“The Word-of-Mouth Program”/“Six Steps”
of Bill W.
(Compiled, and with a
Commentary, by Dick B. and Ken B.)
By Dick B. and Ken B.
© 2014
Anonymous. All rights reserved
On a number of occasions,
Bill W. discussed how his “new version of the program, now the ‘Twelve Steps,’”
came into being.[1] In doing so, he usually
stated or implied that the Twelve Steps evolved out of six predecessor “practices,”
“principles,” elements, or “steps.” For example, in a talk Bill read at the
105th annual meeting of The American Psychiatric Association, in Montreal,
Quebec, Canada, on May 23-27, 1949, he identified “the particular practices”
which his old schoolmate from Burr and Burton Seminary days, Ebby T., had
shared with him and that had been given to Ebby by some “Oxford Group people”:
Two alcoholics [Bill W. and Ebby T.] talk across a kitchen table [in late November 1934]. . . . My friend had arrived to tell how he had been released from alcohol. . . . Having made contact with the Oxford Group, . . . my friend had been specially impressed by an alcoholic he had met [Rowland H.], a former patient of C. G. Jung. Unsuccessfully treating this individual for a year, Dr. Jung had finally advised him to try religious conversion as his last chance. While disagreeing with many tenets of the Oxford Group, my former schoolmate did, however, ascribe his new sobriety to certain ideas that this alcoholic and other Oxford Group people [Shepherd (“Shep”) C. and Cebra G.] had given him. The particular practices my friend had selected for himself were simple:
1.
He admitted he was powerless to solve his own problems.
2.
He got honest with himself as never before; made an examination of
his conscience.
3.
He made a rigorous confession of his personal defects.
4.
He surveyed his distorted relations with people, visiting them to
make restitution.
5.
He resolved to devote himself to helping others in need, without
the usual demand for personal prestige or material gain.
6.
By meditation he sought
God’s direction for his life and help to practice these principles at all
times.
. . . The spark
that was to become Alcoholics Anonymous had been struck. What then did happen
across the kitchen table? Perhaps this speculation were better left to medicine
and religion. I confess I do not know. Possibly conversion will never be fully understood. Looking outward from
such an experience, I can only say with fidelity what seemed to happen. Yet
something did happen that instantly changed the current of my life.[2]
(emphasis added)
In his talk before The
American Psychiatric Association in 1949, Bill asserted: (1) Ebby had shared
with him six “practices” that several Oxford Group people had given him (Ebby);
and (2) Ebby had used the word God in
setting forth the sixth “practice”—with no modifying or qualifying words.
In a talk Bill gave on April
28, 1958, at the New York City Medical Society on Alcoholism, he spoke of six
“principles . . . [his old school friend from Burr and Burton Seminary, Ebby
T.] had learned from the Oxford Group” and had shared with him in November
1934:
He
[Ebby] came to my house one day in November, 1934, and sat across the kitchen
table from me while I drank. No thanks, he didn’t want any liquor, he said.
Much surprised, I asked what had got into him. Looking straight at me, he said
he had “got religion.” . . . As politely as possible, I asked what brand of
religion he had.
Then he told me of his conversations
with Mr. R., [Rowland H.] and how hopeless alcoholism really was, according to
Dr. Carl Jung. . . . Next Ebby enumerated the
principles he had learned from the Oxford Group. In substance here they are
as my friend applied them to himself in 1934:
1.
Ebby
admitted that he was powerless to manage his own life.
2.
He
became honest with himself as never before; made an “examination of
conscience.”
3.
He made
a rigorous confession of his personal defects and thus quit living alone with
his problems.
4.
He
surveyed his distorted relations with other people, visiting them to make what
amends he could.
5.
He
resolved to devote himself to helping others in need, without the usual demands
for personal prestige or material gain.
6.
By
meditation, he sought God’s direction
for his life and to help to practice these principles of conduct at all times.[3] (emphasis added)
In language similar to that
used in his 1949 talk read at The American Psychiatric Association, Bill told
those present at the New York City Medical Society on Alcoholism meeting in
1958: (1) Ebby had “enumerated the principles he had learned from the Oxford
Group;” and (2) Ebby had used the word God
in setting forth the sixth “practice”—with no modifying or qualifying
words.
And Bill added later in his
1949 speech at the New York Medical Society on Alcoholism meeting:
By
the spring of 1939, our Society had produced a book which was called
“Alcoholics Anonymous.” In this volume, our methods were carefully described.
For the sake of greater clarity and thoroughness, the word-of-mouth program which my friend Ebby had given to me was
enlarged into what we now call A.A.’s “Twelve Suggested Steps for recovery.”
. . . This was the backbone of our book. To substantiate A.A. methods, our book
included twenty-eight case histories.[4]
(emphasis added)
Note that Bill stated in
Ebby’s sixth “principle” listed above that Ebby had “sought God’s
direction”—not the direction of “a Power greater than ourselves;”[5] not the direction of “God as we understood Him;”[6] and not the direction of “a
Higher Power.”[7] And Bill claimed that “. . .
the word-of-mouth program which my friend Ebby had given to me was enlarged
into . . . A.A.’s ‘Twelve Suggested Steps for recovery.’”
In September 1954, Bill had
made a series of audio recordings about his life. Transcripts made of those
recordings were later published as his “autobiography.”[8]
In the audio recordings, Bill stated that Ebby had also come to see him during
his (Bill’s) fourth and final stay for alcoholism at Towns Hospital December
11-18, 1934.[9] And Bill said that during
Ebby’s visit:
.
. . [Ebby] began to repeat his pat little formula for getting over drinking.
Briefly and without ado he did so. Again he told
[1] how he found he couldn’t run his own life,
[2] how he got honest with himself as never
before.
[3] How he’d been making amends to the people
he’d damaged.
[4]
How he’d been trying to give of himself without putting a price tag on his
efforts, and finally
[5]
how he’d tried prayer just as an
experiment and had found to his surprise that it worked.[10]
(emphasis added)
In both his talk before The
American Psychiatric Association in 1949 and his talk before the New York City
Medical Society on Alcoholism in 1958, Bill had listed six “practices” or “principles” which he said Ebby “had learned
from the Oxford Group” and had shared with him in November 1934 at Bill’s home
on 182 Clinton Street in New York. Yet when Bill made the audio recordings in
1954 which eventually became his “autobiography,” he listed only five elements which Ebby had
shared with him when he (Ebby) repeated his “pat little formula for getting
over drinking” during Ebby’s visit to Towns Hospital to see Bill in December
1934. And the wording of the five elements in Ebby’s “pat little formula” varied
significantly from the wording of the six “practices” or “principles” Bill had
listed in his 1949 and 1958 talks. In particular, as we focus in this series of
videos on the cure for alcoholism through the power and love of God that A.A.’s
cofounders Bill W. and Dr. Bob found, let’s be sure to observe differences in
wording such as the complete omission of the word God from the five-element “pat little formula” Ebby shared with
Bill at Towns Hospital in December 1934. The closest Bill got to the word God in the five-element “pat little
formula” list was his comment that Ebby had “tried prayer . . . and . . . it
worked.” That statement certainly seems weak in comparison with the following
assertion by Bill in his own personal story in the Big Book:
.
. . [M]y friend [Ebby] sat before me, and he made the point-blank declaration
that God had done for him what he could
not do for himself. His human will had failed. Doctors had pronounced him
incurable.[11] (emphasis added)
As we will see again and
again as we continue to examine various lists of five(!) or six “practices”/”principles”/elements/”steps”
which Bill claimed over the years were the direct antecedents of the “Twelve
Steps” in the Big Book, the wording of the five or six items did not agree from
one list to another—particularly when it came to mentions of the word God.
In Bill W.’s 1949
presentation before The American Psychiatric Association, in his 1958
presentation before the New York City Medical Society on Alcoholism, and his
personal story in the Big Book, Bill indicated that Ebby had used the
unmodified word God in identifying
the source of his (Ebby’s) deliverance from alcoholism. As Bill put it in his
(Bill’s) story in the Big Book as he reviewed Ebby’s visit to Bill’s home:
Thus
was I convinced that God is
concerned with us humans when we want Him
enough. At long last I saw, I felt, I believed. Scales of pride and prejudice
fell from my eyes. A new world came into view.[12]
(emphasis added)
In other discussions of the
six “practices,” “principles,” elements, or “steps” that Bill claimed were in
use before he wrote the Twelve Steps in 1938, Bill spoke of a gradual evolution
of a “word-of-mouth program” involving “six steps,” rather than stating or
implying that Ebby had given Bill the “practices,” “principles,” or elements in
late-November 1934 that led directly to the Twelve Steps Bill wrote in 1938.
For example, Bill stated:
Since Ebby’s visit to me in the fall of 1934 we had gradually evolved what we called “the
word-of-mouth program.” Most of the
basic ideas had come from the Oxford Groups, William James, and Dr. Silkworth.
Though subject to considerable variation, it all boiled down into a pretty
consistent procedure which comprised six steps. These were approximately as
follows:
1.
We
admitted that we were licked, that we were powerless over alcohol.
2.
We made
a moral inventory of our defects or sins.
3.
We
confessed or shared our shortcomings with another person in confidence.
4.
We made
restitution to all those we had harmed by our drinking.
5.
We tried
to help other alcoholics, with no thought of reward in money or prestige.
6.
We
prayed to whatever God we thought there
was for power to practice these precepts.[13] (emphasis added)
After listing “six steps”
which varied in wording from the six “practices” or “principles” Bill had said
Ebby had given Bill at the late-November 1934 meeting at 182 Clinton Street,
Bill said: “This was the substance of what, by the fall of 1938, we were telling
newcomers.”[14]
Note carefully in Bill W.’s
recitation of “the word-of-mouth program” and its “six steps” in Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age the
following two phrases: (1) “[s]ince Ebby’s visit to me in the fall of 1934;”
and (2) “we had gradually evolved.” Note also the sentence: “Most of the basic
ideas had come from the Oxford Groups, William James, and Dr. Silkworth.” Bill
seems here to have moved away from directly attributing to Ebby and his late
November 1934 visit “the word-of-mouth program” and its six [or five!]
“practices,” “principles,” or elements. Rather he speaks of a gradual evolution
that occurred since Ebby’s first visit to see Bill at 182 Clinton Street. In
addition, rather than attributing the six “steps” solely to Ebby and Ebby’s
three Oxford Group mentors (Rowland H., Shep C., and Cebra G.), Bill expands
the sources beyond just “the Oxford Groups” to include also: (a) William James
(by way of James’s book The Varieties of
Religious Experience); and (b) Dr. William D. Silkworth (with whom Ebby had
had no connection of which we are aware).
In a 1963 letter to Rev. Sam
Shoemaker, Bill W. put even more distance between Ebby’s discussions with him
(Bill) in late 1934 and “the word-of-mouth program” comprised of “six steps.”
Bill wrote to Sam on April 23, 1963:
After the alcoholics parted company with the
O.G. [= Oxford Group] here in New York
[Bill and Lois W. had left the Oxford Group in about August 1937], we developed a word-of-mouth program
of six steps which was simply a paraphrase of what we had heard and felt at
your meetings.[15] The Twelve Steps of A.A.
simply represented an attempt to state in more detail, breadth and depth, what
we had been taught—primarily by you.[16]
(emphasis added)
Bill’s statement in his
letter to Rev. Sam Shoemaker quoted above echoes an earlier comment Bill made
relating to Sam’s speech at A.A.’s International Convention in St. Louis in
1955:
There
came next to the lectern a figure that not many A.A.’s had seen before, the
Episcopal clergyman Sam Shoemaker. It was from him that Dr. Bob and I in the
beginning had absorbed most of the principles that were afterward embodied in
the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous, . . .
.
. . [T]he important things is this: the early A.A. got its ideas of
self-examination, acknowledgment of character defects, restitution for harm
done, and working with others straight from the Oxford Groups and directly from
Sam Shoemaker, their former leader in America, and from nowhere else.[17]
The statement: “. . .
[S]traight from the Oxford Groups and directly from Sam Shoemaker, their former
leader in America, and from nowhere else” does not seem to leave much room for
Ebby, does it?
In his July 1953 A.A. Grapevine article titled “A
Fragment of History: Origin of the Twelve Steps,” Bill W. presented what he
called the “principles” of “the so-called word-of-mouth program of our
pioneering time”:
During the next three years after Dr. Bob’s
recovery [Dr. Bob took his last drink
in June 1935], our growing groups at
Akron, New York, and Cleveland evolved
the so-called word-of-mouth program
of our pioneering time. As we commenced
to form a Society separate from the Oxford Group,[18]
we began to state our principles
something like this:
1.
We
admitted we were powerless over alcohol.
2.
We got
honest with ourselves.
3.
We got
honest with another person, in confidence.
4.
We made
amends for harms done others.
5.
We
worked with other alcoholics without demand for prestige or money.
6.
We prayed
to God to help us do these things as
best we could.”[19]
Though
these principles were advocated according to the whim or liking
of each of us, and though in Akron
and Cleveland they still stuck by the O. G. absolutes of honesty, purity,
unselfishness, and love, this was the
gist of our message to incoming alcoholics up to 1939, when our present Twelve Steps were put to paper.[20]
(emphasis added)
In his A.A. Grapevine article quoted above, Bill did not even mention
Ebby’s late November 1934 visit or Ebby’s recitation of his “pat little
formula” at Towns Hospital during Bill’s final stay in December 1934 in
relation to “the so-called word-of-mouth program of our pioneering time.” Bill
even seems to have distanced the “word-of-mouth program” from both the Oxford
Group and Rev. Sam Shoemaker by saying: “As we commenced to form a Society
separate from the Oxford Group, we began to state our principles something like
this:” At least here, Bill sets forth the sixth “principle” using the
unmodified word God.
At least two other challenges
arise at this point when one studies Bill’s “six steps” of “the so-called
word-of-mouth program of our pioneering time”[21]
which Bill said evolved into “the new version of the program, now the ‘Twelve
Steps.’”[22] First, Bill stated:
.
. . [T]hese principles were advocated according to the whim or liking of each
of us, . . .[23]
And along those lines, he
also said: (1) “‘the word-of-mouth program’” was “subject to considerable
variation;” and (2) the “six steps . . . were approximately as follows: . . .”[24] So, based on A.A. cofounder
Bill W.’s own words, the idea that was a group of “six Steps” with consistent
wording from the time Ebby first came to see Bill in late November 1934 would
seem to require some further scrutiny.
In fact, Jim B.—who became
involved with the Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous in early January
1938—stated that when he came in A.A., “we had no real formula”:
At
that time [around the middle-to-end of January 1938] the group in New York was
composed of about twelve men who were
working on the principle of every drunk for himself; we had no real formula and no name. We would follow one man’s ideas for a while, decide he was wrong, and
switch to another’s method.[25]
(emphasis added)
It was not until Jim had
“crawled back to New York” after “wandering around New England half drunk” for
a few days in early June 1938, that Jim said:
Around
this time our big A.A. book was being written, and it all became much simpler; we had a definite formula that some
sixty of us agreed was the middle course for all alcoholics who wanted sobriety,
and that formula has not been changed one iota down through the years.[26]
Bill W.’s wife Lois—who at
least in 1936 was keeping a diary[27]—stated
explicitly that Bill had begun “to write the book in May 1938 . . .”[28]
Then there is a copy of a handwritten
note currently floating around the Internet for which the original supposedly
is—or at least was—in the files of A.A.’s archives in New York. This note contains
a presentation of six “Original AA steps.” It reads:
For
Ed –
1.
Admitted
hopeless
2.
Got
Honest with self
3.
Got
honest with another
4.
Made
Amends
5.
Helped
other with demands
6.
Prayed
to God as you understand Him
Ever
Bill
W.
Apr/1953???
Original
AA steps[29] (emphasis added)
Since the provenance of this
note is sketchy, it is included here for the sake of completeness of
presentation.
And now we turn to the
personal story of one of Dr. Bob’s sponsees, Earl T. of Chicago, a man who got
sober in April 1937.[30] Earl’s personal story,
titled “He Sold Himself Short,” first appeared in the Big Book’s second edition
published in 1955.[31] The writer of the story
titled “He Sold Himself Short” claims that he and Dr. Bob “spent three or four
hours formally going through the Six-Step program as it was at that time.”[32] And the writer then gives
the following list of “the six steps”:
- Complete deflation.
- Dependence and guidance from a Higher Power.
- Moral inventory.
- Confession.
- Restitution.
- Continued work with other alcoholics.[33]
(emphasis added)
This assertion that Dr. Bob
took Earl T. through “the Six-Step program as it was at that time,” and the
wording and the order of these supposed “six steps,” raise questions. First,
some of the language is simply not that usually employed by Dr. Bob. For example,
the alleged first “Step” reads: “Complete deflation.” It was Bill W., rather
than Dr. Bob, who often used the word “deflation.”[34]
In contrast, DR. BOB and the Good
Oldtimers says of Dr. Bob: “Another thing Dr. Bob put quite simply: ‘The
first one will get you.’ According to John R., he kept repeating that.”[35] More significantly for our
discussion here, I (Dick B.) have not found a single example of Dr. Bob’s ever
referring to a “higher power” (as in the second “Step” above) other than this
supposed use of the term in this personal story. Actually, his usual language
in referring to God was “Heavenly Father”[36]
or “God”[37] or “the Lord.”[38] Whether Earl T. actually
made the statement about “the Six-Step program” or gave the list of “the six
steps” as found in the “He Sold Himself Short” personal story, we do not know.[39]
But these points seem clear
from the “He Sold Himself Short” story and from what Earl T.’s wife Katie
disclosed in a lengthy interview in 1985.[40]
The Big Book indicated that Dr. Bob had covered a good many A.A. ideas with
Earl, in addition to the quoted six specifics. The interview with Earl’s wife
had these things to say:
- The men were desperate and took the
program as presented.
- She said: “There was no book, no
pamphlets, no nothing, and the only way you could get it was through
passing it on verbally to the next fellow.”
- She said she felt the Oxford Group people
had the same ideas and principles as AA now has—they helped others.
However they never coped with alcoholism.
- Earl was a nervous wreck and didn’t know
what to do or talk about. He said they had better pattern themselves after
the Oxford Group, and they had used the Bible. When they met, they picked
out a chapter, and it was read. Then they discussed it.
- The next thing they decided upon was a
quiet time.
- The alcoholic was asked to offer a prayer,
ask for guidance, and at night when he came home to review what had
happened to him, and also to offer a prayer of thankfulness
- The alcoholic was to rise an hour before
his usual time and get things straightened out and in order before he
started out.
- Both Dr. Bob and Anne were frequently seen
by Earl and his wife; and Bill W. often stayed in the home of Earl and his
wife.
- Neither Earl nor his wife is quoted as
making mention of any Steps; and Earl did not die until he had a stroke in
his 90’s.[41]
Finally, we want to mention
here what Bill’s wife Lois called “the Oxford Group precepts . . . in
substance”—which happened to be six in number:
[1.]
[S]urrender your life to God;
[2.]
[T]ake a moral inventory;
[3.]
[C]onfess your sins to God and
another human being;
[4.]
[M]ake a restitution;
[5.]
[G]ive of yourself to others with no demand for return; [and]
[6.]
[P]ray to God for help to carry out
these principles.[42] (emphasis added)
Two quick points about the
preceding list of six so-called “Oxford Group precepts”: (a) Footnote 2 on 197
of ‘PASS IT ON’ (given near the
bottom of page 206) points out that there were no “six steps of the Oxford
Group.” (b) Note the use of the word “God” without modifying words in
“precepts” one, three, and six.
In addition, and more
importantly for our presentation of “the rest of the story,” Bill seemingly
treated the word “God” in the supposed “sixth step” of “the word-of-mouth
program” differently according to the view he was advocating or sanctioning at
a particular time. For example, in July 1953, Bill stated the “sixth step” as
follows:
“6.
We prayed to God to help us do these
things as best we could.”[43] (emphasis added)
This use of the word “God” without
any modifying words is similar to use of the word “God” in one of the seven
points of Frank Amos’s summary of the Akron program as of February 1938.[44]
When, however, Bill was
penning the Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of
Age story in 1957, he wrote:
“6.
We prayed to whatever God we thought
there was for power to practice these precepts.”[45]
(emphasis added)
In this second example,
rather than stating simply that “We prayed to God for power . . .”—i.e., using
the word “God” without modifying words, as in the first example above—Bill
added the words “. . . whatever . . . we thought there was.” That was a
significant change in wording.
When Bill wrote out the “six
steps” for a man named Ed in April 1953, he worded the “six step” in yet a
different way:
“6.
Prayed to God as you understand him.”[46] (emphasis added)
In this third example, Bill
chose to add the modifying words “as you understand him” after the word “God,”
using in this version of the “sixth step” language that closely resembled how
Steps Three and Eleven read in the Big Book; i.e., “. . . God as we understood Him.”[47]
Well, those are the five or
six “practices,” “principles,” elements, or “steps” in the “word-of-mouth
program” that Bill W. claims evolved into “the new version of the program, now
the ‘Twelve Steps.’” Food for thought.
Gloria
Deo
[1] Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age (New
York: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc., 1957, 1985), 162.
[2]
William W., “The Society of Alcoholics Anonymous,” in American Journal of Psychiatry, May 1949, 370: http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/article.aspx?articleid=143969;
accessed 9/7/2014.
[3]
Bill W., “Alcoholics Anonymous—Beginnings and Growth,” Presented to the New
York City Medical Society on Alcoholism, April 28, 1958,” in Three Talks to Medical Societies by Bill W.,
Co-Founder of AA (New York, NY: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc.,
n.d.), 12: http://aa.org/lang/en/catalog.cfm?category=4&product=27;
accessed 2/19/2014.
[4]
Bill W., “Alcoholics Anonymous—Beginnings and Growth,” 17: http://aa.org/lang/en/catalog.cfm?category=4&product=27;
accessed 2/25/2014.
[5]
See Step Two in Alcoholics Anonymous,
4th ed., 59. And note that the original draft of Step Two read: “. .
. that God could restore us . . .” See Alcoholics
Anonymous Comes of Age, 166-67.
[6]
See Steps Three and Eleven in Alcoholics
Anonymous, 4th ed., 59. And note again that the original draft
of Step Three read: “. . . of God.” And that the original draft of Step Eleven
read: “. . . contact with God, praying . . .” See Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 166-67.
[7]
For the only two occurrences of the phrase “Higher Power” on pages 1-164 of the
fourth edition of the Big Book, see Alcoholics
Anonymous, 4th ed., 43 (cp. the earlier reference on page 43 to
“divine help”) and 100 (cp. the earlier references on page 100 to “his
relationship with God” and “in God’s hands”). And note that, in the first of
its two occurrences in chapters one through eleven of the first printing of the
first edition of the Big Book, this phrase was capitalized as “higher
Power”—i.e., with a lowercase initial “h” in the word “higher.” See Alcoholics Anonymous: “The Big Book”: The
Original 1939 Edition, with a New Introduction by Dick B. (Mineola, NY:
Dover Publications, 2011), 55.
[8]
See Bill W., My First 40 Years: An
Autobiography by the Cofounder of Alcoholics Anonymous (Center City, Minn.:
Hazelden, 2000).
[9]
Bill W., My First 40 Years, 141.
[10]
Bill W., My First 40 Years, 141-42.
The text has been reformatted, and Ebby’s points have been numbered, for
clarity. Punctuation and capitalization (of the word “how”) are as they appear
in the original.
[11] Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th
ed., 11.
[12] Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th
ed., 12.
[14] Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 160.
[15]
The parting of Bill and Lois, and of the other New York AAs, from the Oxford
Group took place around August 1937, as we will discuss in more detail and
document in another video in this series.
[16]
In September 1993, Rev. Sam Shoemaker’s daughter Nickie Shoemaker Haggart
provided to Dick B. the text of the April 23, 1963, letter from Bill W. to Rev.
Sam Shoemaker from which this quote was drawn. See Dick B., New Light on Alcoholism, 551.
[17] Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 39.
[18] Lois
W. stated in her autobiography: “. . . [I]n the summer of 1937 Bill and I
stopped going to OG meetings. (See Lois
Remembers (New York: Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc., 1979), 103. Dr.
Bob did not leave the Oxford Group in Akron until around the end of December
1939. (See DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers,
218.)
[19]
“A Fragment of History: Origin of the Twelve Steps” in The Language of the Heart, 200.
[21]
“A Fragment of History: Origin of the Twelve Steps” in The Language of the Heart, 200.
[22] Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 162.
[23]
“A Fragment of History: Origin of the Twelve Steps” in The Language of the Heart, 200.
[24] Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 160.
[25] Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th
ed., 227.
[26] Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th
ed., 229.
[27] Lois Remembers, 105.
[28] Lois Remembers, 111.
[29]
See, for example: (1) “Original Six Steps,” http://anonpress.org/faq/855; accessed
9/10/2014; and (2) “Early Six-step Versions of the Steps,” http://hindsfoot.org/steps6.html;
accessed 9/10/2014.
[30]
According to Richard K., Earl T. got sober in April 1937. See Richard K., New Freedom: Reclaiming Alcoholics Anonymous
(Haverhill, MA: Golden Text Publishing Company, 2005), 383-86. The writer
of the personal story “He Sold Himself Short” states in the story that he had a
week-long slip “[a] few months after I made my original trip to Akron.” Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th
ed., 264.
[31]
See: “He Sold Himself Short”—pages 287-96 in the 2d and 3rd editions
of Alcoholics Anonymous and pages
258-67 in the 4th edition of Alcoholics
Anonymous.
[32] Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th
ed., 263.
[33] Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th
ed., 263.
[34]
See, for example: Alcoholics Anonymous
Comes of Age, 64, 68, 136; Alcoholics
Anonymous, 4th ed., 122; Twelve
Steps and Twelve Traditions (New York, NY: Alcoholics Anonymous World
Services, Inc., 1952, 1953, 1981), 40, 55.
[35] DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 227.
[36] The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous, 15,
19, 20; DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers,
222, 314.
[37] DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 74, 110,
111, 144, 228, 229. Cp. 131, 139
[38] DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 50.
[39]
Neither a “Six-Step program” nor “six steps” are mentioned on page 179 of DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers.
[40] https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/AAHistoryLovers/conversations/topics/161;
accessed 2/17/2014.
[41] http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/AAHistoryLovers/conversations/topics/161;
accessed 12/9/2013.
[42] Lois Remembers, 92.
[43]
“A Fragment of History: Origin of the Twelve Steps” in The Language of the Heart, 200.
[44] DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 131.
Item # 2: “He must surrender himself absolutely to God, . . .”
[45] Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 160.
[46]
When I was interviewing Bill’s secretary Nell Wing in New York, she handed me a
copy of the alleged “six steps” in Bill’s own hand-writing. The paper on which
the “steps” were written stated “For Ed.” It was signed “Ever April/1953 Bill
W. Original A.A. Steps.” See: (1) Dick B., New
Light on Alcoholism: God, Sam Shoemaker, and A.A., Pittsburgh ed. (Kihei,
HI: Paradise Research Publications, Inc., 1999), 551-52; and (2) Dick B.,
“Alcoholics Anonymous Origins and Early History: Darkness, Be Gone. Let There
Be Light,” http://www.dickb.com/articles/Darkness_Be_Gone.shtml,
accessed 12/9/2013; and (3) Jared C. Lobdell, This Strange Illness: Alcoholism and Bill W. (NY: Aldine De
Gruyter, 2004), 242-43. You may see a
copy/reproduction of Bill’s statement “For Ed” here: http://thejaywalker.com/pages/sixstep.html;
accessed 2/12/2014.
[47] Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th
ed., 59.
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