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Tradition
Eight
Copyright
© The A.A.
Grapevine, Inc., July 1948
Throughout
the world AAs are twelfth-stepping with thousands of new
prospects a month. Between one and two thousand of these
sick on our first presentation; past experience shows
that most of the remainder will come back to us later
on. Almost entirely unorganized and completely non professional,
this mighty spiritual current is now flowing from alcoholics
who are well to those who are sick. One alcoholic talking
to another; that's all.
Could
this vast and vital face-to-face effort ever be professionalized
or even organized? Most emphatically, it could not. The
few efforts to professionalized straight twelfth Step
work have always failed quickly. Today, no AA will tolerate
the idea of paid "AA therapists" or "organizers."
Nor does any AA like to be told just how he must handle
that new prospect of his. No, this great life-giving stream
can never be dammed up by paid do-gooders or professionals.
Alcoholics Anonymous is never going to cut its own lifelines.
To a man, we are sure of that.
But
what about those who serve us full time in other capacities
-- are cooks, caretakers, and paid intergroup secretaries
"AA professionals"?
Because
our thinking about these people is still unclear, we often
feel and act as though they were such. The impression
of professionalism subtly attaches to them, so we frequently
hear they are "making money out of AA" or that
they are "professionalizing" AA. Seemingly,
if they do take our AA dollars they don't quite belong
with us AAs anymore. We sometimes go further; we underpay
them on the theory they ought to be glad to "cook"
for AA cheap.
Now
isn't this carrying our fears of professionalism rather
far? If these fears ever got too strong, none but a saint
or an incompetent could work for Alcoholics Anonymous.
Our supply of saints being quite small, we would certainly
wind up with less competent workers than we need.
We
are beginning to see that our few paid workers are performing
only those service tasks that our volunteers cannot consistently
handle. Primarily these folks are not doing Twelfth Step
work. They are just making more and better Twelfth Step
work possible. Secretaries at their desks are valuable
points of contact, information, and public relations.
That is what they are paid for, and nothing else. They
help carry the good news of AA to the outside world and
bring our prospects face to face with us. That's not "AA
therapy"; it's just a lot of very necessary but often
thankless work.
So,
where needed, let's revise our attitude toward those who
labor at our special services. Let us treat them as AA
associated, and not as hired help; let's recompense them
fairly and, above all, let's absolve them from the label
of professionalism.
Let
us also distinguish clearly between "organizing the
AA movement" and setting up, in a reasonably businesslike
manner, its few essential services of contact and propagation.
Once we do that, all will be well. The million or so fellow
alcoholics who are still sick will then continue to get
the break we sixty thousand AAs have already had.
Let's
give our "service desks" the hand they so well
deserve.
Copyright
© The A.A.
Grapevine, Inc., July 1948
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