On the morning of December 17, 1981, I checked into an inpatient treatment center for alcoholism. I was eighteen years old. That night, after supper, a vanload of fellow patients and I attended an AA meeting, my first, in the cavernous basement of an old Episcopal church. Scared, ashamed, beaten down by recent experience, I waited to see what might unfold.
I didn’t know anyone there. Even my treatment mates were strangers to me. We sat in a large, irregular circle on metal folding chairs. Just about all of us smoked cigarettes, and I recall a dreamlike, hazy aspect to the lamp-lit room. I didn’t know what to say or how to act. And for the first time in years I didn’t have the comforting advantage of some disinhibitor in my bloodstream. Despite the relative warmth in the room, I was shivering.
Each of us in turn said our piece. Today, I don’t recall specifically what I uttered that night, or what others said, nor would I share that information if I did. And really, what was said or heard is secondary to the feeling I drew from the experience.
I’d always been something of a misfit. Even among my dearest friends, I never really felt all the way in. Sitting in that first AA meeting, though, it seemed as if I’d discovered a haven of sorts, a safe harbor. I didn’t know a soul, yet I could intuit what my fellow attendees had experienced along their respective paths. Their stories meshed with mine, as I’m sure mine did with theirs. But more than that, I was gifted with a vision—really, only a glimpse—of possibility. Maybe, just maybe, there was a way out of this. That meeting gave me something to hold on to as the evening played out. And if this first day worked out—if I didn’t use or bolt from the treatment center—it would bode well for the next day, and perhaps further.
The shivering subsided.
I would remain in the program for a year-and-a-half before relapsing—at first smoking the odd joint with friends; then chipping away at pills, coke; and eventually returning to booze, my drug of choice. Not surprisingly, my meeting attendance during that time fizzled out to nothing. I would spend three more years in active addiction—more than a thousand days of pain, despair, and humiliation—before returning to recovery at twenty-three. Today, I’m approaching thirty-four years of sobriety. Literally everything I have in my life right now shares a causal link to my having returned.
But an even more powerful connection, one that I acknowledge every December to this day, is that initial cloud-break of hope: getting my start in the smoky, warm glow of that church basement in 1981.
*AUTHOR’S NOTE: An edited version of this short piece appeared in the Readers Write section of THE SUN magazine, issue 546.


Awesome work. And equally awesome your inner strength to beat this on your terms.
Now enough about you…… let’s get to the swings and get a game started !!!! 🙂
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Thanks, Bill! Game on. 😎
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