Frankly, I don’t see how any alcoholic makes it through the struggle to stay sober, considering the Exalted Place that alcohol holds in U.S. culture, including Christian culture.
You don’t dare say anything against alcohol. People, including Christians (especially Catholic Christians) jump up and say “Well, MOST people drink responsibly.” Yeah, yeah, yeah, sure they do. Tell that to all the poor families whose relatives were killed in drunk driving accidents last week by “responsible” drinkers who just had little lapse. As a Catholic, I don’t favor a death penalty, BUT…if we have to have a death penalty, I think it should be reserved for those who drink and then kill someone, especially when they drink and drive. Grrrr…
I work in a hospital, and people there should know better, right? We have college degrees and in some cases, post-graduate study and doctoral degrees. Our hospital mission statement talks about “caring for people.” Fat baloney! All the time, people–not just kids, but people my age! (55) sit around the break room and talk about how smashed they were after the party they attended, and how they probably should not have driven home. OMG!!! I have to leave when people start talking about these situations. But if I called the cops to report them, even the cops would say, “Sorry, lady, we can’t do anything about it.” Of course they can’t. No one can. People keep drinking and driving, and no one can do a thing because everyone does it, including the cops, the judges, the lawyers. The only people who don’t drink and drive seem to be the people who don’t drink.
But it’s OK. MOST people drink responsibly. Alcohol is a right, not a privilege.
All this crazy talk of banning guns. Alcohol kills so many people in so many ways, and destroys so many families and relationships and even companies. Yet, no talk of banning alcohol. Of course it will never be banned, because we tried it during Prohibition and the result was disastrous and we’re still trying to deal with the negative consequences of Prohibition today. (Not sure why people think this won’t happen again if guns are banned.)
Anyway, considering how alcohol is absolutely untouchable, and is paraded across the television screens during most major sporting events, it’s amazing to me that anyone who is alcoholic is able to stop drinking. I admire them. I am a (pop) soda addict; to me, pop is not just a sweet drink, it’s puppies and singing on hillside, because those ads have worked themselves into my very soul. To give up pop would be to give up life, at least in my thinking. I gave it up for two years once, and went back to it because life wasn’t as good without it. I don’t see how alcoholics are able to put their past good associations with alcohol behind them, especially when everyone else is drinking and having such a great time.
So IMO, ANYTHING that helps an alcoholic to stop drinking and stay sober is GOOD, and we shouldn’t criticize it. If someone has a different method than AA, that’s good, because AA doesn’t help everyone. (I tried it for overeating and pop addiction, and it was a joke to me.) But there are plenty of people for whom AA works–to take away their success is just wrong. We should be glad when ANYONE is able to give up alcohol, considering how our U.S. culture is soaked with alcohol.