After nearly a half century of attending recovery meetings, I have found it best to take all of this heated hyperbole and rhetoric into stride and treat it much like the proverbial water flowing off the duck’s back. When AA lost the copyright to the Big Book it was heralded as the end of AA. That didn’t come to pass. When AA lost its fight to copyright the “Circle and the Triangle” this loss was lauded as the end of AA, but that didn’t happen either. When AA tried unsuccessfully to gain ownership of the original manuscript of the Big Book, this too was met with doom and gloom, but it quickly passed with hardly anyone noticing.
Now we are on the eve of the Plain Language Big Book being published and Chicken Little seems to have taken flight. For those who have concerns about an updated Big Book watering down or worse yet ruining the AA program, here are a couple things to keep in mind.
Today, AA can be found around the world. The Big Book has been translated into 70 different languages. AA has weathered many storms from the passing of its co-founders to anonymity breaks and even being disparaged by the recovery community it helped to flourish. In spite of all of this, AA continues to strive, grow, and keep its doors open to the newcomer who is looking for a solution to their drinking problem. I suspect that the Plain Language Big Book will be no more than a blip on the AA recovery radar.
*The Free Dictionary gives this insightful information about the phrase “the sky is falling”: An absurd belief that disaster is imminent. The “sky is falling” has become an idiom which is used to express the belief that something ominous and disastrous is about to happen.