The Best of Grapevine, Vols. 1,2,3. Группа авторов
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу The Best of Grapevine, Vols. 1,2,3 - Группа авторов страница 13
Most of the jealousy I suffer from today is in a disguised form; I have simply allowed it to appear in a new mask. It makes itself known abruptly, however, when I feel something good is missing from my life. I feel tense and bitter and unhappy—it is my old enemy again, and I throw him out.
I give AA’s Fifth Step a great deal of the credit for my progress. The Fifth Step is something of a mystery to me; I’m unable to understand why it should be such an effective part of the program. It is, though, and it got me off dead center on this problem. Unable to quell the vicious feelings myself, I talked them over with certain other members, and sometimes even brought them up at group meetings. There was marked improvement almost every time, particularly on the occasions when it had seemed especially difficult to mention the subject. If a person is able to recognize that he is a victim of jealousy, then the Fifth Step—talking the thing over with another human being—will certainly help.
I suspect, though, that most people who suffer from jealousy are afflicted with it in a disguised form. It has escaped detection and remains in the shadows like a beast of prey, appearing only now and then to make sudden, lightning attacks when its victim is most vulnerable. Jealousy in its meaner forms is too crude for most of us, but we would do well to look for the subtle expressions of it.
Many of us cannot help feeling jealous under the following circumstances:
1 When somebody else gets something (a promotion, a possession) which we have wanted for ourselves.
2 When we are bested in a hotly competitive situation, and our own abilities are shown to be second to another’s.
3 When we are rejected.
4 When somebody else is praised to our own disadvantage.
In most cases, our jealousy is toward acquaintances and close relatives. As I mentioned, it was only in the primitive world of constant drunkenness that I could be jealous of strangers. One should not be deluded just because he is indifferent to the successes of people he reads about in the newspapers. Were these stories about people whom he knew intimately, he might find himself smoldering with rage because fortune had blessed such “undeserving people” while bypassing him. And it does no good simply to hold the violence of your feelings in check, while outwardly appearing to be glad for your friends’ good luck. The damage is in the way this evil thing poisons and strangles the human heart—and eventually destroys fine personal relationships.
Aside from recommending the Fifth Step, I have no world-shaking news of fast-fast-fast relief for the jealousy sufferer. I believe that any person who is able to face it, and to search for it in himself, is already on his way out of the woods. Still, here are a few things to keep in mind about jealousy:
1 It may stem partly from our own feelings of inadequacy. We secretly doubt ourselves, and resent anything that calls attention to our own lack of achievement.
2 It indicates a lack of trust in God; an unwillingness to accept the role God has assigned us for reasons known only to himself.
3 Jealousy is the wreckage of thwarted ambition. Too much ambition, in the AA member, often means a loss of contact with the principles of the program. Such a person loses even if he wins, and loses more painfully, when he does.
4 It has a lot of self-centeredness and lovelessness in it. After all, we must admit that we don’t really love the people whom we envy. In fact, we are at that point dangerously close to wishing them bad luck! We are then thinking only of our own twisted desires.
One last thing to remember about jealousy is that it is a universal human affliction. Even the saints suffered from it; even Peter and Paul suffered from it, despite their marvelous spiritual experiences. So it is not a question of whether one is bothered by it, it is simply a matter of degree! And don’t forget that there can also be jealousy between AA members trying to do good work. As Henry Drummond said in his wonderful little book called The Greatest Thing in the World, “The most despicable of all the unworthy moods…assuredly waits for us on the threshold of every work, unless we are fortified with…grace of magnanimity.’’
M.B., Jackson, Mich.
Complacency—the Enemy Within
September 1961
I’m in my eleventh year of sobriety in AA and it’s not at all like I thought it would be in those first few tremulous months.
How did I think it would be?
Well, the old hands in our area were dry five to six years when I went shyly through a meeting hall door for the first time. As I became aware of them as people, there developed in me a sense of awe for the old-timer of the day.
From my own insecure stance, I thought, ‘How wonderful to have a platform of sober years to work from. Surely, these men and women who have been dry for so long have a security from the horrors of alcoholic drinking.’
I longed for that security.
Then a decade whirled and I became conscious that in some eyes I, too, had become an old-timer. A friend who was to be chairman of a special “big meeting” asked me to dig up a speaker for him.
“I want all the speakers to be in the six- to eighteen-month group,’’ he said. “They are the ones who pack a real punch.’’
I pondered this.
I pondered it even harder after attending that meeting. The speakers had great power. All talked out of the remembrance of recent agony and great gratitude for their release.
Freedom! Freedom from alcoholism was the theme. How purposeful they made AA life seem!
For the last couple of years I have been uneasily aware of once-active members who have disappeared from meetings, and disturbed by reports of slips suffered by people with years of sobriety. Where was their platform of security? Where was my own?
Recently, a bouncy Twelfth-stepper, just over a year dry, brought a slippee to my door. Both were in varying degrees of desperation. The AA man wanted my help in solving a difficult hospitalization problem. The sick man, it appeared, had made himself unwelcome at almost every institution in the area.
The sick one was babbling and arrogant. I became resentful and irritated. A couple of phone calls solved the problem and I made a half-hearted offer to accompany them to the sanitarium. The offer was politely turned down.
When they left, I was overwhelmed with shame. True, I had given of my past Twelfth Step experience, but nothing else; no compassion, none of the essential friendship of AA. A chore had been accomplished and my friend knew that for me it had been nothing more.
Is this a common problem of the older AA member—remoteness in time and feeling from the sick alcoholic stumbling in his search for recovery?
One does not, I think, become suddenly remote. It creeps up, as smugness and security displace concern for our own sobriety and that of others.
How secure is my eleven-year sobriety today? As secure, I am forced to admit, as that of any other self-deceived older member who, to the dismay of his friends, has returned to drink. As secure, insight tells me, as that of the newest member, because my sobriety and his