Under the thinning fog the surf curled and creamed, almost without sound,
like a thought trying to form itself on the edge of consciousness.
― Raymond Chandler , The Big Sleep
I could tell that she was conflicted. “I pray a lot to God,” she told us. “He keeps
me sober. I have to keep praying every day.” Failure to pray, she was telling us, is a
danger to her sobriety. There seemed to be a direct line here, for her: In the power of
prayer lay the formula for continued recovery.
Yet, a few moments later she said this: “I keep coming to meetings and this
keeps me sober. When I have been sober for several months, I begin to slack off the
meetings, going to one or two a month. Then I find myself drinking again.”
Was she confused? Was it both God and the meetings keeping her on the wagon
of sobriety? As in a good many of these personal chronicles publicly shared at
meetings, she had been rambling. There seemed to be no clear focus to her remarks
in terms of a message. There was clearly more self-exploration than communication
going on—almost a stream-of-consciousness purgation of failures. In the final
analysis, she was doing fine—as long as we and God had her back.
But it seemed to me that she was in a fog of haziness even to herself, and this is
what struck me: This soundtrack had been played before, in other meetings, by other
sufferers. Some had emphasized the role of God, but insisted that the group was
essential to keeping them safe; others emphasized the group, but the spiritual was
not far behind. All were slicing through the fog for something to cling to, feeling
around for one buoy after another.
Then, as she closed, she made a telling remark that seems, now I reflect upon it,
a common confession in AA groups. “I’m not sure there is a God,” she told us.
“Probably nobody knows for sure—but it works for me, so I keep praying.”
It wasn’t, after all, a confusion between two discordant entities—God and the
group. It was her conflation of two transposable forces: private communion and
public confession. The “Higher Power” inscribed in the AA protocol is ineffable in a
way not encountered in church canon because in its attempt to define itself broadly,
it defines everything and nothing.
To the devout, it is clearly God, and this was the initial intent as Alcoholics
Anonymous emerged from the Oxford Group in the mid-1930s. For non-believers,
its intentional ambiguity is designed to cast a wide net. The result is a kind of faith
grounded in a benign mysticism for which the logical mind is ill-prepared (and
towards which logic is uniquely irrelevant). It is spirituality in search of a God-like focal point that may explicitly not be God. In its perplexity, it is satisfying at the level that matters: the alcoholic grasping for a life jacket.
The psyche of the drowning addict finds gratification in the value of such
practice without questioning its authenticity. It is comforting to the discomfited to
find some deliverance in such an ecumenical group that welcomes all: lack of
precision is precisely its worth.
“Keep coming back; it works if you work it” is the mantra repeated at the close
of every meeting, holding hands in a circle, trusting the connection.
Ron Wetherington is a retired professor of anthropology living in Dallas, Texas. After more than half a century of university teaching and research, he has settled on replacing scientific journals with literary magazines as an outlet for his writing efforts. He has published a novel, Kiva (Sunstone Press), and numerous short fiction pieces in this second career. He also enjoys writing creative non-fiction.
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