
I met up with the guy who has lost his job because of disclosing his serostatus and was very impressed by his optimism about the whole thing, how pragmatic his approach has been to the virus and how little he worries, trusting in the doctors to maintain his current good health, how readily he took to the medication, asking what on earth the people who complain about the medication have got to justify it when he had a couple of days of feeling ill then felt great on the tablets. No annoyance at having to take them, just a shrug of the shoulders and, "Well, that's how it is now."
I would that I had talked to him the moment I was diagnosed, then I'd know to question the soul-searching and the anxieties I've held since finding out my status. Still, were it not for the catalyst of the diagnosis, I might not have embarked on the road I've followed, becoming single, concentrating on my creativity, getting back into photography as a daily practice, defining my politics more defiantly and generally diving headfirst into all kinds of strange scenarios. Through my obsession about the virus I've learned a lot, I've met new people, experienced some strange scenarios I might not otherwise have seen played out in front of me.

Knowing which battles to fight is important, as is recognising when you're dwelling needlessly on things you can't change and worst of all is worrying about things which may well not come to pass and remaining anxious about conditional clauses.
I've indulged myself a lot with this blog, and let out some deeply skewed thinking which I attached to the virus which hasn't even really done anything to me yet. Not directly, anyway. Sure, I had night sweats sometimes, only badly very infrequently. Generally, I need an open window and a lighter quilt, I think. It's not seeing the wood for the trees to let this damned thing define me.

Yeah, I'm okay and things will work out just fine.
1 comment:
Good post. I've been waiting for a post like this to help highlight your great blog. This one will do.
I've featured it in the "best of gay blogging" section of HomoMojo.com.
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