For Drunks Only
One Man’s Reaction To Alcoholics Anonymous
by Richmond Walker
A 1989 Hazelden reprint, this softcover book is in very good
condition with no writing and no torn or missing pages.
This is a reproduction of a pamphlet written by the author of
Twenty Fours Hours A Day, a daily reader stilled widely used by
members of AA. The pamphlet was originally published in 1945. In it
Walker shares his experiences on AA’s road to recovery. He presents his
experiences in short topics that would be very helpful to present day
members as well.

For Drunks Only (one man's reactions to Alcoholics Anonymous), by Richmond
Walker (author of the Twenty Four Hours A Day), soft cover, published byHazelden,
Hazelden Information Education; ASIN: 0894864327; (April 1987)
The resources here will guide
you along a pathway of self-assessment, discovery, and fulfillment.
Heralded as the most concise
presentation of the Twelve Step way of life, this book is the final work
of Richmond Walker, author of the best-selling Twenty-Four Hours a Day.
ISBN: 0934125163
Edition Number: Rev. ed.
Edition Description: Revised
Publication Date: August 1989
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 103
Dimensions: 7.98x5.23x.27 in. .27 lbs .

The following is from: FOR DRUNKS
ONLY - ONE MAN'S REACTIONS TO ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
By:
Richmond Walker - author of
Twenty-four Hours a Day
for Drunks Only was originally
published in 1945.
Preface
Richmond Walker, author of
Twenty-Four Hours a Day; published For Drunks Only: One Man's Reaction to
Alcoholics Anonymous in September 1945. More than forty years later,
students of A.A. history and A.A. members will find this pamphlet a
welcome addition to their reading list. For Drunks Only is Walker's
personal story of following the guidelines in Chapter Five of Alcoholics
Anonymous: what we used to be like, what happened, and what we are like
now. He also adds insight on how A.A. works for those who are willing to
accept the A.A. spiritual program of recovery from alcoholism.
In the early 1940s, Alcoholics
Anonymous headquarters published only its Big Book * and a few pamphlets.
Meanwhile, many groups began publishing additional material for A.A.
members. Walker was a few years sober in A.A. and a member of the South
Shore A.A. group in Quincy, Massachusetts when they published 2,000 copies
of For Drunks Only in 1945. At that time, A.A. membership was around
13,000 and 900 A.A. groups were established.
In 1945, Walker
sent a copy of his pamphlet to his friend and A.A. cofounder, Bill
Wilson. The book was inscribed, For Bill Wilson with gratitude from Rich
Walker. In 1946, Walker offered Wilson For Drunks Only; to consider for
publication by A.A. But, A.A. declined to publish For Drunks Only; as it
would also decline to publish Twenty Four Hours a Day when he made a
similar offer in 1954. In March 1946, 6,000 more copies of For Drunks Only
were printed by the Quincy Group and sold for 25 cents each to A.A.
members.
In 1945, A.A. world headquarters was
in its adolescence with A.A. membership rapidly increasing. Problems of
finance, anonymity, and the question of leadership when its cofounders
were gone were the concerns of the day. The A.A. Grapevine began printing
The Twelve Traditions in the summer of 1946 as a set of principles and
guidelines for A.A. unity. So, in 1945 A.A. members had just the Big Book,
a few pamphlets, and the newly begun A.A. Grapevine as literature to help
them with their journey in sobriety. For Drunks Only and Twenty-Four Hours
a Day stand apart from other literature for A.A. members by their use of
Oxford Group literature and principles.
The Oxford Group, through its
teachings and meetings, tried to help individuals become physically,
mentally, and spiritually whole. Its disciples taught the necessity of
absolute surrender to God as the directing force in their entire lives.
(In Not-God, Ernest Kurtz describes the Oxford Group as a
nondenominational, theologically conservative, evangelically styled
attempt to recapture the impetus and spirit of what its members understood
to be primitive Christianity.) When Bill Wilson achieved sobriety in 1934,
it was the Oxford Group and their meetings that helped him. In Alcoholics
Anonymous Comes of Age Bill Wilson wrote, Early A.A. got its ideas of
self-examination, ac. knowledgment of character defects, restitution of
harm done, and working with others straight from the Oxford Group.
Richmond Walker, like many other A.A.
members during the 1940s, relied heavily on writings associated with the
Oxford Group, although the Oxford Group was not exclusively for alcoholics
trying to remain sober. The Oxford Group author which influenced Walker
the most was A. J. Russell. Russell had attended an Oxford Group meeting
with the intention of doing a newspaper story on the Oxford Group. In
Russell's words, ‘as an observer, I became a convert’
A characteristic of most group or
social movements is that one book becomes identified as the Bible of
that organization. Just as Alcoholics Anonymous has this status in A.A.,
For Sinners Only by Russell was the Bible of the Oxford Group. Russell
was also the editor of God Calling, which Richmond Walker used as a
guideline in writing Twenty-Four Hours a Day. Russell, who was a newspaper
editor in London, describes his journey from Prodigal Son to the Oxford
Group in For Sinners Only. This book became a best seller in the 1930s in
the United States and England and was translated into many foreign
languages. In 1939, the Big Book was published giving the first lOO A.A.
members their Own book and their own organization removed from the Oxford
Group.
For Sinners Only chronicles
Russell's interpretation of the group, with various sections of the book
citing important ideas such as: the common fear of people to let go and
trust themselves to God, the importance of surrendering to the will of
God, and the way one's powerlessness to overcome sin leads that person to
seek help from the Powerful One. Russell was able to make spiritual
progress through insights which came during Quiet Times or morning
meditations of listening to God. The Oxford Group believed in the
importance of Quiet Times for daily guidance.
One chapter of For Sinners Only was
devoted to Calvary Episcopal Church in New York City and its rector, The
Reverend Samuel M. Shoemaker. Calvary Episcopal Church served as the U.S.
headquarters of the Oxford Group during the 1930s. Shoemaker had been an
Oxford Group convert since 1918.
In November
1934, Calvary witnessed the arrival of Bill Wilson. Through the assistance
of Shoemaker and Dr. William Duncan Silkworth at Towns Hospital, Bill W.
remained sober and a member of the Oxford Group. Dr. Bob Smith, A.A:s
other cofounder, also relied on the literature and meetings of the Oxford
Group in Akron, Ohio.
The influence of Oxford Group
teachings and literature is evident in For Drunks Only. Walker uses the
Oxford Group term soul-sickness to describe his alcoholic condition when
he attended his first A.A. meeting. As in Oxford Group meetings, early A.A.
members were instructed to get up at meetings and bear personal witness
to past mistakes. Walker wrote that the Big Book told him to do seven
things: 'Admit I'm an alcoholic, realize I must spend the rest of my life
without alcohol, be absolutely honest with myself and others, turn to a
Higher Power for help, live one day at a time, come to A.A. meetings
regularly, and work with other alcoholics:' A major criteria for working
the Oxford Group program were the Four Absolutes: Honesty, Purity,
Unselfishness, and Love. Bill W., however, was careful not to put
absolute requirements into the A.A. program; he believed individuals
seeking sobriety would have problems with this concept. Walker also refers
to the Sanskrit proverb in For Drunks Only which he used in the foreword
of Twenty-Four Hours a Day.
In Chapter Four of For Drunks Only;
The Spiritual Basis of A.A.:' Walker tells the reader that A.A. members
have a motto: “But for the grace of God” This motto is important for
sobriety and to conquer the soul-sickness caused by alcoholism. Early
A.A. members were often asked when joining A.A. to get down on their knees
when they accepted God in their lives. (This practice is one of many that
have been eliminated over the years in A.A. Other early rigid practices
have also been softened as A.A. goes through its evolutionary stages.)
Walker also uses parables such as the Prodigal Son and the Good Samaritan
from the New Testament in his pamphlet. The Twenty-Four Hour Programme
(Walker shows the influence of British Oxford Group writers with his use
of the British spelling of program) is simplified in thl old saying,
“Yesterday is gone, forget it; tomorrow never comes, don’t worry; today is
here, get busy”
Walker continually refers to
witnessing which is one of the most frequently used Oxford Group sayings.
He then tells us that this terDI is the same as sharing which is the term
used by A.A. members. Walker's concept of A.A. involves a program of
submission, release, and action and one of faith, hope, and charity.
Walker comes closer than most others who write about A.A. in his
interpretation of the source of the A.A. Twelve Steps. The Oxford Group's
Five C's are discussed as the source of the Steps. Confidence,
confession, convic. tion, conversion, and continuance are illustrated by
Walker as they apply to the Steps.
We are all fortunate that For Drunks
Only is again available as it illustrates the influence of the Oxford
Group. But more importantly, it shows us that the A.A. program of over
forty years ago remains essentially the same today. This is reflected in
Walker's conclusion where he states: “And, finally, if you want to, you
can become a uniquely useful person by using your own greatest defeat and
failure and sickness as a weapon to help others.”
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