I was barely twenty-two years old when I tested HIV
positive. That was twenty-four years
ago. A few years back it occurred to me
that I had been living with HIV for more than half my life. This was never supposed to be. I was never supposed to live this long. In fact, several years ago, after the first
time I’d been sick, I got better and fell into such a depression I wasn’t
certain I’d ever dig myself out. I had
something called CMV or Cytomegalovirus.
Because at the time, my immune system was nonexistent and because I had
at least one AIDS related infection, I was considered to have full blown
AIDS. It was 1994 and I was living in Seattle. I was twenty-six years old and going
blind. Each day was like looking through
a little bit smaller toilet paper tube.
Prior to that, I had not taken any of the HIV/AIDS related drugs I had
seen completely obliterate the quality of life of so many friends. I refused.
You may call it valiant, but really it was just cowardice. I didn’t want to get that sick. This new development, however, frightened me
enough that I was against a wall and no longer had a choice. There was an experimental treatment that’s
first dose was to be administered intravenously, so off I went to the hospital,
just a few weeks before Christmas, 1994.
After that, I had agreed to go on a regimen of medications. I had been, at that time, HIV positive for
almost six years. I really believe that
my gutless refusal to take any treatment prior to that is one of the reasons I’m
alive today.
If you’ve recently seen the brilliant HBO movie the Normal
Heart or maybe you were around then, you know that the first cases of a rare
cancer in gay men were reported by the New York Times in the summer of
1981. There weren’t terms like HIV or
AIDS that early. No one knew what the
hell was happening, not even doctors.
For the next 10 – 15 years, testing positive for HIV was thought to be a
death sentence. That’s what I meant
earlier when I said I was never supposed to live that long. When I got better, in 1995, after starting
treatment, I grew more and more depressed.
Now what? I had spent the last
half-decade preparing to die. I
certainly hadn’t done anything about living, no savings, no education, and no
career. I’d burnt bridges definitely. What was the point of living any
differently? Well, I decided, I’d just
go on another five years and surely die then.
the climate was far less friendly. Some came out with not one person on their
side. Being HIV positive or having AIDS only
added to the struggle, doubling the hysteria.
It was March 8, 1990, when I tested positive. I’d already known at the time that I’d been
exposed. When the doctor told me, I felt
more than a modicum of relief. I have to say, it wasn’t as much having
suspected it was coming, as much as it was relief in knowing it was the
ultimate punishment. What more could
they do to me for being gay, what other penance could I be asked to pay? I could finally stop running from the
shame.
I’ve told the story already that I was friends, at the time,
with several other young gay men all of them within a year or two of my
age. Within two years, eight of us had
tested HIV positive. Less than ten years
later, I was living back home in Minnesota when I got the news that the second
to the last of the eight had died, leaving me the only one left alive. Nearly unable to breathe under the weight of
that news, I sat on the floor of my apartment in Minneapolis, chairs being too far from the
ground. Naturally I got drunk. It was nine o’clock in the morning when I
cracked my first beer determined to pour over photo albums and reminisce. As the morning drew on, I began to rip
pictures out of the albums, suffocated by the faces of so many dead people
staring back at me. It wasn’t only the
seven people I alluded to who had died It was the 1990s and I was gay, having
just lived in Southern California, then San Francisco
and finally Seattle. In the preceding decade I had known 73 people
who had died of AIDS. 73!
The guilt that you feel having survived takes on a life of
its own, so many people far more talented, far more beautiful with far more to
offer than I did, all gone. How could I
not feel guilty? I suppose there are
still moments of guilt, more than another decade later, mostly when I’m
shirking my potential and just getting by.
I owe those amazing people much more than that. I suppose a piece of it is the telling of,
not just mine, by OUR story. I lived
through an amazing time in our history, sad certainly; sometimes so much so
that you felt you might literally drown in it, but also incomprehensibly life affirming. You can’t really imagine what it’s like to
face your mortality in such a way and at such an age and then come out the
other side. At some point, it became
clear that I had very little say in my own destiny or whatever you want to call
it. I had done nearly everything I could
to die and, yet, I was still here. There
was drug addiction, two suicide attempts, and such an abhorrent level of self
destruction, I’m embarrassed to admit, I woke up one day and realized I had
wasted nearly my entire adult life, determined to die. It was then that I decided, and it was a very
definite decision, like flipping a switch, to try and figure out how to live. It was as simple as that.
I have taken HIV meds, now, for almost twenty years, the
side effects ranging from fatigue, depression, painful neuropathy in my feet
and legs, weight gain, weight loss, skin irritation, nausea and vomiting. In the beginning, some of those were
constant, but with the advent of newer, better regimens, the side effects seem
only to persist in the beginning.
Sometimes you are on the same regimen for so long that the virus
develops an immunity and the drugs lose their efficacy. Then it’s time to start new drugs and with
those, a whole new set of side effects as your body struggles to get used to
the new poisons you’re willingly
taking in on a daily basis. And then
there are drugs you take to alleviate the side effects of drugs you take to
alleviate the side effects of the HIV meds.
And so and so on.
In 2002, I had lost my medical assistance, tied up in red
tape over a job that offered health insurance, leaving me ineligible for assistance,
yet disqualifying any preexisting conditions, and I went off HIV meds for the
first time since 1994. I was off meds
for six months and, by October of 2002, I had pneumonia in both lungs, I had
lost forty pounds, weighing around 110 pounds, and I had no immune system. Once again, I was facing full blown AIDS. I spent ten days in the hospital, the
neuropathy in my legs aggravated by the harrowing weight loss; I was on
morphine for pain. Visitors had to wear
masks and hospital gowns and slippers, not for their protection, but for
mine. Anything they might be carrying
could be the final nail in my coffin. Once
again, though, from somewhere, I rallied.
Back on meds, surrounded by loved ones, I began to gain weight and get
better. By New Year’s 2003, it was
barely evident I’d even been sick, let alone having, again, almost died.
I went on a new kind of regimen then, something called a protease
inhibitor, in conjunction with other anti retrovirals. A protease inhibitor was a new class of drug
in the early 2000s that prevented viral replication. For nine years, I did great, the virus
essentially held at bay by one drug cocktail, but then, about two and a half
years ago, that cocktail stopped working.
For the last two years, I underwent five med changes, some complete,
others just tweaking one or two meds, or playing with dosages to diminish or
eliminate side effects all together. In
some cases, the regimen never started to work.
In others, it worked, but not for long.
Each time a med change was ordered, there were side effects, mostly
vomiting, so much so for nearly an entire year, that I damaged my esophagus. I took steroids to repair some of the damage,
but there will likely be some permanent damage, as well. For the record, I seem to be back on a
regimen that is working. Surprisingly, we’ve
decided to restart the original drug cocktail I began in 2002. The hope was that, the virus had spent so
much time in the previous two years fighting off new drugs that it’s immunity
to the old, more effective ones had been forgotten. So far, so good. I’m doing better than expected and my test
results have been amazing.
amazing. He took my
hands across the table and assured me nothing had changed. After dinner, as I had said, we were meeting
friends for drinks. It had started to
pour by the time we reached the bar, so this kind man dropped me at the door
and went to find a parking spot. I went
in to meet our friends feeling on cloud nine.
The guy never came back that night.
I saw him once after and he acted like he owed me money he couldn’t pay
back. There have been other instances
sure. For a long time, I just stopped
dating.
At times, you have this feeling that no one can ever really
understand. Literally, all of the people
in my life that could have, have died. I
suppose had this fact become unbearable, I could have found a support
group. In 2003, though, in a dark movie
theater, next to my best friend Melissa, I sat dumbfounded as a movie presented
the most brilliant metaphor, to me, for living with HIV, in the most unexpected place, Lord of the
Rings: Return of the King. “Come, Mr.
Frodo!' Sam cried. 'I can't carry it [the ring] for you, but I can carry you.” All at once, the tears came. It was an emotional moment anyway, but I didn’t
cry for Sam or Frodo or anyone in Middle Earth.
I cried because I had ever held anyone at arm’s length because they
couldn’t actually understand everything I had been through or was going through
then. For most of my life, I have been
surrounded by wonderful, flawed, yet amazing people. I have rarely lacked support and for that I
am so grateful. So many people, unable
to carry the disease, have carried me instead.
Over and over again, I have feared I would be left alone, only to have
someone pop up when and where you least expect them to.
Many people find my attitude about all of this commendable. I believe the sentiment most often bandied
about is what a positive attitude I have after all I’ve been through. Of course I don’t walk through life whining
about my lot in it. I’ve never
understood the point in that, though sure, so many people do approach their
life as if it’s a chore they can’t wait to complete and cross of their to do
list. I have been given a gift, really
we all have. Anyone who thinks I have a
positive attitude, though, should be beside me on the morning’s when I grumble
out of bed, almost disgusted at the prospect of another day, or when I swallow
another handful of pills I know will make me sick, without an ounce of
gratitude, or a single thought of any one of those 73 people I knew who had
died. I am often grateful there isn’t a
loud speaker attached to my brain broadcasting my thoughts. I’m grateful, too, that I manage, most days,
to find some joy in the mundane, that I choose to surround myself with people
who also choose to laugh at life’s endless barrage of inside jokes. Getting up every day and putting one foot in
front of the other, attempting to better yourself and trying to be kind to
other people no matter what, isn’t, in my opinion, about having a positive
attitude. It’s about making a decision
to live. It is so much easier to be
happy in life than to be miserable. Look
around. I can almost guarantee you that
you’ve crossed paths, recently, with someone who chose the other option. I am never as good as I hope to be. Being truly good, I think, is a thing rarer
and rarer, but I hope that I have touched as many as have touched me. If that is the case than I’m glad I’m still
here. I hope to honor those who have
died of this, with which I live. I hope,
too, that I’ve shed just a little bit of light on what it is like to live with
HIV, so much having been said about what it is like to die of AIDS.