On the Military Firing Line in the Alcoholism Treatment Program

The Air Force Sergeant Who Beat Alcoholism and Taught Others to Do the Same

by William Swegan


Formats

Hardcover
$31.95
Softcover
$21.95
Hardcover
$31.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 7/13/2003

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 360
ISBN : 9780595748365
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 360
ISBN : 9780595283828

About the Book

An insightful, very readable book. The father of military alcoholism treatment tells about his own life and recovery from alcoholism, and describes how he set up the first officially sanctioned military treatment programs for alcoholics in the 1940s and 50s, when the Alcoholics Anonymous movement was first spreading across the United States. A survivor of the attack on Pearl Harbor, he almost died after the war from his own out-of-control drinking. Using his own recovery as a guide, he persuaded the Air Force to appoint him full time to working with other alcoholics. The success story which he and psychiatrist Dr. Louis Jolyon West related in the American Journal of Psychiatry in 1956 was distributed all across the country by the National Council on Alcoholism.

If you think that you may have a problem with alcohol or drugs yourself, this book can save your life. The author describes in simple terms the processes which drive people to drink and use drugs, and the route to recovery. He talks about genetics, physical addiction, and the social and psychological pressures which produce subconscious conflicts and massive guilt in alcohol and drug abusers. For mental health professionals, he discusses the relationship between the twelve step program and basic psychiatric principles, and shows how the professionals and the A.A. and N.A. groups can work together to produce impressive recovery rates.

This A.A. old-timer (fifty-five years sober) also talks about his early mentor Mrs. Marty Mann, the first woman to gain long-term sobriety in A.A. He describes his conversations with Sister Ignatia and the good old-timers in Akron, Ohio, his work with the noted alcohol researcher E. M. Jellinek at the Yale School of Alcohol Studies, and the way early A.A. meetings were organized and conducted. His book is a lasting monument to those early years, when it was first discovered that alcoholics could be saved.


About the Author

Bill S. was born in Niles, Ohio on June 29, 1918. He enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1939, and served in the Pacific theater in World War II, narrowly escaping death in the attack on Pearl Harbor. After the war, he was assigned to work full time creating alcoholism treatment programs at Mitchell Air Force Base on Long Island and Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio. He retired from the Air Force as a Senior Master Sergeant in 1961, but later ran alcoholism treatment programs at Fort Ord for the Army, and then at Alameda Naval Air Station, where in 1983 he was given the Meritorious Service Award, the Navy?s highest award for a civilian at a duty station, for his work there with alcoholics and drug addicts.

Glenn F. Chesnut, who earned his doctorate at Oxford University, has taught at the University of Virginia and Boston University, and has just retired after many years as Professor of History and Religious Studies at Indiana University, South Bend. He is the author of The Higher Power of the Twelve-Step Program: For Believers & Non-Believers, and The Factory Owner & the Convict, which tells the story of the lives and teachings of some of the early A.A. leaders of the upper midwest.