys, only 5% of newcomers are still in AA at > the one year point, and 73% are still drinking. More ppl > recover spontaneously. > ******************************************************************* > > In 1989, I was in a Hazelden affiliated treatment center. Being an > old con, I got as chummy as possible with one of the upper level > therapists in order to make life a bit easier on myself. > > About the eigth or ninth day I was there, she was bemaoning the > low recovery rate of a bit over 3% for one year and about 2% for two > years. The graph was pretty flat after two years. This was a > hardass beat you over the head with your sins, other folks sins > against you don't matter, 12step center. In other words a carbon > copy of Hazelden. The stats were overall for Hazelden and > affiliates is my understanding. I told here Gee, this could be turned > into a motivational message. Our class was 37, which ONE of the > 37 would get a year. It wasn't me, I got 4 months, counting the > month in treatment. > > Even as low as these stats are, they were massaged to get them > that good. First, no incompletes were counted. Second, no one > unavailable by telephone or letter after a year was counted. Now > who would be more likely to move with no forwarding or telephone, > a sober person or one drinking? Doesn't take a rocket scientist. > > However, even accepting their stats, let's look at it from a different > angle. If you started a cancer treatment and remission with one > year results was 3% and for two Years 2%, what would the > medical community say about your treatment? I'm no doctor, but > I'll bet they'd say the treatment was ineffective and those recovering > were Spontaeous Remissions and shut you down. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 Hi , The treatment surveys are so flawed it's pitiful. As a graduate of many programs here is how I answered the surveys. If I was drinking which I always was within 30 days of treatment I would either lie and say I was sober or I would not respond. Since non-responders never are counted you can see how useless these statistics are. Artie n a message dated 10/31/99 10:27:09 AM Central Standard Time, pachy2@... writes: > Hi Pete; > > The excerpt from your reply below shows, I believe, where AA > plays fast and loose with statistics. > > **************************************************************** > example: By one of AA's own > triennial surveys, only 5% of newcomers are still in AA at > the one year point, and 73% are still drinking. More ppl > recover spontaneously. > ******************************************************************* > > In 1989, I was in a Hazelden affiliated treatment center. Being an > old con, I got as chummy as possible with one of the upper level > therapists in order to make life a bit easier on myself. > > About the eigth or ninth day I was there, she was bemaoning the > low recovery rate of a bit over 3% for one year and about 2% for two > years. The graph was pretty flat after two years. This was a > hardass beat you over the head with your sins, other folks sins > against you don't matter, 12step center. In other words a carbon > copy of Hazelden. The stats were overall for Hazelden and > affiliates is my understanding. I told here Gee, this could be turned > into a motivational message. Our class was 37, which ONE of the > 37 would get a year. It wasn't me, I got 4 months, counting the > month in treatment. > > Even as low as these stats are, they were massaged to get them > that good. First, no incompletes were counted. Second, no one > unavailable by telephone or letter after a year was counted. Now > who would be more likely to move with no forwarding or telephone, > a sober person or one drinking? Doesn't take a rocket scientist. > > However, even accepting their stats, let's look at it from a different > angle. If you started a cancer treatment and remission with one > year results was 3% and for two Years 2%, what would the > medical community say about your treatment? I'm no doctor, but > I'll bet they'd say the treatment was ineffective and those recovering > were Spontaeous Remissions and shut you down. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 Hi , The treatment surveys are so flawed it's pitiful. As a graduate of many programs here is how I answered the surveys. If I was drinking which I always was within 30 days of treatment I would either lie and say I was sober or I would not respond. Since non-responders never are counted you can see how useless these statistics are. Artie n a message dated 10/31/99 10:27:09 AM Central Standard Time, pachy2@... writes: > Hi Pete; > > The excerpt from your reply below shows, I believe, where AA > plays fast and loose with statistics. > > **************************************************************** > example: By one of AA's own > triennial surveys, only 5% of newcomers are still in AA at > the one year point, and 73% are still drinking. More ppl > recover spontaneously. > ******************************************************************* > > In 1989, I was in a Hazelden affiliated treatment center. Being an > old con, I got as chummy as possible with one of the upper level > therapists in order to make life a bit easier on myself. > > About the eigth or ninth day I was there, she was bemaoning the > low recovery rate of a bit over 3% for one year and about 2% for two > years. The graph was pretty flat after two years. This was a > hardass beat you over the head with your sins, other folks sins > against you don't matter, 12step center. In other words a carbon > copy of Hazelden. The stats were overall for Hazelden and > affiliates is my understanding. I told here Gee, this could be turned > into a motivational message. Our class was 37, which ONE of the > 37 would get a year. It wasn't me, I got 4 months, counting the > month in treatment. > > Even as low as these stats are, they were massaged to get them > that good. First, no incompletes were counted. Second, no one > unavailable by telephone or letter after a year was counted. Now > who would be more likely to move with no forwarding or telephone, > a sober person or one drinking? Doesn't take a rocket scientist. > > However, even accepting their stats, let's look at it from a different > angle. If you started a cancer treatment and remission with one > year results was 3% and for two Years 2%, what would the > medical community say about your treatment? I'm no doctor, but > I'll bet they'd say the treatment was ineffective and those recovering > were Spontaeous Remissions and shut you down. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 -----Original Message----- >Hi Wally, folks > >I'm pretty sure you know this already, but just in case you don't, that >wasn't a parody - it was written in sincerity by a member of APA Div50. > >Pete Yes, Pete, I was joshing -- I knew you didn't really write it yourself ;-) HOWEVER... I wouldn't be so quick to assume that the author is sincere. Could be he's spoofing. He's SO off the wall. Aside from the philosophical malapropisms, it's a simple fact that his description of the " 2 AAs " is nothing like the reality. Everybody who goes to AA for more than a year or two winds up working the steps. It really IS a spiritual program, and EVERYBODY knows this except for the newcomers and outsiders who may get the IMPRESSION at first that there is a " secular AA. " People don't have to join secret Big Book groups to work the Steps. They can go to any of zillions of step meetings, most of which use the 12 & 12, some of which use the BB... 99 out of 100 sponsors will tell you to work the steps and get really peeved if you make no effort to do so. He might as well be claiming that ( " contrary to poular belief " ) there's more to Catholicism than Bingo, and making his case by pointing to some obscure sect of Spanish monks as The Real Catholic Church! And you're going to debate this nutcase/clown? good luck, wally > > " wally t. " wrote: >original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8934 >> Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively >priceless! >> >> This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the >first >> time I saw " Duck Soup! " >> >> Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... >> >> -- wally >> >> PS: Are you going to give this character a name? >> PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing >myself by >> trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the >Vienna >> Circle " ... What do you think? >> >> >> >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and >> clinicians >> >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or >tacit >> beliefs that provide >> > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality >in the >> human sciences >> >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical >> positivism. As a >> >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions >about >> transcendent >> >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise >red >> flags of suspicion and >> >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. >So be >> it.... >> >> > > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >Essential Feynman Library for $7.99! A $96.65 >value of 3 books+6 audio tape set. Learn >physics from Feynman renown for making >complex ideas easy. Order NOW at Library >of Science http://clickhere./click/1370 > > >eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free > - Simplifying group communications > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 -----Original Message----- >Hi Wally, folks > >I'm pretty sure you know this already, but just in case you don't, that >wasn't a parody - it was written in sincerity by a member of APA Div50. > >Pete Yes, Pete, I was joshing -- I knew you didn't really write it yourself ;-) HOWEVER... I wouldn't be so quick to assume that the author is sincere. Could be he's spoofing. He's SO off the wall. Aside from the philosophical malapropisms, it's a simple fact that his description of the " 2 AAs " is nothing like the reality. Everybody who goes to AA for more than a year or two winds up working the steps. It really IS a spiritual program, and EVERYBODY knows this except for the newcomers and outsiders who may get the IMPRESSION at first that there is a " secular AA. " People don't have to join secret Big Book groups to work the Steps. They can go to any of zillions of step meetings, most of which use the 12 & 12, some of which use the BB... 99 out of 100 sponsors will tell you to work the steps and get really peeved if you make no effort to do so. He might as well be claiming that ( " contrary to poular belief " ) there's more to Catholicism than Bingo, and making his case by pointing to some obscure sect of Spanish monks as The Real Catholic Church! And you're going to debate this nutcase/clown? good luck, wally > > " wally t. " wrote: >original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8934 >> Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively >priceless! >> >> This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the >first >> time I saw " Duck Soup! " >> >> Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... >> >> -- wally >> >> PS: Are you going to give this character a name? >> PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing >myself by >> trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the >Vienna >> Circle " ... What do you think? >> >> >> >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and >> clinicians >> >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or >tacit >> beliefs that provide >> > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality >in the >> human sciences >> >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical >> positivism. As a >> >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions >about >> transcendent >> >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise >red >> flags of suspicion and >> >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. >So be >> it.... >> >> > > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >Essential Feynman Library for $7.99! A $96.65 >value of 3 books+6 audio tape set. Learn >physics from Feynman renown for making >complex ideas easy. Order NOW at Library >of Science http://clickhere./click/1370 > > >eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free > - Simplifying group communications > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 1999 Report Share Posted October 31, 1999 -----Original Message----- >Hi Wally, folks > >I'm pretty sure you know this already, but just in case you don't, that >wasn't a parody - it was written in sincerity by a member of APA Div50. > >Pete Yes, Pete, I was joshing -- I knew you didn't really write it yourself ;-) HOWEVER... I wouldn't be so quick to assume that the author is sincere. Could be he's spoofing. He's SO off the wall. Aside from the philosophical malapropisms, it's a simple fact that his description of the " 2 AAs " is nothing like the reality. Everybody who goes to AA for more than a year or two winds up working the steps. It really IS a spiritual program, and EVERYBODY knows this except for the newcomers and outsiders who may get the IMPRESSION at first that there is a " secular AA. " People don't have to join secret Big Book groups to work the Steps. They can go to any of zillions of step meetings, most of which use the 12 & 12, some of which use the BB... 99 out of 100 sponsors will tell you to work the steps and get really peeved if you make no effort to do so. He might as well be claiming that ( " contrary to poular belief " ) there's more to Catholicism than Bingo, and making his case by pointing to some obscure sect of Spanish monks as The Real Catholic Church! And you're going to debate this nutcase/clown? good luck, wally > > " wally t. " wrote: >original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8934 >> Pete, your parodies of pompous pseudo-profundity are positively >priceless! >> >> This one had me howling. I don't think I've laughed so hard since the >first >> time I saw " Duck Soup! " >> >> Please keep it up! More, more, I'm still not satisfied... >> >> -- wally >> >> PS: Are you going to give this character a name? >> PPS: Maybe you could have him " write a book. " I've been amusing >myself by >> trying to think up titles... Like maybe " The Public Square and the >Vienna >> Circle " ... What do you think? >> >> >> >...I appreciate that most academically-based alcohol researchers and >> clinicians >> >are very deeply committed to the pre-theoretical assumptions or >tacit >> beliefs that provide >> > the invisible faith foundation for the reigning paradigm of reality >in the >> human sciences >> >known by some as philosophical materialism and others as logical >> positivism. As a >> >consequence of these metatheoretical presuppositions, discussions >about >> transcendent >> >dimensions of reality, religiosity and spirituality instantly raise >red >> flags of suspicion and >> >distrust among many alcohol researchers embedded within academia. >So be >> it.... >> >> > > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >Essential Feynman Library for $7.99! A $96.65 >value of 3 books+6 audio tape set. Learn >physics from Feynman renown for making >complex ideas easy. Order NOW at Library >of Science http://clickhere./click/1370 > > >eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free > - Simplifying group communications > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 2, 1999 Report Share Posted November 2, 1999 You'll love this one. As I will shortly be pointing out to him, HE was the one who strateed trying to discredit a system of ideas by ad hominem attacks on its creator, not me. It's well worth reading through this bilge for the last line. Pete --- Begin Forwarded Message --- Mr. Watts, I am curious: are you a clinician? Have you ever personally watched an alcoholic struggle in recovery and succeed? Have you ever helped one to succeed and watched his life improve? Have you attended any funerals of clients who did not succeed in that struggle? Or is your knowledge of addiction limited to your studies of learned journals? Is your knowledge of the AA Big Book limited to intellectual (and pseudo-intellectual) deconstruction, or have you ever clung to the hope found in that volume whilst drowning in a sea of booze? On a more intimate note: have you ever made any " mistakes " in your personal life? Would your sexual activities hold up to the scrutiny of some future biographer? Did you ever cheat on your taxes? Or an algebra test? (no, no, not projection: as a child I was good at algebra until I so damaged my nervous system that I have the greatest of difficulty keeping my paltry checking account balanced) Fail to speak up when some minimum wage store clerk gave you an extra ten dollars in change? Pee in the swimming pool? Fart in the theatre? (I don't suppose you go to church, so you missed out on that opportunity). I do not know if God exists. I used to pray " God get me out of this and I will never do it again " but I always did it again until I accepted help from AA.. AA suggested I pray for God's guidance in my life. I once knew an AA member, now deceased of leukemia, with about ten years' abstinence at his death. I'll never forget his description of how, when his disease was active, he had to drink a water glass of whiskey every morning, so he could stop his hands from shaking long enough to allow him to brush his teeth. In meetings where the topic was " dealing with resentments " he liked to share the problems he had with a sister-in-law. Advised by his AA sponsor to pray for his in-law daily for two weeks, he did so. And on the fourteenth day she fell and broke her leg! Definite proof, according to my AA compatriot, that prayer works. What do you say, Mr. Watts? Shall we pray for one another? I shall pray that you get down in the trenches with those of us who try and try to help the poor suffering addict, despite managed care, despite administrators who buy into " evaluation and outcomes instruments " written by someone who has never witnessed a full-blown case of DT's. Elected officials that become such by promising to build more jail cells to protect the decent people (read: voters) from all those drug fiends who worship the Devil? (Do you suppose He exists too?) All readers, and Mr. Watts, please excuse my soapbox diatribe. I confess, Mr Watts! I am still alive after all the near-fatal mistakes I have made; therefore there must be a God! (Don;t look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith. Graham Greene taught me that faith is belief in the Almighty in the absence of proof that he exists. Just ask Oppenheimer). God loves you, Mr. Watts, and so do I! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 2, 1999 Report Share Posted November 2, 1999 " ...Don't look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith... " Yup. That about sums it up. Cheers, > You'll love this one. As I will shortly be pointing out to > him, HE was the one who strateed trying to discredit a > system of ideas by ad hominem attacks on its creator, not > me. > > It's well worth reading through this bilge for the last > line. > > Pete > > --- Begin Forwarded Message --- > > Mr. Watts, I am curious: are you a clinician? Have you ever personally > watched an alcoholic struggle in recovery and succeed? Have you ever helped > one to succeed and watched his life improve? Have you attended any funerals > of clients who did not succeed in that struggle? Or is your knowledge of > addiction limited to your studies of learned journals? Is your knowledge of > the AA Big Book limited to intellectual (and pseudo-intellectual) > deconstruction, or have you ever clung to the hope found in that volume > whilst drowning in a sea of booze? On a more intimate note: have you ever > made any " mistakes " in your personal life? Would your sexual activities > hold up to the scrutiny of some future biographer? Did you ever cheat on > your taxes? Or an algebra test? (no, no, not projection: as a child I was > good at algebra until I so damaged my nervous system that I have the > greatest of difficulty keeping my paltry checking account balanced) Fail to > speak up when some minimum wage store clerk gave you an extra ten dollars in > change? Pee in the swimming pool? Fart in the theatre? (I don't suppose > you go to church, so you missed out on that opportunity). I do not know if > God exists. I used to pray " God get me out of this and I will never do it > again " but I always did it again until I accepted help from AA.. AA > suggested I pray for God's guidance in my life. I once knew an AA member, > now deceased of leukemia, with about ten years' abstinence at his death. > I'll never forget his description of how, when his disease was active, he > had to drink a water glass of whiskey every morning, so he could stop his > hands from shaking long enough to allow him to brush his teeth. In meetings > where the topic was " dealing with resentments " he liked to share the > problems he had with a sister-in-law. Advised by his AA sponsor to pray for > his in-law daily for two weeks, he did so. And on the fourteenth day she > fell and broke her leg! Definite proof, according to my AA compatriot, that > prayer works. What do you say, Mr. Watts? Shall we pray for one another? > I shall pray that you get down in the trenches with those of us who try and > try to help the poor suffering addict, despite managed care, despite > administrators who buy into " evaluation and outcomes instruments " written by > someone who has never witnessed a full-blown case of DT's. Elected > officials that become such by promising to build more jail cells to protect > the decent people (read: voters) from all those drug fiends who worship the > Devil? (Do you suppose He exists too?) All readers, and Mr. Watts, please > excuse my soapbox diatribe. I confess, Mr Watts! I am still alive after all > the near-fatal mistakes I have made; therefore there must be a God! (Don;t > look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith. > Graham Greene taught me that faith is belief in the Almighty in the absence > of proof that he exists. Just ask Oppenheimer). > God loves you, Mr. Watts, and so do I! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 2, 1999 Report Share Posted November 2, 1999 " ...Don't look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith... " Yup. That about sums it up. Cheers, > You'll love this one. As I will shortly be pointing out to > him, HE was the one who strateed trying to discredit a > system of ideas by ad hominem attacks on its creator, not > me. > > It's well worth reading through this bilge for the last > line. > > Pete > > --- Begin Forwarded Message --- > > Mr. Watts, I am curious: are you a clinician? Have you ever personally > watched an alcoholic struggle in recovery and succeed? Have you ever helped > one to succeed and watched his life improve? Have you attended any funerals > of clients who did not succeed in that struggle? Or is your knowledge of > addiction limited to your studies of learned journals? Is your knowledge of > the AA Big Book limited to intellectual (and pseudo-intellectual) > deconstruction, or have you ever clung to the hope found in that volume > whilst drowning in a sea of booze? On a more intimate note: have you ever > made any " mistakes " in your personal life? Would your sexual activities > hold up to the scrutiny of some future biographer? Did you ever cheat on > your taxes? Or an algebra test? (no, no, not projection: as a child I was > good at algebra until I so damaged my nervous system that I have the > greatest of difficulty keeping my paltry checking account balanced) Fail to > speak up when some minimum wage store clerk gave you an extra ten dollars in > change? Pee in the swimming pool? Fart in the theatre? (I don't suppose > you go to church, so you missed out on that opportunity). I do not know if > God exists. I used to pray " God get me out of this and I will never do it > again " but I always did it again until I accepted help from AA.. AA > suggested I pray for God's guidance in my life. I once knew an AA member, > now deceased of leukemia, with about ten years' abstinence at his death. > I'll never forget his description of how, when his disease was active, he > had to drink a water glass of whiskey every morning, so he could stop his > hands from shaking long enough to allow him to brush his teeth. In meetings > where the topic was " dealing with resentments " he liked to share the > problems he had with a sister-in-law. Advised by his AA sponsor to pray for > his in-law daily for two weeks, he did so. And on the fourteenth day she > fell and broke her leg! Definite proof, according to my AA compatriot, that > prayer works. What do you say, Mr. Watts? Shall we pray for one another? > I shall pray that you get down in the trenches with those of us who try and > try to help the poor suffering addict, despite managed care, despite > administrators who buy into " evaluation and outcomes instruments " written by > someone who has never witnessed a full-blown case of DT's. Elected > officials that become such by promising to build more jail cells to protect > the decent people (read: voters) from all those drug fiends who worship the > Devil? (Do you suppose He exists too?) All readers, and Mr. Watts, please > excuse my soapbox diatribe. I confess, Mr Watts! I am still alive after all > the near-fatal mistakes I have made; therefore there must be a God! (Don;t > look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith. > Graham Greene taught me that faith is belief in the Almighty in the absence > of proof that he exists. Just ask Oppenheimer). > God loves you, Mr. Watts, and so do I! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 2, 1999 Report Share Posted November 2, 1999 " ...Don't look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith... " Yup. That about sums it up. Cheers, > You'll love this one. As I will shortly be pointing out to > him, HE was the one who strateed trying to discredit a > system of ideas by ad hominem attacks on its creator, not > me. > > It's well worth reading through this bilge for the last > line. > > Pete > > --- Begin Forwarded Message --- > > Mr. Watts, I am curious: are you a clinician? Have you ever personally > watched an alcoholic struggle in recovery and succeed? Have you ever helped > one to succeed and watched his life improve? Have you attended any funerals > of clients who did not succeed in that struggle? Or is your knowledge of > addiction limited to your studies of learned journals? Is your knowledge of > the AA Big Book limited to intellectual (and pseudo-intellectual) > deconstruction, or have you ever clung to the hope found in that volume > whilst drowning in a sea of booze? On a more intimate note: have you ever > made any " mistakes " in your personal life? Would your sexual activities > hold up to the scrutiny of some future biographer? Did you ever cheat on > your taxes? Or an algebra test? (no, no, not projection: as a child I was > good at algebra until I so damaged my nervous system that I have the > greatest of difficulty keeping my paltry checking account balanced) Fail to > speak up when some minimum wage store clerk gave you an extra ten dollars in > change? Pee in the swimming pool? Fart in the theatre? (I don't suppose > you go to church, so you missed out on that opportunity). I do not know if > God exists. I used to pray " God get me out of this and I will never do it > again " but I always did it again until I accepted help from AA.. AA > suggested I pray for God's guidance in my life. I once knew an AA member, > now deceased of leukemia, with about ten years' abstinence at his death. > I'll never forget his description of how, when his disease was active, he > had to drink a water glass of whiskey every morning, so he could stop his > hands from shaking long enough to allow him to brush his teeth. In meetings > where the topic was " dealing with resentments " he liked to share the > problems he had with a sister-in-law. Advised by his AA sponsor to pray for > his in-law daily for two weeks, he did so. And on the fourteenth day she > fell and broke her leg! Definite proof, according to my AA compatriot, that > prayer works. What do you say, Mr. Watts? Shall we pray for one another? > I shall pray that you get down in the trenches with those of us who try and > try to help the poor suffering addict, despite managed care, despite > administrators who buy into " evaluation and outcomes instruments " written by > someone who has never witnessed a full-blown case of DT's. Elected > officials that become such by promising to build more jail cells to protect > the decent people (read: voters) from all those drug fiends who worship the > Devil? (Do you suppose He exists too?) All readers, and Mr. Watts, please > excuse my soapbox diatribe. I confess, Mr Watts! I am still alive after all > the near-fatal mistakes I have made; therefore there must be a God! (Don;t > look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith. > Graham Greene taught me that faith is belief in the Almighty in the absence > of proof that he exists. Just ask Oppenheimer). > God loves you, Mr. Watts, and so do I! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 2, 1999 Report Share Posted November 2, 1999 More of my replies to APA DIv 50: --- Begin Forwarded Message --- I will precede your comments with JS and mine with PW. JS: > While I realize that the following is anecdotal evidence I still believe it > has some validity. In 1995 I attended the international AA convention in San > Diego and saw nearly 80,000 sober people in (what was then called) Jack > stadium. Now that, to me anyway, is some powerful proof that AA works. ER wrote: > > > It helps hopeless alcoholics get sober and > > > become productive citizens at a higher success rate than anything all > > the > > > APA researchers have been able to come up with yet. PW: > > Could I have citations please? Because AA routinely refuses > > to allow systematic investigation of it, there cannot > > possibly be scientific justification for this claim. There > > is however, some evidence it isn't true. By one of AA's own > > triennial survey, only 5% of newcomers are still in AA at > > the one year point, and 73% are still drinking. More ppl > > recover spontaneously. Stanton Peele is of course a much > > better authority than me on such matters. When I used these > > statistics from AA's survey on addict-l, an AA practitioner > > said that he would report back to the AA literature > > committee that the statistics were being " misrepresented " > > and they should not be made generally available anymore; > > and from one report this appears to have happened. JS: > you always amaze me when you quote this particular survey. This was one > of the most *unscientific* surveys known to mankind with many flaws in > methodology. I can't right off hand think of anyone who would base a > statement on the efficiency of a program on the basis of that survey. Yet you > grasp it like a life preserver to prove your point PW: You are of course the AA practitioner who said he would use his influence within AA to try to prevent such " misuse " of these surveys. I don't know if you did try and how much difference you made, but shortly afterward epidemiologist Robin Room wrote that in his most recent enquiry he had been no longer allowed access to the survey data but could only obtain the officially released AA documents on them. Robin Room is an epidemiologist of repute; and he obviously considers this data of value, and for some reason AA GSO now feels that they don't like an independent scientist using them. When there is no method of getting very high quality data (and no Social Science data is ever perfect) then one must use what is available; and as previously expressed, it is considered valuable to an expert sociologist, Robin Room. Also, I do not try to use it to " prove my point " as I said before. What I actually said was " there is some evidence that it [ER's] claim " isn't true. " In other word, I was making quite a tentative comment based on it. In contrast, you state of the AA 1995 convention that it was " some powerful proof that AA works " - in other words, you are claiming " powerful proof " for something that isn't even a survey of any kind at all - just 80,000 ppl of a fellowship with the order of a million US members and two million worldwide - of ppl healthy enough and committed enough to make a journey to the convention. Just how small a crowd could be assembled and you consider it still " powerful proof " ? Good grief, who is basing a viewpoint on worse data, and a more extreme one to boot? JS: > and at the same time state > that Project Match, which was a well designed research project, as being > meaningless and useless. Isn't there a bit of a contradiction here? PW: I don't recall describing Match as meaningless and useless, and doubt that I would use such extreme terms; in fact, I have actually made some suggestions on the basis of it, and as such therefore, cannot possibly have considered it completely meaningless or useless. I acknowledge that Principal Investigators Reid and Hester are extremely eminent experts in the area of alcohol research. It is ironic that my comments on Match have made references to Reid and Hesters' *earlier* research, including that Match produced precisely the results that one would have expected from their earlier work, such as the lack of a " dosage effect " for treatment - so, in the absence of any other differences, one would expect 4 MET sessions to be as effective as the 12 provided of CBT and TSF. You state that it was a " well-designed research project " - but have not referred to the methodological criticisms I made of it. My 1500 word letter on the subject, which was based on a less formal one I wrote to this list, was considered worthy of being printed in the The Addictions Newsletter. That would seem to suggest to that my arguments were of scientific credibility, even if they were in fact mistaken. That letter was followed by several in response, also posted on this list, which were highly complimentary of what I had written. Only critical response was included by Bruce Liese in TAN - that by Fred Rotgers. Apart from Fred's letter, *Nobody* has responded to my criticisms of Match with a *scientific* argument as to why my criticisms are invalid. Some have claimed that a control group could not be included for ethical reasons - an invalid argument as Duncan argued at the time, and in fact I consider it unethical *not* to have included one, in that it would have told us much more valuable information if it had. Turning to Fred's objections, it is worth noting that Fred is by no means uncritical of Match himself, but his criticisms are based on its External Validity, while mine are mostly on its Internal. His response to me was essentially that Match wasn't intended to demonstrate absolute or even relative treatment efficacy but was to investigate the possible effectiveness of matching patient characteristics to treatment modalities. My response to this is that there is no point in trying to find out the effectiveness of patient matching in the absence of evidence that any of the modalities is actually effective at all, and *that* could only be demonstrated with a control group. [it is also worth noting that Match is incessantly being used as supposedly demonstrating both absolute and relative efficacy, which it wasn't supposed to do. I have seem promotional material from a 12-step rehab in the UK which includes an article from a UK national newspaper claiming that Match showed that " TSF is the best " - i.e a relative (and by implication absolute) effectiveness claim. Similarly, I have seen Match used to claim evidence for TSF effectiveness on the basis of its overall performance comparability to CBT.] To this it can be responded that there is already supportive evidence for both MET and CBT in previous studies, but I contend that that isn't good enough, in that for robustness it is necessary to have one on every occasion - not least here because the size and statistical power of Match gave a splendid opportunity which ought not to have been missed, especially with the lack of previous experimental support for TSF. This belief is also supported because of the problems of *External* Validity that bother Fred. Even though previous studies might have demonstrated effectiveness for MET and CBT, how could we be sure these would be held up for the particular client sample used in Match? One comment that Fred made was that the " methodologically sophisticated " can construct controls by comparing each treatment with the other two; to which I respond: What happens when we do this? No treatment is effective above control! Finally, it is not of value just to find statistical significance for a hypothesis; one needs a significant effect size too. If it should transpire that the average IQ of everyone called " S**** " is 1 point above the average of everyone called " Watts " this would almost certainly be massively statistically significant, and of scarcely any practical significance at all. Certainly it would be of precious little value in determining who was bringing greater intelligence to bear on the present debate. While effect sizes can be constructed from those apparently statistically significant matching effects observed, what use is this if we do not know what the effect size of the treatments over control are? It is like trying to determine whether an average IQ difference of 1 point is worth bothering about without knowing what the standard deviation of the IQ scale is. JS: > What I > have seen in your writings is that anything that is negative about AA you > accept as pure fact and anything that is positive about AA you discard as > meaningless. I do in fact apply a critical approach to negative appraisals of AA, and do not discard supportive things as automatically meaningless, but critique them in what I consider to be an appropriate scientific manner. JS: > As for the horror stories on the 12 step free zone list and The news group > Alt.recovery.from-12-steps, a while back I asked the person who is supposedly > writing a book containing these so called horror stories what method she > intended to use to verify the validity of these stories. She stated that she > did not intend to verify them as the individuals had to be telling the true > since they didn't like AA. You ask for citations about positive effects of > AA but are willing to accept negative reports at face value. That to me is > not a scientific approach. J**, even assuming you report this author's response accurately - it was THE AUTHOR's response, not mine. I don't automatically accept negative reports at face value. In fact, when one woman claimed to have been harassed by AA members by various means, I made several posts asking her how she knew that it was AA members who were doing this, and I also considered the possibility that she was suffering from a paranoid illness. But that aside, I didn't suggest that the accounts of these individuals automatically should be accepted as true. What I am saying is that they are a source of discourses abt AA and they are legitimate to exactly the same extent that the positive discourses, including the 80,000 in that stadium are. If you accept the stadium as evidence worthy of consideration (with all the problems associated with anecdotes), you should accept 12 step free stories as also evidence *worthy of consideration* - no more than that. If I am indeed biased, all you would have to do then would simply invoke the evidence I neglect - simply *declaring* me to be biased, even if true, does not by itself demonstrate that I am. I rather think the extremity of evidence selection and conclusions drawn you see in me is actually what exists in yourself, which careful comparison of your arguments and mind reveals. There is in fact one occasion where " anecdotal " evidence is totally legitimate; that of the counterexample. A single counter-example is all that is required to blow a universal hypothesis out of the water. Frequently, universal claims *are* made for AA. " No-one will call you an alcoholic " , " One can be an atheist and work the AA program " and " AA is compatible with anyone's religious views " etc. etc. One does not need to " verify " a committed Christian's or Jew's claim that they find AA offensive to their religious views - if they say they are, they are - and both of these have appeared on 12sf. It might be a awhile before 12sf membership reaches 80,000 - let alone two million, but it's growing. Pete Watts Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 2, 1999 Report Share Posted November 2, 1999 And more replies from me: --- Begin Forwarded Message --- On Mon, 1 Nov 1999 00:46:48 -0600 (CST) ER wrote: > Mr. Watts, I am curious: are you a clinician? No. > Have you ever personally > watched an alcoholic struggle in recovery and succeed? I have slept alongside them in rehab, if that counts. > Have you ever helped > one to succeed and watched his life improve? Not in a formal sense, but I have been friend to many; I still am, although I prefer to say " former alcoholics " as I think referring to ppl who have not met the criteria for alcohol dependence for years as " alcoholics " is silly, even if they do so of themselves, and the ones that now drink moderately even more so. > Have you attended any funerals > of clients who did not succeed in that struggle? Or is your knowledge of > addiction limited to your studies of learned journals? These are very revealing questions. I accept that practical work as a clinician could well teach a lot more than reading journals, but I doubt that attending a funeral could. What it could do, however, is cloud one's judgement with emotion. Addiction treatment providers are unique in that they tend to invoke their clients' *deaths* as proof of how important their work is, as well as the ones that get well. Also, although working in the field ina particular role (such as 12-step counsellor) has special advantages to understanding; it also has a drawback - the clinician's fallacy. Sometimes oine can get too close to a problem to see the whole picture; the bookworm researcher who doesn't 'get their hands dirty' also has a role. > Is your knowledge of > the AA Big Book limited to intellectual (and pseudo-intellectual) > deconstruction, or have you ever clung to the hope found in that volume > whilst drowning in a sea of booze? Like being a practitioner, being a *sufferer* of a disorder gives a unique and valuable perspective, but also carries with it the risk of putting too much emphasis on one's own experience over that of others. > On a more intimate note: have you ever > made any " mistakes " in your personal life? Would your sexual activities > hold up to the scrutiny of some future biographer? Did you ever cheat on > your taxes? Or an algebra test? (no, no, not projection: as a child I was > good at algebra until I so damaged my nervous system that I have the > greatest of difficulty keeping my paltry checking account balanced) Fail to > speak up when some minimum wage store clerk gave you an extra ten dollars in > change? Pee in the swimming pool? Fart in the theatre? (I don't suppose > you go to church, so you missed out on that opportunity). I do not know if > God exists. I used to pray " God get me out of this and I will never do it > again " but I always did it again until I accepted help from AA.. I'm not sure what the point of this diatribe is, but if it is in response my comments on , they were only in response to the previous ad hominem comments made on Skinner. I did not fire the first shot in this respect( and most certainly not on a personal level) and in any case they are not the basis of my argument. I must say I am rather saddened as well as disturbed by what you write below, as it seems a most inappropriate thing to appear on a professional list. > AA > suggested I pray for God's guidance in my life. I once knew an AA member, > now deceased of leukemia, with about ten years' abstinence at his death. > I'll never forget his description of how, when his disease was active, he > had to drink a water glass of whiskey every morning, so he could stop his > hands from shaking long enough to allow him to brush his teeth. In meetings > where the topic was " dealing with resentments " he liked to share the > problems he had with a sister-in-law. Advised by his AA sponsor to pray for > his in-law daily for two weeks, he did so. And on the fourteenth day she > fell and broke her leg! Definite proof, according to my AA compatriot, that > prayer works. What do you say, Mr. Watts? Shall we pray for one another? > I shall pray that you get down in the trenches with those of us who try and > try to help the poor suffering addict, despite managed care, despite > administrators who buy into " evaluation and outcomes instruments " written by > someone who has never witnessed a full-blown case of DT's. Elected > officials that become such by promising to build more jail cells to protect > the decent people (read: voters) from all those drug fiends who worship the > Devil? (Do you suppose He exists too?) All readers, and Mr. Watts, please > excuse my soapbox diatribe. I confess, Mr Watts! I am still alive after all > the near-fatal mistakes I have made; therefore there must be a God! (Don;t > look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith. > Graham Greene taught me that faith is belief in the Almighty in the absence > of proof that he exists. Just ask Oppenheimer). > God loves you, Mr. Watts, and so do I! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 2, 1999 Report Share Posted November 2, 1999 And more replies from me: --- Begin Forwarded Message --- On Mon, 1 Nov 1999 00:46:48 -0600 (CST) ER wrote: > Mr. Watts, I am curious: are you a clinician? No. > Have you ever personally > watched an alcoholic struggle in recovery and succeed? I have slept alongside them in rehab, if that counts. > Have you ever helped > one to succeed and watched his life improve? Not in a formal sense, but I have been friend to many; I still am, although I prefer to say " former alcoholics " as I think referring to ppl who have not met the criteria for alcohol dependence for years as " alcoholics " is silly, even if they do so of themselves, and the ones that now drink moderately even more so. > Have you attended any funerals > of clients who did not succeed in that struggle? Or is your knowledge of > addiction limited to your studies of learned journals? These are very revealing questions. I accept that practical work as a clinician could well teach a lot more than reading journals, but I doubt that attending a funeral could. What it could do, however, is cloud one's judgement with emotion. Addiction treatment providers are unique in that they tend to invoke their clients' *deaths* as proof of how important their work is, as well as the ones that get well. Also, although working in the field ina particular role (such as 12-step counsellor) has special advantages to understanding; it also has a drawback - the clinician's fallacy. Sometimes oine can get too close to a problem to see the whole picture; the bookworm researcher who doesn't 'get their hands dirty' also has a role. > Is your knowledge of > the AA Big Book limited to intellectual (and pseudo-intellectual) > deconstruction, or have you ever clung to the hope found in that volume > whilst drowning in a sea of booze? Like being a practitioner, being a *sufferer* of a disorder gives a unique and valuable perspective, but also carries with it the risk of putting too much emphasis on one's own experience over that of others. > On a more intimate note: have you ever > made any " mistakes " in your personal life? Would your sexual activities > hold up to the scrutiny of some future biographer? Did you ever cheat on > your taxes? Or an algebra test? (no, no, not projection: as a child I was > good at algebra until I so damaged my nervous system that I have the > greatest of difficulty keeping my paltry checking account balanced) Fail to > speak up when some minimum wage store clerk gave you an extra ten dollars in > change? Pee in the swimming pool? Fart in the theatre? (I don't suppose > you go to church, so you missed out on that opportunity). I do not know if > God exists. I used to pray " God get me out of this and I will never do it > again " but I always did it again until I accepted help from AA.. I'm not sure what the point of this diatribe is, but if it is in response my comments on , they were only in response to the previous ad hominem comments made on Skinner. I did not fire the first shot in this respect( and most certainly not on a personal level) and in any case they are not the basis of my argument. I must say I am rather saddened as well as disturbed by what you write below, as it seems a most inappropriate thing to appear on a professional list. > AA > suggested I pray for God's guidance in my life. I once knew an AA member, > now deceased of leukemia, with about ten years' abstinence at his death. > I'll never forget his description of how, when his disease was active, he > had to drink a water glass of whiskey every morning, so he could stop his > hands from shaking long enough to allow him to brush his teeth. In meetings > where the topic was " dealing with resentments " he liked to share the > problems he had with a sister-in-law. Advised by his AA sponsor to pray for > his in-law daily for two weeks, he did so. And on the fourteenth day she > fell and broke her leg! Definite proof, according to my AA compatriot, that > prayer works. What do you say, Mr. Watts? Shall we pray for one another? > I shall pray that you get down in the trenches with those of us who try and > try to help the poor suffering addict, despite managed care, despite > administrators who buy into " evaluation and outcomes instruments " written by > someone who has never witnessed a full-blown case of DT's. Elected > officials that become such by promising to build more jail cells to protect > the decent people (read: voters) from all those drug fiends who worship the > Devil? (Do you suppose He exists too?) All readers, and Mr. Watts, please > excuse my soapbox diatribe. I confess, Mr Watts! I am still alive after all > the near-fatal mistakes I have made; therefore there must be a God! (Don;t > look for logic in that statement, or any other statement regarding faith. > Graham Greene taught me that faith is belief in the Almighty in the absence > of proof that he exists. Just ask Oppenheimer). > God loves you, Mr. Watts, and so do I! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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