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Are You a
Jay-Walker?
Taken from the
Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous, page
37
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The Jay-Walker
Parable Reworded for Alcohol.
Our behavior
is as absurd and incomprehensible
with respect to the first drink as that of an
individual with a passion, say, for
jay-walking. He gets a thrill out of
hanging
out at bars.
He enjoys himself for a few years in
spite of friendly warnings. Up to
this point you would label him as a
foolish chap having queer ideas of
fun. Luck then deserts him and he goes out on sprees several times in
succession. Presently he gets drunk again and this time he ends up in the
hospital.
Within a week after leaving the
hospital he's back drinking. He tells you he has
decided to stop drinking for good, but in a few
weeks he is back drinking.
On through
the years this conduct continues,
accompanied by his continual
promises to be careful or to keep away from the bars altogether. Finally, he
can no longer work, his wife gets a
divorce and he is held up to
ridicule. He tries every known means
to get the drinking idea out of his head.
He shuts himself up in an asylum,
hoping to mend his ways. But the day
he comes out he races back to the bar, which sets off another
spree.
Such a man would be crazy, wouldn't
he?
You may think
our illustration is too ridiculous.
But is it? We, who have been through
the wringer, have to admit if we
substituted alcoholism for
jay-walking, the illustration would
fit us exactly.
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Jay Walker
The Jay-Walker
Parable , Chapter 3
MORE ABOUT ALCOHOLISM, page 37
Our behavior
is as absurd and incomprehensible
with respect to the first drink as
that of an individual with a passion,
say, for jay-walking. He gets a
thrill out of skipping in front of
fast-moving vehicles. He enjoys
himself for a few years in spite of
friendly warnings. Up to this point
you would label him as a foolish chap
having queer ideas of fun.
Luck then deserts him and he is
slightly injured several times in
succession. You would expect him, if
he were normal, to cut it out.
Presently he is hit again and this
time has a fractured skull. Within a
week after leaving the hospital a
fast-moving trolley car breaks his
arm. He tells you he has decided to
stop jay-walking for good, but in a
few weeks he breaks both legs.
On through the years this conduct
continues, accompanied by his
continual promises to be careful or
to keep off the streets altogether.
Finally, he can no longer work, his
wife gets a divorce and he is held up
to ridicule. He tries every known
means to get the jay-walking idea out
of his head. He shuts himself up in
an asylum, hoping to mend his ways.
But the day he comes out he races in
front of a fire engine, which breaks
his back. Such a man would be crazy,
wouldn't he?
You may
think our illustration is too
ridiculous. But is it?
We, who
have been through the wringer, have
to admit if we substituted alcoholism
for jay-walking, the illustration
would fit us exactly. However
intelligent we may have been in other
respects, where alcohol has been
involved, we have been strangely
insane. It's strong language - but
isn't it true?
Some of
you are thinking:
"Yes,
what you tell us is true, but it
doesn't fully apply. We admit we have
some of these symptoms, but we have
not gone to the extremes you fellows
did, nor are we likely to, for we
understand ourselves so well after
what you have told us that such
things cannot happen again. We have
not lost everything in life through
drinking and we certainly do not
intend to. Thanks for the
information."
That may be true of certain
nonalcoholic people who, though
drinking foolishly and heavily at the
present time, are able to stop or
moderate, because their brains and
bodies have not been damaged as ours
were. But the actual or potential
alcoholic, with hardly an exception,
will be absolutely unable to stop
drinking on the basis of
self-knowledge. This is a point we
wish to emphasize and re-emphasize,
to smash home upon our alcoholic
readers as it has been revealed to us
out of bitter experience.
Taken from the
Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous,
page 37
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