The Fearful One

Personal Stories From The First Edition

WHEN I was 21, I was taken suddenly and violently ill and was ill for
seven years. As a result of this illness I was left with a poorish
nervous system and a curious phobia. As this has a large place in my
story, I will try to explain it clearly. After I had been ill some
months, I grew strong enough to get out of doors a little each day, but
found I couldn't get farther than the nearest corner without becoming
totally panic stricken. As soon as I turned back home the panic would
vanish. I gradually overcame this particular phase of the trouble by
setting myself longer distances to walk each day. Similarly I learned
later to take short street car rides, then longer ones, and so forth,
until I appeared to be doing most of the things other people do daily.
But the things I did not have to do each day, or at least frequently,
remained unconquered and a source of great but secret embarrassment to me.

So I went on for years, planning always to sidestep the things I was
afraid of, but concealing my fear from everyone. Those years of illness
were not all total invalidism. I made a good living part of the time, but
was continually falling down and having to get up and start over again.
The whole process gave me a licked feeling, especially when, towards the
end of my twenties, I had to give up the presidency of a small company
which was just turning the corner to real success. Shortly after this I
was successfully operated on and became a physically well man. But the
surgeon did not remove the phobia, that remained with me.

During the period of my illness I was not especially interested in
liquor. I was not a teetotaler, but I was just a "social drinker."
However, when I was about thirty, my mother died. I went to pieces as I
had become very dependent on my parents through my illness. When I began
to get on my feet again I discovered that whiskey was a fine relief from
the terrific nervous headaches I had developed. Long after the headaches
were gone, however, I kept discovering other difficulties for which
whiskey was a grand cure. During the ensuing ten years I once, by sheer
will power, remained dry for five weeks.

I had many business opportunities during those ten years which, although
I tried to keep them in my grasp, slipped through my fingers. A lovely
wife came and went. She tried her best and our baby's birth put me on my
mettle for all of six months, but after that, worse and more of it. When
my wife finally took the baby and left, did I square my shoulders and go
to work to prove to her and to the world that I was a man? I did not. I
stayed drunk for a solid month.

The next two months were simply a drawn-out process of less and less work
and more and more liquor. They ended eventually at the home of a very
dear friend whose family were out of town. I had been politely but firmly
kicked out of the house where I had been boarding, and although I seemed
to be able to find money to buy drinks with, I couldn't find enough to
pay advance room rent anywhere.

One night, sure my number was up, I chucked my "pride" and told this
friend a good deal of my situation. He was a man of considerable means
and he might have done what many men would have in such a case. He might
have handed me fifty dollars and said that I ought to pull myself
together and make a new start. I have thanked God more than once that
that was just what he did not do.

Instead, he took me out, bought me three more drinks, put me to bed and
yanked me bodily out of town the next noon to a city 200 miles away and
into the arms of one of the most extraordinary bunch of men in the United
States. Here, while in the hospital, men with clear eyes and happy faces
came to see me and told me the story of their lives. Some of them were
hard to believe, but it didn't take a lot of brain work to see they had
something I could use. And it was so simple. The sum and substance of it
seemed to be that if I would turn to God, it was very probably that He
could do a better job with my life than I had.

When I got out of the hospital, I was invited to stay in the home of one
of the fellows. Here I found myself suddenly and uncontrollably seized
with the old panic. I was in a strange house, in a strange city, and fear
gripped me. I shut myself up in my room. I couldn't sit down, I couldn't
stand up, I couldn't lie down, couldn't leave because I had nowhere to go
and no money to take me. Any attempt at reasoning accomplished nothing.

Suddenly in this maelstrom I grasped at a straw. Maybe God would help
me-just maybe, mind you. I was willing to give Him a chance, but with
considerable doubt. I got down on my knees-something I hadn't done in
thirty years. I asked Him if He would let me hand over all these fears
and this panic to Him. I lay down on the bed and went to sleep like a
baby. An hour later I awoke to a new world. I could scarcely credit my
senses, but that terrible phobia which had wrecked my life for eighteen
years, was gone. Utterly gone. And in its place was a power and
fearlessness which is a bit hard to get accustomed to.

All that happened nearly eight years ago. In those six months a new life
has opened before me. It isn't that I have been cured of an ordinarily
incurable disease. I have found a joy in living that has nothing to do
with money or material success. I know that incomparable happiness that
comes from helping some other fellow get straightened out. Don't get me
wrong. We are not a bunch of angels. None of us has any notion of
becoming such. But we know that we can never go completely back to old
ways because we are traveling upward through service to others and in
trying to be honest, decent, and loving toward the world, instead of
sliding and slipping around in a life of drinking, cheating, lying and
doing what we like.



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