What is alcoholism?
There are many different ideas
about what alcoholism really is.
The explanation that seems to
make sense to most A.A. members is that alcoholism is an illness, a
progressive illness, which can never be cured but which, like some
other diseases, can be arrested. Going one step further, many
A.A.s feel that the illness represents the combination of a physical
sensitivity to alcohol and a mental obsession with drinking, which,
regardless of consequences, cannot be broken by willpower alone.
Before they are exposed to A.A.,
many alcoholics who are unable to stop drinking think of themselves as
morally weak or, possibly, mentally unbalanced. The A.A. concept is that
alcoholics are sick people who can recover if they will follow a simple
program that has proved successful for more than one and a half million
men and women.
Once alcoholism has set in,
there is nothing morally wrong about being ill. At this stage, free will
is not involved, because the sufferer has lost the power of choice over
alcohol. The important thing is to face the facts of one's illness and
to take advantage of the help that is available. There must also be a
desire to get well. Experience shows that the A.A. program will work for
all alcoholics who are sincere in their efforts to stop drinking; it
usually will not work for those not absolutely certain that they want to
stop.