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Stigma
A FEW THOUGHTS FROM MARTY MANN ON STIGMA
(The following was adapted from “A Matter
of Life and Death,” an article that first appeared in 1970)
Few among you consider alcoholism a proper
subject for open discussion, few among you would willingly label
yourself, or a friend or colleague, an alcoholic, and even fewer
would be able to recognize alcoholism early, when there is the best
chance for recovery.
All of this is the result of stigma, a state
of mind which we inherited from our Puritan and also our Victorian
forebears; a state of mind which is essentially mindless since it
overlooks all the things which have been learned; a state of mind
which produces public attitudes that are anti-therapeutic to say
the least. In bald language, stigma kills.
Stigma manifests itself in many ways; in false
beliefs, such as that alcoholism is entirely a moral problem and
alcoholics moral delinquents; or that alcoholism is simply a matter
of will power and alcoholics are weaklings; or that alcoholism
is a deliberate self-degradation and alcoholics are simply letting
themselves slide downhill—“throwing their lives away,”
or that alcoholism is only found on the Skid Rows of the nation
and alcoholics are all homeless indigent derelicts—“Skid
Row bums”; or finally, that alcoholism is a hopeless condition
and alcoholics are all “hopelessdrunks” (spoken as
one word).
The results of stigma are also many, and all
are destructive. The family that has an alcoholic in its midst
goes to great lengths to conceal this, and the fellow workers of
the alcoholic—often including his immediate superiors—cover
up for him, keep giving him “one more chance to straighten
up.” The friends, neighbors and others in more casual contact
with the alcoholic carefully look the other way. All are participating
in a great conspiracy of silence, many of them in the mistaken
belief that they are protecting the alcoholic when actually they
are preventing him from getting help.
Stigma drives the alcoholic and his family
underground, isolates them from their fellows, twists and distorts
them psychologically as they cringe under the heavy burden of shame.
They feel disgraced and so they hide—and keep quiet. A study
of wives of recovered alcoholics made by the National Council on
Alcoholism a few years ago showed that these wives had waited an
average of eleven years after they first realized there was something
seriously wrong, before talking to anyone about it: doctors, clergymen,
lawyers or even their own families. And none of them knew there
was help available, or where to go to find it, all during those
long painful years while their alcoholic’s illness was progressing
and the losses due to it were mounting: money, jobs, homes, friends,
and the well-being, both physical and psychological, of the children.
For contrary to another false belief fostered by stigma, the large
majority of our alcoholic population is married, living at home,
with children, and with a job. And the large majority of women
alcoholics are housewives, even more easily hidden inside the home.
Where they are career women, whether in the theater, the arts,
or in business, their situation is comparable to that of the men…excepting
that the stigma is twice as heavy and infinitely more cruel for
a woman. So their underground existence is apt to start earlier
and to continue longer, and their chances recovery have only recently
begun to catch up with those for men.
Stigma also plays a part in the almost universal
characteristic of the alcoholic: denial that he is one. Who has
not heard someone who “drinks too much” declare flatly, “Who,
me? Trouble with drinking? Nonsense, I can quit any time I want
to.”
Or use the even better known phrase, “I can take it or leave
it alone.” The role of stigma in this denial is simple: no
one willingly admits to being a moral delinquent, a weakling, or
any other of the many misinformed characterizations that have for
so long been applied to alcoholics. How can we blame them? They
too were brought up in ignorance of the facts. They too were brainwashed
into the vast mythology that surrounds drinking and alcoholism.
They too are usually lacking any useful information about this
condition and its victims, and what can be done about them.
Many things are needed before all alcoholics
at all stages of their illness will have a equal chance at recovery:
things like good medical care, hospital beds, outpatient clinics,
recovery centers or halfway houses. Most of all we need a new climate
of understanding on the part of the public—and that means
everyone.
Original article appeared
in NCADDAmethyst, Fall 1994, Vol. 2, No. 3. Used with
permission.
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