Page iii The Alcoholic Man What You Can Learn from the Heroic Journeys of Recovering Alcoholics Second Edition Sylvia Cary, M.A., M.F.T. LOWELL HOUSE LOS ANGELES NTC/Contemporary Publishing Group Page iv Library of Congress CataloginginPublication Data Cary, Sylvia. The alcoholic man : what you can learn from the heroic journeys of recoving alcoholics / Sylvia Cary. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0737300892 1. Alcoholics—Rehabilitation—United States—Case studies. 2. Alcoholism—United States—Psychological aspects—Case studies. 3. Selfactualization (Psychology)—Case studies I. Title. HV5279.C38 1999 362.29'28—dc20 995441 CIP Published by Lowell House. A division of NTC/Contemporary Publishing Group, Inc. 4255 West Touhy Avenue, Lincolnwood (Chicago), Illinois 606461975 U.S.A. Copyright © 1999 by NTC/Contemporay Publishing Group. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of NTC/Contemporary Publishing Group, Inc. Printed in the United States of America International Standard Book Number: 0737300892 99 00 01 02 03 04 RRD 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Page v FOR THE HEROES IN MY LIFE For These TwentyOne Brave Interviewees With Admiration For Sponsor Jack With Appreciation For The Late Bill W. With Gratitude For My Husband, Lance With Love Page vii Contents Foreword xiii Jokichi Takamine, M.D. Preface xxi Introduction Toward a New Kind of Hero 1 Clean and Sober and Then What? 2 The Long Haul 3 Gentlemen, Choose Your Definitions 4 What's "Sobriety"? 7 Length of Sobriety 8 Who Are the Men? 9 Local Talent 9 History of AA 101 11 Why Only AA? 12 For Wives, Lovers, and Others 13 The Treatment Mystique 15 Spontaneous Remission from Addiction 16 Chapter 1 19 Can an Alcoholic Change His Spots? Jim, Sober 1 Year. The last of a dying breed—a classic "pure" alcoholic 21 Jason, Sober Four Months Addicted to everything but alcohol, he feared 25 that getting off drugs would take away his creative muse Brian, Sober Five Years Drank and used drugs at age ten, graduated to 28 heroin and then robbery to pay for it all. In prison, a friend's death triggered a spontaneous remission Nagging Issues in Early Sobriety 30 Sex 31 Creativity 32 Chapter 2 35 All Newcomers are Crazy: What Everybody Knows 35 Detox Without Tears 37 More Will Be Revealed 39 Love and Work 40 Page viii The Wrath of Women 41 I Liked You Better Drunk 42 Louis, Sober 30 Days Always played the role of the "responsible" one in the 43 family, even when he was drinking. His job now is to take care of himself Chapter 3 53 Those Frightening Firsts: Welcome to Sixty Days of Sobriety 53 GreenEyed Monsters 56 Dragon Slaying 56 MeetingsMeetingsMeetings 57 Sponsorship 58 Mark, Sober 60 Days When sober, prone to depression. When he drank, a 59 party animal that was sometimes violent Chapter 4 67 The Armpit of Sobriety: Depression 68 Anxiety 70 Emotional Involvements 71 Norman, Sober 120 Days Suicidal since childhood, stuffing his true feelings 73 and being Mr. Nice Guy. He now recognizes these as traps Chapter 5 81 On Being a Raving Lunatic about Sobriety: Overdoing a Good Thing 81 First GoRound with the Twelve Steps 83 Breaking the "Don'tGetInvolved" Rule 85 Utilizing the Sponsor 85 "Charlie Brown," Sober One Year Son of a selfmade millionaire who gave 86 him money, but never a personal gift. He was a "bad boy" from the start, fascinated with violence and gangs Chapter 6 95 Matching the Walk to the Talk: Out of Mothballs 97 The "God Bit" 100 Lenny, Sober Two Years Child of the "Sixties" with a picture perfect 100 childhood, he moved through drugs, sex, and rock 'n roll Chapter 7 109 Is That All There Is? A Path Through a Mine Field 109 One Day at a Time—Forever 110 Page ix Gil, Sober Three Years Thanks to his alcoholic older brothers, he began 112 using beer and pot at the age of six. His biggest problem is still peer pressure Chapter 8 123 Sophomoritis: Siren's Song 123 Beyond Wise Foolishness 124 The Right Stuff 126 Rusty, Sober Four Years At sixteen he drank beer for breakfast and 127 graduated to a $400 aday cocaine habit that led him to deal for and then steal from the Coloumbian Mafia Chapter 9 139 Second Surrender: Second Milestone 139 "As If" Courage 140 Letting Go of the Branch 142 John, Sober Seven years Scottish grandson of an IRA hero, his family 142 wanted him to be a priest. He ended up a house painter who was fired for being drunk. A classic spiritual awakening saved him from almost certain death Chapter 10 155 Hitting Stride: Becoming His Own Man 155 A Touch of Heroism 157 Barry, Sober Ten Years Clinical psychologist and former professional 157 drummer. In second grade his mother took him out of school because she didn't want to get up in the mornings Chapter 11 167 Persistence: Don't Quit Five Minutes Before the Miracle 167 Making a Dent 168 Beyond Survival Issues 169 Arthur, Sober Fifteen Years A middleage, overweight divorced movie and 170 TV agent, sobriety has not fixed his problems with depression and loneliness Chapter 12 179 Balancing Act: Overshooting the Mark 179 The Spiritual Path versus the "Householder" Path 180 Roger, Sober Twenty Years An Engineering professor, who grew up sickly 182 and always felt he was "too smart" for AA Page x Ken, Sober Twenty Years Son of an alcoholic mother and father. He called 189 himself a "hopeless case," until AA finally took Chapter 13 197 Old Ideas: Bad Versus Good "Old Ideas" 197 Onion Peeling 198 Walter, Sober Twentytwo Years. Seventeen years in a wellknown singing 198 group until a club owner refused to let him on stage because he was too drunk. Sober he must face lifelong ambivalence about being black Dean, Sober Twentytwo Years. Drinking got him thrown out of dental 206 school, the Marines, several marriages, and a job selling encyclopedias. A bail bondsman got him into AA. He's now a successful attorney Chapter 14 215 The Slip: Slips Don't "Just Happen" 215 When a Drink Is Not Just a Drink 217 Phoenix Out of the Ashes 218 Hugh, Sober Thirty Years/Ninety Days A periodic alcoholic, dean of a 219 business school, he slipped after being sober 30 years Chapter 15 229 Secrets of a Longer Sobriety: NeverEnding Commitment 229 Disciple Status 230 Warren, Sober Thirtyfive Years Age seventyfive, former radio announcer 231 and band musician from the days when everyone boasted about "horrendous hangovers" Chapter 16 243 Keeping it Simple: Phil, Sober Fortyone Years Former actor and singer and an angry drunk. 244 He drank at people Ray, Sober Fortythree Years Son of affluent teetotalers, he killed six men in 248 three separate drinking bouts Page xi Epilogue 259 Sobriety 2000 AA's Survivability 260 AA As a Family, Tribe, or Herd 261 Sobriety 2000 261 What Every Hero Should Know About Character 264 The Perks of Character 266 The Secret of Success 267 Appendix A 269 The Generic Addiction Quiz Appendix B 275 Seven Steps to Trigger a Spontaneous Remission Appendix C 279 How to Upgrade Your Character, Index 281 Page xiii Foreword Ten years ago, when I wrote the original Foreword to psychotherapist Sylvia Cary's The Alcoholic Man, I was struck by three things: That she was writing about longterm recovery (which others weren't writing about); that she referred to the recovering alcoholic man as a "hero" (certainly not a name anybody else was calling him, especially when he was drinking); and that she was able to look right into the hearts of eighteen recovering alcoholic men and describe from their point of view— based on her interviews with them—what the recovery experience is really like, and how it feels to get sober and stay sober year after year. Many times, since the first edition of The Alcoholic Man came out, I have found myself using it as a tool in my practice as a physician treating addiction. When I have to confront an alcoholic man still in denial, or a man who is making those tentative first steps into sobriety, or the family member who has a stake in the alcoholic's fate, I often give them a copy of The Alcoholic Man and say, "Here, this may help you understand what I'm talking about. It explains a lot." Anyone who deals with substance abuse knows that tools like this can be a lifesaver. I'm grateful that Sylvia Cary has written a book that provides me with something that makes my job easier. The physician's role in working with alcoholics is a tricky one. When you tell a patient he has a heart condition, he hears it as a diagnosis. But, when you tell a patient he has alcoholism or any
Description: