Guest guest Posted October 12, 2001 Report Share Posted October 12, 2001 --- no_never_met_him@... wrote: > Hello, > > I once heard that 50% of the authors of the pesonal > stories in the > book " Alcoholics Anonymous " died drunk. > > Or maybe that figure was actually that 50% of the > touted first 100 > members of AA died drunk. > > Can anyone on the list confirm this and refer me to > some reliable > source for this information? > > On a related note, someone once told me that the > reason some stories > in the Big Book have been removed in newer editions > is that those > authors had not remained sober. Can anyone confirm > this? > > Thanks again, > > That wouldn't surprise me. I know of a couple. there is " The First Woman to become sober in A.A. " . Marty Mann was not the first woman to become sober in A.A. She was the first to stay sober. The first woman to become sober was Florence R., who wrote the Big Book chapter A Feminine Victory, which appeared in the first edition. Unfortunately, the Twelve Steps didn't work for her, either, for very long, and she relapsed, and was gone. So her story was silently removed from the second edition of the Big Book in 1955, and A.A. started yammering a new party line about how Marty Mann was the first woman to achieve sobriety in A.A.. This " revisionist history " routine is just totally typical of A.A.. They have no respect for the truth, and change history whenever and however it suits them. See: http://www.geocities.com/ageorange/orange-cult.html#woman_stay And then there was Parkhurst, the author of the chapter " to Employers " , whom Bill drove out of A.A. see: http://www.geocities.com/ageorange/orange-aacoa.html __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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