Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Honesty and Policy

The guy I've been seeing most of this year is moving out to Australia in a month or so, so he's been having medicals and such like to check he's healthy enough for them to take him without considering him an unnecessary expense for the country. He's in the middle of all of those checks at the moment, but what irks me is that after having reconciled myself to the thought that there's no way I could have followed him because of my HIV status, they don't do blood tests for students. I couldn't afford to be a student for two years, but it once again reflects the bizarre double standards about HIV. The prejudice seems to be against disclosure, rather than HIV status, because if they were worried about the impact on public health in Australia, they'd test everyone for HIV when applying for a visa and a recent court appeal in the country decided that HIV is not an excessive public expense because people generally need no looking after, just a couple of appointments a year, other than that, it's the medication that costs money and that's a different matter.

Still, he's going and I have no choice but not to go if I'm honest. Same as America, where it seems that the thing they want to keep out is honest people with HIV. It's fine to cross the border if you lie. America turns you out for carrying medication for your infection, but they do nothing to check if you carry the virus when you're visiting.

If I'd not tested this time last year, chances are I'd have had no idea that I have the virus, so I'd move freely in and out of countries without ever thinking if there was something to hide. If I didn't know my status, would I be aware of just how important safer sex was when I have sex? Perhaps not, which would have meant an even greater risk to people in the countries I visited.

My freedom of movement is not, it would seem, restricted by my HIV status but by my honest and for taking the decision to test for the virus. Having decided to test means I've lost my freedom of movement, made myself sick with worry more than once and now seems to have lost me any hope of keeping a relationship that got off to a really good start going.

I mentioned my frustration on an internet forum recently and someone answered that surely I could understand countries not wanting to incur risks to public health or the need to maintain expensive medical conditions. Understanding their rationale doesn't make it any easier to know that those restrictions now apply to me.

Friday, August 18, 2006

One Year On From The End Of The World

There's not been an awful lot to say since my last update, yes, I'm still positive, still well, still holding things together. My boyfriend and I used to be so terrified of risking anything for him, now it's become sex talk and masturbatory fantasy that I "Poz him up" but it remains just a dirty thought rather than a deed. I have a feeling it's best that way.

It's a year on from the start of this blog and the end of the world has turned out to be nothing of the thought. At least not yet. I know that at some point I'll need medication, I don't feel any particular sense of dread about this. I'd still not recommend it to anyone, though, the complications for travelling, the complications in relationships, the never quite being able to touch someone you love in that way, the fleeting moments of fear whenever you get a sore throat or an ulcer. It's not a good look on that front, I tell you that, but it's not the hideous looming crisis you might think.

Yes, my results are all over the place - they kind of match with my personality in that respect - although my viral load remains higher than most I've spoken to. There's not much I can really do to change either. I'm not about to become a monk and live in quiet contemplation in the hope that'll help my body recover, nor am I going to give up and become some drugfuck clubkid either. I think there's not a significant difference in prognosis between the martyr and the whore.

It's a disease, not a punishment, after all.