Tradition Eight "Alcoholics Anonymous should remain forever nonprofessional,
but our service centers may employ special workers."
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS will never have a professional class. We have gained some
understanding of the ancient words "Freely ye have received, freely give." We
have discovered that at the point of professionalism, money and spirituality do
not mis. Almost no recovery from alcoholism has ever been brought about by the
world's best professionals, whether medical or religious. We do not decry
professionalism in other fields, but we accept the sober fact that it does not
work for us. Every time we have tried to professionalize our Twelfth Step, the
result has been exactly the same: Our single purpose has been defeated.
Alcoholics simply will not listen to a pain twelfth-stepper. Almost from the
beginning, we have been positive that face-to-face work with the alcoholic who
suffers could be based only on the desire to help and be helped. When an A.A.
talks for money, whether at a meeting or to a single newcomer, it can have a
very bad effect on him, too. The money motive compromises him and everything he
says and does for his prospect. This has always been so obvious that only a very
few A.A.'s have ever worked the Twelfth Step for a fee.
Despite this certainty, it is nevertheless true that few subjects have been the
cause of more contention within our Fellowship than professionalism. Caretakers
who swept floors, cooks who fried hamburgers, secretaries in offices, authors
writing books--all these we have seen hotly assailed because they were, as their
critics angrily remarked, "making money out of A.A." Ignoring the fact that
these labors were not Twelfth Step jobs at all, the critics attacked as A.A.
professionals these workers of ours who were often doing thankless tasks that no
one else could or would do. Even greater furors were provoked when A.A. members
began to run rest homes and farms for alcoholics, when some hired out to
corporations as personnel men in charge of the alcoholic wards, when others
entered the field of alcohol education. In all these instances, and more, it was
claimed that A.A. knowledge and experience were being sold for money, hence
these people, too, were professionals.
At last, however, a plain line of cleavage could be seen between
professionalism and nonprofessionalism. When we had agreed that the Twelfth Step
couldn't be sold for money, we had been wise. But when we had declared that our
Fellowship couldn't hire service workers nor could any A.A. member carry our
knowledge into other fields, we were taking the counsel of fear, fear which
today has been largely dispelled in the light of experience.
Take the case of the club janitor and cook. If a club is going to function, it
has to be habitable and hospitable. We tried volunteers, who were quickly
disenchanted with sweeping floors and brewing coffee seven days a week. They
just didn't show up. Even more important, an empty club couldn't answer its
telephone, but it was an open invitation to a drunk on a binge who possessed a
spare key. So somebody had to look after the place full time. If we hired an
alcoholic, he'd receive only what we'd have to pay a nonalcoholic for the same
job. The job was not to do Twelfth Step work; it was to make Twelfth Step work
possible. It was a service proposition, pure and simple.
Neither could A.A. itself function without full-time workers. At the
Foundation* and intergroup offices, we couldn't employ nonalcoholics as
secretaries; we had to have people who knew the A.A. pitch. But the minute we
hired them, the ultraconservative and fearful ones shrilled, "Professionalism!"
At one period, the status of these faithful servants was almost unbearable. They
weren't asked to speak at A.A. meetings because they were `making money out of
A.A." At times, they were actually shunned by fellow members. Even the
charitably disposed described them as "a necessary evil." Committees took full
advantage of this attitude to depress their salaries. They could regain some
measure of virtue, it was thought, if they worked for A.A. real cheap. These
notions persisted for years. Then we saw that if a hard working secretary
answered the phone dozens of times a day, listened to twenty wailing wives,
arranged hospitalization and got sponsorship for ten newcomers, and was gently
diplomatic with the irate drunk who complained about the job she was doing and
how she was overpaid, then such a person could surely not be called a
professional A.A. She was not professionalizing the Twelfth Step; she was just
making it possible. She was helping to give the man coming in the door the break
he ought to have. Volunteer committeemen and assistants could be of great help,
but they could not be expected to carry this load day in and day out.
At the Foundation, the same story repeats itself. Eight tons of books and
literature per month do not package and channel themselves all over the world.
Sacks of letters on every conceivable A.A. problem ranging from a lonely-heart
Eskimo to the growing pains of thousands of groups must be answered by people
who know. Right contacts with the world outside have to be maintained. A.A.'s
lifelines have to be tended. So we hire A.A. staff members. We pay them well,
and they earn what they get. They are professional secretaries, * but they
certainly are not professional A.A.'s.
Perhaps the fear will always lurk in every A.A. heart that one day our name
will be exploited by somebody for real cash. Even the suggestion of such a thing
never fails to whip up a hurricane, and we have discovered that hurricanes have
a way of mauling with equal severity both the just and the unjust. They are
always unreasonable.
No individuals have been more buffeted by such emotional gusts than those
A.A.'s bold enough to accept employment with outside agencies dealing with the
alcohol problem. A university wanted an A.A. member to educate the public on
alcoholism. A corporation wanted a personnel man familiar with the subject. A
state drunk farm wanted a manager who could really handle inebriates. A city
wanted an experienced social worker who understood what alcohol could do to a
family. A state alcohol commission wanted a paid researcher. These are only a
few of the jobs which A.A. members as individuals have been asked to fill. Now
and then, A.A. members have bought farms or rest homes where badly beat-up
topers could find needed care. The question was--and sometimes still is--are
such activities to be branded as professionalism under A.A. tradition?
We think the answer is "No. Members who select such full-time careers do not
professionalize A.A.'s Twelfth Step." The road to this conclusion was long and
rocky. At first, we couldn't see the real issue involved. In former days, the
moment an A.A. hired out to such enterprises, he was immediately tempted to use
the name Alcoholics Anonymous for publicity or money-raising purposes. Drunk
farms, educational ventures, state legislatures, and commissions advertised the
fact that A.A. members served them. Unthinkingly, A.A.'s so employed recklessly
broke anonymity to thump the tub for their pet enterprise. For this reason, some
very good causes and all connected with them suffered unjust criticism from A.A.
groups. More often than not, these onslaughts were spearheaded by the cry
"Professionalism! That guy is making money out of A.A.'s Twelfth Step work. The
violation in these instances was not professionalism at all; it was breaking
anonymity. A.A.'s sole purpose was being compromised, and the name of Alcoholics
Anonymous was being misused.
It is significant, now that almost no A.A. in our Fellowship breaks anonymity
at the public level, that nearly all these fears have subsided. We see that we
have no right or need to discourage A.A.'s who wish to work as individuals in
these wider fields. It would be actually antisocial were we to forbid them. We
cannot declare A.A. such a closed corporation that we keep our knowledge and
experience top secret. If an A.A. member acting as a citizen can become a better
researcher, educator, personnel officer, then why not? Everybody gains, and we
have lost nothing. True, some of the projects to which A.A.'s have attached
themselves have been ill-conceived, but that makes not the slightest difference
with the principle involved.
This is the exciting welter of events which has finally cast up A.A.'s
Tradition of nonprofessionalism. Our Twelfth Step is never to be paid for, but
those who labor in service for us are worthy of their hire.
*The work of the present-day staff members has no counterpart among the job
categories of commercial organizations. These A.A.'s bring a wide range of
business and professional experience to their service at G.S.O.
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