The book cover of Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th edition. AA derives its name from the title of this book and is written by AA members.
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Type | Mutual-help addiction recovery twelve-step program |
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Website | www |
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is an international mutual aid fellowship with the stated purpose of enabling its members to "stay sober and help other alcoholics achieve sobriety." AA is nonprofessional, self-supporting, and apolitical. Its only membership requirement is a desire to stop drinking. The AA program of recovery is set forth in the Twelve Steps.
AA was founded in 1935 in Akron, Ohio when one alcoholic, Bill Wilson, talked to another alcoholic, Bob Smith, about the nature of alcoholism and a possible solution. With the help of other early members, the book Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More Than One Hundred Men Have Recovered From Alcoholism was written in 1939. Its title became the name of the organization and is now usually referred to as "The Big Book". AA's initial Twelve Traditions were introduced in 1946 to help the fellowship be stable and unified while disengaged from "outside issues" and influences.
The Traditions recommend that members remain anonymous in public media, altruistically help other alcoholics, and that AA groups avoid official affiliations with other organizations. They also advise against dogma and coercive hierarchies. Subsequent fellowships such as Narcotics Anonymous have adapted the Twelve Steps and the Twelve Traditions to their respective primary purposes.
AA membership has since spread internationally "across diverse cultures holding different beliefs and values", including geopolitical areas resistant to grassroots movements. Close to two million people worldwide are estimated to be members of AA as of 2016.
History
AA sprang from The Oxford Group, a non-denominational movement modeled after first-century Christianity. Some members founded the Group to help in maintaining sobriety. "Grouper" Ebby Thacher
was Wilson's former drinking buddy who approached Wilson saying that he
had "got religion", was sober, and that Wilson could do the same if he
set aside objections to religion and instead formed a personal idea of
God, "another power" or "higher power".
Feeling a "kinship of common suffering" and, though drunk, Wilson
attended his first Group gathering. Within days, Wilson admitted
himself to the Charles B. Towns Hospital after drinking four beers on the way—the last alcohol he ever drank. Under the care of William Duncan Silkworth (an early benefactor of AA), Wilson's detox included the deliriant belladonna. At the hospital, a despairing Wilson experienced a bright flash of light, which he felt to be God revealing himself.
Following his hospital discharge, Wilson joined the Oxford Group and
recruited other alcoholics to the Group. Wilson's early efforts to help
others become sober were ineffective, prompting Silkworth to suggest
that Wilson place less stress on religion and more on "the science" of
treating alcoholism. Wilson's first success came during a business trip
to Akron, Ohio, where he was introduced to Robert Smith, a surgeon and
Oxford Group member who was unable to stay sober. After thirty days of
working with Wilson, Smith drank his last drink on 10 June 1935, the
date marked by AA for its anniversaries.
The first female member Florence Rankin joined AA in March 1937, and the first non-Protestant member, a Roman Catholic, joined in 1939. The first Black AA group was established in 1945 in Washington DC by Jim S., an African-American physician from Virginia.
During the 2020 global coronavirus pandemic, many AA meetings moved to online meetings using platforms such as Zoom, Google Hangouts,
and conference calls. Some members expressed concerns about anonymity
and security and steps were taken, including having "digital bouncers at
some online meetings.
The Big Book, the Twelve Steps and the Twelve Traditions
To share their method, Wilson and other members wrote the initially-titled book, Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More Than One Hundred Men Have Recovered from Alcoholism,
from which AA drew its name. Informally known as "The Big Book" (with
its first 164 pages virtually unchanged since the 1939 edition), it
suggests a twelve-step program in which members admit that they are
powerless over alcohol and need help from a "higher power". They seek
guidance and strength through prayer and meditation from God or a Higher Power
of their own understanding; take a moral inventory with care to include
resentments; list and become ready to remove character defects; list
and make amends to those harmed; continue to take a moral inventory,
pray, meditate, and try to help other alcoholics recover. The second
half of the book, "Personal Stories" (subject to additions, removal and
retitling in subsequent editions), is made of AA members' redemptive
autobiographical sketches.
In 1941, interviews on American radio and favorable articles in US magazines, including a piece by Jack Alexander in The Saturday Evening Post, led to increased book sales and membership.
By 1946, as the growing fellowship quarreled over structure, purpose,
and authority, as well as finances and publicity, Wilson began to form
and promote what became known as AA's "Twelve Traditions," which are
guidelines for an altruistic, unaffiliated, non-coercive, and
non-hierarchical structure that limited AA's purpose to only helping
alcoholics on a non-professional level while shunning publicity.
Eventually, he gained formal adoption and inclusion of the Twelve
Traditions in all future editions of the Big Book. At the 1955 conference in St. Louis, Missouri, Wilson relinquished stewardship of AA to the General Service Conference, as AA grew to millions of members internationally.
Organization and finances
AA says it is "not organized in the formal or political sense", and Bill Wilson, borrowing the phrase from anarchist theorist Peter Kropotkin, called it a "benign anarchy". In Ireland, Shane Butler said that AA "looks like it couldn't survive as there's no leadership or top-level telling local cumanns
what to do, but it has worked and proved itself extremely robust".
Butler explained that "AA's 'inverted pyramid' style of governance has
helped it to avoid many of the pitfalls that political and religious
institutions have encountered since it was established here in 1946."
In 2018, AA counted 2,087,840 members and 120,300 AA groups worldwide.
The Twelve Traditions informally guide how individual AA groups
function, and the Twelve Concepts for World Service guide how the
organization is structured globally.
A member who accepts a service position or an organizing role is a
"trusted servant" with terms rotating and limited, typically lasting
three months to two years and determined by group vote and the nature of
the position. Each group is a self-governing entity with AA World
Services acting only in an advisory capacity. AA is served entirely by
alcoholics, except for seven "nonalcoholic friends of the fellowship" of
the 21-member AA Board of Trustees.
AA groups are self-supporting, relying on voluntary donations from members to cover expenses. The AA General Service Office (GSO) limits contributions to US$3,000 a year.
Above the group level, AA may hire outside professionals for services
that require specialized expertise or full-time responsibilities.
Like individual groups, the GSO is self-supporting. AA receives
proceeds from books and literature that constitute more than 50% of the
income for its General Service Office.
In keeping with AA's Seventh Tradition, the Central Office is fully
self-supporting through the sale of literature and related products, and
through the voluntary donations of AA members and groups. It does not
accept donations from people or organizations outside of AA.
In keeping with AA's Eighth Tradition, the Central Office employs
special workers who are compensated financially for their services, but
their services do not include traditional "12th Step" work of working
with alcoholics in need.
All 12th Step calls that come to the Central Office are handed to sober
AA members who have volunteered to handle these calls. It also
maintains service centers, which coordinate activities such as printing
literature, responding to public inquiries, and organizing conferences.
Other International General Service Offices (Australia, Costa Rica,
Russia, etc.) are independent of AA World Services in New York.
Program
AA's program extends beyond abstaining from alcohol. Its goal is to effect enough change in the alcoholic's thinking "to bring about recovery from alcoholism" through "an entire psychic change," or spiritual awakening. A spiritual awakening is meant to be achieved by taking the Twelve Steps, and sobriety is furthered by volunteering for AA and regular AA meeting attendance or contact with AA members.
Members are encouraged to find an experienced fellow alcoholic, called a
sponsor, to help them understand and follow the AA program. The sponsor
should preferably have experience of all twelve of the steps, be the
same sex as the sponsored person, and refrain from imposing personal
views on the sponsored person. Following the helper therapy principle,
sponsors in AA may benefit from their relationship with their charges,
as "helping behaviors" correlate with increased abstinence and lower
probabilities of binge drinking.
AA's program is an inheritor of Counter-Enlightenment
philosophy. AA shares the view that acceptance of one's inherent
limitations is critical to finding one's proper place among other humans
and God. Such ideas are described as "Counter-Enlightenment" because
they are contrary to the Enlightenment's ideal that humans have the capacity to make their lives and societies a heaven on earth using their own power and reason.
After evaluating AA's literature and observing AA meetings for sixteen
months, sociologists David R. Rudy and Arthur L. Greil found that for an
AA member to remain sober a high level of commitment is necessary. This
commitment is facilitated by a change in the member's worldview.
To help members stay sober AA must, they argue, provide an
all-encompassing worldview while creating and sustaining an atmosphere
of transcendence
in the organization. To be all-encompassing AA's ideology places an
emphasis on tolerance rather than on a narrow religious worldview that
could make the organization unpalatable to potential members and thereby
limit its effectiveness. AA's emphasis on the spiritual nature of its
program, however, is necessary to institutionalize a feeling of
transcendence. A tension results from the risk that the necessity of
transcendence, if taken too literally, would compromise AA's efforts to
maintain a broad appeal. As this tension is an integral part of AA, Rudy
and Greil argue that AA is best described as a quasi-religious organization.
Meetings
AA meetings are "quasi-ritualized therapeutic sessions run by and for, alcoholics".
They are usually informal and often feature discussions with voluntary
donations collected during meetings. (AA's 7th tradition encourages
groups to be self-supporting, declining outside contributions).
Local AA directories list weekly meetings. Those listed as "closed" are
available to those with a self-professed "desire to stop drinking,"
which cannot be challenged by another member on any grounds. "Open" meetings are available to anyone (nonalcoholics can attend as observers). At speaker meetings
(also known as gratitude meetings), one or more members who typically
come in from a neighboring town's meeting tell their stories. At Big Book meetings,
the group in attendance will take turns reading a passage from the AA
Big Book and then discuss how they relate to it after. At twelve step meetings,
the group will typically break out into subgroups depending on where
they are in their program and start working on the twelve steps outlined
in the program. In addition to those three most common types of
meetings, there are also other kinds of discussion meetings which tend
to allocate the most time for general discussion.
AA meetings do not exclude other alcoholics, though some meetings cater to specific demographics such as gender, profession, age, sexual orientation, or culture. Meetings in the United States are held in a variety of languages including Armenian, English, Farsi, Finnish, French, Japanese, Korean, Russian, and Spanish. While AA has pamphlets that suggest meeting formats, groups have the autonomy to hold and conduct meetings as they wish "except in matters affecting other groups or AA as a whole".
Different cultures affect ritual aspects of meetings, but around the
world "many particularities of the AA meeting format can be observed at
almost any AA gathering".
Confidentiality
US courts have not extended the status of privileged communication, such as that enjoyed by clergy and lawyers, to AA related communications between members.
Spirituality
A
study found an association between an increase in attendance to AA
meetings with increased spirituality and a decrease in the frequency and
intensity of alcohol use. The research also found that AA was
effective at helping agnostics and atheists
become sober. The authors concluded that though spirituality was an
important mechanism of behavioral change for some alcoholics, it was not
the only effective mechanism.
Since the mid-1970s, a number of 'agnostic' or 'no-prayer' AA groups
have begun across the U.S., Canada, and other parts of the world, which
hold meetings that adhere to a tradition allowing alcoholics to freely
express their doubts or disbelief that spirituality will help their
recovery, and these meetings forgo use of opening or closing prayers. There are online resources listing AA meetings for atheists and agnostics.
Disease concept of alcoholism
More informally than not AA's membership has helped popularize the
disease concept of alcoholism which had appeared in the eighteenth
century. Though AA usually avoids the term "disease", 1973 conference-approved literature said "we had the disease of alcoholism." Regardless of official positions, since AA's inception, most members have believed alcoholism to be a disease.
AA's Big Book calls alcoholism "an illness which only a spiritual
experience will conquer." Ernest Kurtz says this is "The closest the
book Alcoholics Anonymous comes to a definition of alcoholism." Somewhat divergently in his introduction to The Big Book, non-member and early benefactor William Silkworth said those unable to moderate their drinking suffer from an allergy.
In presenting the doctor's postulate AA said "The doctor's theory that
we have an allergy to alcohol interests us. As laymen, our opinion as to
its soundness may, of course, mean little. But as ex-problem drinkers,
we can say that his explanation makes good sense. It explains many
things for which we cannot otherwise account." AA later acknowledged that "alcoholism is not a true allergy, the experts now inform us." Wilson explained in 1960 why AA had refrained from using the term "disease":
We AAs have never called alcoholism a disease because, technically speaking, it is not a disease entity. For example, there is no such thing as heart disease. Instead there are many separate heart ailments or combinations of them. It is something like that with alcoholism. Therefore, we did not wish to get in wrong with the medical profession by pronouncing alcoholism a disease entity. Hence, we have always called it an illness or a malady—a far safer term for us to use.
Since then medical and scientific communities have generally concluded that alcoholism is an "addictive disease" (aka Alcohol Use Disorder, Severe, Moderate, or Mild).
The ten criteria are: alcoholism is a Primary Illness not caused by
other illnesses nor by personality or character defects; second, an
addiction gene is part of its etiology; third, alcoholism has
predictable symptoms; fourth, it is progressive, becoming more severe
even after long periods of abstinence; fifth, it is chronic and
incurable; sixth, alcoholic drinking or other drug use persists in spite
of negative consequences and efforts to quit; seventh, brain chemistry
and neural functions change so alcohol is perceived as necessary for
survival; eighth, it produces physical dependence and life-threatening
withdrawal; ninth, it is a terminal illness; tenth, alcoholism can be
treated and can be kept in remission.
Canadian and United States demographics
AA's
New York General Service Office regularly surveys AA members in North
America. Its 2014 survey of over 6,000 members in Canada and the United
States concluded that, in North America, AA members who responded to the
survey were 62% male and 38% female.
Average member sobriety is slightly under 10 years with 36% sober
more than ten years, 13% sober from five to ten years, 24% sober from
one to five years, and 27% sober less than one year.
Before coming to AA, 63% of members received some type of treatment or
counseling, such as medical, psychological, or spiritual. After coming
to AA, 59% received outside treatment or counseling. Of those members,
84% said that outside help played an important part in their recovery.
The same survey showed that AA received 32% of its membership
from other members, another 32% from treatment facilities, 30% were
self-motivated to attend AA, 12% of its membership from court–ordered
attendance, and only 1% of AA members decided to join based on
information obtained from the Internet. People taking the survey were
allowed to select multiple answers for what motivated them to join AA.
Effectiveness
Studies of AA's efficacy have produced inconsistent results. While
some studies have suggested an association between AA attendance and
increased abstinence or other positive outcomes, other studies have not.
The Surgeon General of the United States
2016 Report on Alcohol, Drugs, and Health states "Well-supported
scientific evidence demonstrates the effectiveness of twelve-step mutual
aid groups focused on alcohol and twelve-step facilitation
interventions."
Relationship with institutions
Hospitals
Many
AA meetings take place in treatment facilities. Carrying the message of
AA into hospitals was how the co-founders of AA first remained sober.
They discovered great value in working with alcoholics who are still
suffering, and that even if the alcoholic they were working with did not
stay sober, they did.
Bill Wilson wrote, "Practical experience shows that nothing will so
much insure immunity from drinking as intensive work with other
alcoholics". Bill Wilson visited Towns Hospital in New York City in an attempt to help the alcoholics who were patients there in 1934. At St. Thomas Hospital
in Akron, Ohio, Smith worked with still more alcoholics. In 1939, a New
York mental institution, Rockland State Hospital, was one of the first
institutions to allow AA hospital groups. Service to corrections and
treatment facilities used to be combined until the General Service
Conference, in 1977, voted to dissolve its Institutions Committee and
form two separate committees, one for treatment facilities, and one for
correctional facilities.
Prisons
In the
United States and Canada, AA meetings are held in hundreds of
correctional facilities. The AA General Service Office has published a
workbook with detailed recommendations for methods of approaching
correctional-facility officials with the intent of developing an
in-prison AA program. In addition, AA publishes a variety of pamphlets specifically for the incarcerated alcoholic.
Additionally, the AA General Service Office provides a pamphlet with
guidelines for members working with incarcerated alcoholics.
United States court rulings
United States courts have ruled that inmates, parolees, and
probationers cannot be ordered to attend AA. Though AA itself was not
deemed a religion, it was ruled that it contained enough religious components (variously described in Griffin v. Coughlin
below as, inter alia, "religion", "religious activity", "religious
exercise") to make coerced attendance at AA meetings a violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the constitution. In 2007, the Ninth Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals stated that a parolee who was ordered to attend AA had standing to sue his parole office.
American treatment industry
In 1939, High Watch Recovery Center
in Kent, Connecticut was founded by Bill Wilson and Marty Mann. Sister
Francis who owned the farm tried to gift the spiritual retreat for
alcoholics to Alcoholics Anonymous, however citing the sixth tradition
Bill W. turned down the gift but agreed to have a separate non-profit
board run the facility composed of AA members. Bill Wilson and Marty
Mann served on the High Watch board of directors for many years. High
Watch was the first and therefore the oldest 12-step-based treatment
center in the world still operating today.
In 1949, the Hazelden
treatment center was founded and staffed by AA members, and since then
many alcoholic rehabilitation clinics have incorporated AA's precepts
into their treatment programs. 32% of AA's membership was introduced to it through a treatment facility.
United Kingdom treatment industry
A
cross-sectional survey of substance-misuse treatment providers in the
West Midlands found fewer than 10% integrated twelve-step methods in
their practice and only a third felt their consumers were suited for
Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous membership. Less than half
were likely to recommend self-help groups to their clients. Providers
with nursing qualifications were more likely to make such referrals than
those without them. A statistically significant correlation was found
between providers' self-reported level of spirituality and their
likelihood of recommending AA or NA.
Criticism
Thirteenth-stepping
"Thirteenth-stepping" is a pejorative term for AA members approaching new members for dates. A study in the Journal of Addiction Nursing sampled 55 women in AA and found that 35% of these women had experienced a "pass"
and 29% had felt seduced at least once in AA settings. This has also
happened with new male members who received guidance from older female
AA members, in pursuit of sexual company. The authors suggest that both
men and women need to be prepared for this behavior or find male-only or
female-only groups. However, women report feeling safe in AA, women-only meetings are a very prevalent part of AA culture, and AA has become more welcoming for women. AA's pamphlet on sponsorship suggests that men be sponsored by men and women be sponsored by women.
Moderation or abstinence
Stanton Peele argued that some AA groups apply the disease model to all problem drinkers, whether or not they are "full-blown" alcoholics.
Along with Nancy Shute, Peele has advocated that besides AA, other
options should be readily available to those problem drinkers who are
able to manage their drinking with the right treatment.
The Big Book says "moderate drinkers" and "a certain type of hard
drinker" are able to stop or moderate their drinking. The Big Book
suggests no program for these drinkers, but instead seeks to help
drinkers without "power of choice in drink."
Cultural identity
One review of AA warned of detrimental iatrogenic effects of twelve-step philosophy and concluded that AA uses many methods that are also used by cults.
A subsequent study concluded, however, that AA's program bore little
resemblance to religious cults because the techniques used appeared
beneficial. Another study found that the AA program's focus on admission of having a problem increases deviant stigma and strips members of their previous cultural identity, replacing it with the deviant identity. A survey of group members, however, found they had a bicultural identity and saw AA's program as a complement to their other national, ethnic, and religious cultures.
Literature
Alcoholics Anonymous publishes several books, reports, pamphlets, and other media, including a periodical known as the AA Grapevine. Two books are used primarily: Alcoholics Anonymous (the "Big Book") and Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions,
the latter explaining AA's fundamental principles in depth. The full
text of each of these two books is available on the AA website at no
charge.
- Anonymous (2011). Alcoholics Anonymous: the story of how many thousands of men and women have recovered from alcoholism (multiple PDFs) (4th ed.). ISBN 978-1-893007-16-1. 575 pages. Also available in libraries.
- Anonymous (2002). Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions (multiple PDFs). ISBN 978-0-916856-01-4. 192 pages. Also available in libraries.
- "Home Page". AA Grapevine. Alcoholics Anonymous. ISSN 0362-2584. OCLC 319167052. Also available in libraries.
AA in film
Films about Alcoholics Anonymous
- My Name Is Bill W. – dramatized biography of co-founder Bill Wilson.
- When Love Is Not Enough: The Lois Wilson Story – a 2010 film about the wife of founder Bill Wilson, and the beginnings of Alcoholics Anonymous and Al-Anon.
- Bill W. – a 2011 biographical documentary film that tells the story of Bill Wilson using interviews, recreations, and rare archival material.
Films where primary plot line includes AA
- A Walk Among the Tombstones (2015), a mystery/suspense film based on Lawrence Block's books featuring Matthew Scudder, a recovering alcoholic detective whose AA membership is a central element of the plot.
- When a Man Loves a Woman – an airline pilot's wife attends AA meetings in a residential treatment facility.
- Clean and Sober – an addict (alcohol, cocaine) visits an AA meeting to get a sponsor.
- Days of Wine and Roses – a 1962 film about a married couple struggling with alcoholism. Jack Lemmon's character attends an AA meeting in the film.
- Drunks – a 1995 film starring Richard Lewis as an alcoholic who leaves an AA meeting and relapses. The film cuts back and forth between his eventual relapse and the other meeting attendants.
- Come Back, Little Sheba – A 1952 film based on a play of the same title about a loveless marriage where the husband played by Burt Lancaster is an alcoholic who gets help from 2 members of the local AA chapter. A 1977 TV drama was also based on the play.
- I'll Cry Tomorrow – A 1955 film about singer Lillian Roth played by Susan Hayward who goes to AA to help her stop drinking. The film was based on Roth's autobiography of the same name detailing her alcoholism and sobriety through AA.
- You Kill Me – a 2007 crime-comedy film starring Ben Kingsley as a mob hit man with a drinking problem who is forced to accept a job at a mortuary and go to AA meetings.
- Smashed – a 2012 drama film starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead. An elementary school teacher's drinking begins to interfere with her job, so she attempts to get sober in AA.
- Don't Worry, He Won't Get Far on Foot – a 2018 biography/comedy/drama by Gus Van Sant, based on the life of cartoonist John Callahan.
AA in television
Chuck Lorre's Mom
(2013–), follows dysfunctional daughter/mother duo Christy and Bonnie
Plunkett, who are estranged for years while simultaneously struggling
with addiction. They attempt to pull their lives and relationships
together by trying to stay sober and visiting Alcoholics Anonymous. The
show also explores themes of alcoholism, drug addiction and relapse.
In Hill Street Blues, Captain Furillo (Daniel J. Travanti) is a regular member of AA and is shown several times in AA meetings.
In Grey's Anatomy, AA plays a large role in the storylines of multiple characters. In season 6, Dr. Richard Webber (James Pickens Jr.)
begins struggling with alcoholism and it is revealed that he has a
history of alcohol addiction. AA and maintaining sobriety become an
important part of Dr. Webber's life through out the rest of the series.
Alcoholism, but more so drug addiction, is also heavily featured in the
spin-off series Private Practice. In season 4, it is revealed that both Dr. Charlotte King (KaDee Strickland) and Dr. Amelia Shepherd (Caterina Scorsone)
have a history of problem drinking and narcotics addiction. This
becomes main theme in season 5 when Amelia relapses and begins using
again following her friend's suicide. The season follows her relapse and
recovery. When Amelia joins Grey's in season 11, overcoming addiction
remains an important part of her story line. Both series commonly
discuss AA meetings, sponsors, and the "serenity prayer".
In Aaron Sorkin's political drama, The West Wing, the character Leo McGarry
is an admitted alcoholic and drug addict. He is reluctant to attend
regular AA meetings, feeling the high-profile nature of his position as
Chief of Staff of the White House would encourage a media frenzy. The
vice president (Tim Matheson) invites him to a "weekly poker game", which turns out to be a secret AA meeting known only to those invited.