“I
don’t want to be a number that people put on statistics; I want to be heard,
to be part of a community simply because I am.”
If
ten people were asked who they think said these words, the answers would vary.
It could be a father who is jobless but wants to earn a living for his family.
It could be a child who had to stop school because his parents could not afford
it. Or it could be what it is—words from a 25-year-old HIV patient.
“All
the years I watched HIV/AIDS campaigns on television, I never actually thought
it could happen to me,” began Louise (not her real name). “I was there
watching music videos and the campaigns would be shown in between. If I could
take it back, I would. But it’s too late, I guess.”
How
to Survive It
It
was only last year that Louise learned she was HIV positive. Upon meeting a
person inflicted with HIV/AIDS, the first question most people ask is how he or
she acquired the virus. But Louise did not want to elaborate on that.
“Initially people would think that I am ashamed to tell them how I got
sick,” she said, “but what I want to tell them about is how I am, now that
I’m sick. It’s not how I got sick, it has something do to with the fact that
I am sick.”
Louise
also described the battle of HIV/AIDS as a physical and mental undertaking.
“It’s everything, it occupies your mind all day because you see your
medications. You remind yourself of the time you have to take your medications
and how you should prepare them.” But her worry list goes on. “And then
it’s going out of the house and knowing that I’m sick. And that I can’t
interact with people and be carefree as before. Also, when I do activities that
are related to my condition, I feel like there is stamp on my face that spells
HIV/AIDS.”
When
asked what the hardest part of her condition was, she quickly replied, “My
family.” She paused, trying to hold her tears back. “It’s them I have hurt
the most. It’s not the medications or the side effects of the medications;
it’s the pain I saw on their faces and the tension that my condition has
brought to our relationship.”
Upon
receiving confirmation from the doctor, Louise said that she did not hesitate to
tell her family about it. “I simply felt that the best way to tell them is to
tell them straight out that I’m sick. I did not want to keep it or prolong it.
I felt so alone and I needed them.”
In 2005, the number of people affected with HIV/AIDS reached 40.3 million while 3.1 million died. Since its discovery in 1981, 25 million people have died of HIV/AIDS and everyday, 8,000 lives are taken—5 people every minute. A report by the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS stated that “achieving universal access will require coordination of different approaches.” Prevention, treatment, and care should be prioritized. |
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It
was not as easy as she wished it to be. “I remember saying that I had
something to tell them and I want them to be honest with me,” she recalled,
“I was about to say I’m sick when my father shouted, ‘are you pregnant?’
I told him I wish I was pregnant, but I’m sick.” Louise described it as the
longest night of her life. “The fear that I had when I was driving home from
the hospital was the judgments that people will have. And it was much more than
I expected because it was my family who were giving me a lecture about how I am
as a person. They told me I was irresponsible, I was too easy. It was painful
because I expected them to be mad but not that mad.”
The
following months were harder for Louise and her family. “It was like I was a
stranger in the house. There was deafening silence.” It is only now, after two
years of being sick, that things are starting to normalize for her. “I think
I’m lucky because we can afford my medicine. I have met patients who are not
able to get the medication at all or who are on a limited budget. I have learned
to be thankful for what I can do to prolong my time and fix what I can fix,”
she shared.
Now
her parents have started to talk to her about it and support her in little ways.
“Even if it’s just asking me what time I was able to take my meds or if they
can drive me anywhere, it’s a big thing already. Like I said, I am thankful
for whatever is given to me.”
Sad
Reality
Now
Louise keeps a positive outlook in life. “I might be ill. But I’m alive. And
nobody knows how long I’ll live. So I have to make the most of it.” But she
immediately added, “Still, I’m not having a ball. There are times when I’m
reminded of the whole thing. My condition has limited me from doing what I want
to do.”
“The
sad reality is that people have more negative thoughts about people with AIDS
than good. And over time I have understood that most people do not have enough
knowledge about it. For instance, mere physical contact can’t give you HIV. If
I shake hands with you, I won’t give you AIDS,” she stressed.
For
Louise, information and awareness result in a domino effect. “If people would
know the basics about it, it would affect their way of living. They would be
more careful in decisions they make. Second, it will allow people like me who
are sick to be accepted in more ways and supported by many.”
But
it does not stop there; Louise’s vision is much wider. “If all this happens,
a structure will be built that will allow much-needed support to be generated to
people with the virus. It will produce good laws, good projects, good support
systems. And that is what we need the most—advocacy.”
Birds
of the Same Feather
“Through
the advocacy groups that I have joined, I have realized that no matter how
controversial AIDS campaigns get, the straightforwardness makes people
listen.” She then enumerates advertisements for the cause of HIV/AIDS and says
that having these “have prevented many from getting sick.” Learning from the
level of HIV/AIDS awareness in other societies, she underscores that if a
community is open, solutions will follow. “The stigma will be lessened and
eventually, erased,” she said hopefully.
For
now, she is doing her part to spread awareness and support people with HIV/AIDS.
“There’s a saying that birds of the same feather flock together. That’s
how I feel when I’m with them. Eventually, my illness will win me over. But
there are many doctors who are working hard every day for the cure. This is what
I can do for this part of the world. Work on the structure that will establish
the much-needed full circle of HIV/AIDS support.”
**
Joyce Loanzon Reyes is
currently a research officer for the Development Executive Group. She previously
worked with the United Nations Development Program and the United States
Agency for International Development. She is a graduate of International
Studies from Miriam College, Philippines and is currently attending the
University of the Philippines for her graduate studies in the same field. She is
an alumnus of the Model United Nations of the Far West. Your emails will be
forwarded to her by contacting the editor at: