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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!edcastle!aiai!diana
- From: diana@aiai.ed.ac.uk (Diana Bental)
- Newsgroups: soc.bi
- Subject: Re: Questionnaire for HIV-negative people
- Keywords: HIV negative AIDS safer sex psychology gay bi
- Message-ID: <8084@skye.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: 30 Dec 92 16:13:21 GMT
- References: <Bzn32w.Cr2@world.std.com> <Bzn6JE.6L8@demon.co.uk> <1992Dec26.130922.6072@cltr.uq.OZ.AU> <BzyK3w.HAC@demon.co.uk>
- Reply-To: diana@aiai.UUCP (Diana Bental)
- Organization: AIAI, University of Edinburgh, Scotland
- Lines: 57
-
- In <BzyK3w.HAC@demon.co.uk> Graham Toal says:
-
- >It sure looked to me like he was talking about the stress and guilt of
- >being found HIV- when your friends are HIV+. While I understand the
- >psychology of this (like major accident/war survivors who need
- >psychiatric help to readjust, asking themselves why their friends and
- >'better people than me' suffered while they survived), I don't think
- >it applies to HIV+ when 99.9999% of the world's population are
- >'survivors'.
-
- Well, let's just take a closer look at your analogy.
-
- 99.9999% of the world's population didn't die in a major air crash,
- either. The people who need psychiatric help are the ones who were
- *in* the air crash but survived it. You have assumed that people who
- test HIV- are analogous to people who weren't even in the plane. But
- your assumption is wrong. Everyone who has decided to take the HIV
- test (or who knows that s/he is seriously at risk of HIV) is in that
- crashed plane: testing negative is analogous to surviving the crash
- without physical injury.
-
- The analogy also works in a different way. Someone who lost many of
- their friends, family, heroes and lovers in an air crash might also
- feel devastating loss *and* survivor guilt even if s/he wasn't
- actually on the plane. Anyone who lives among people many of whom are
- HIV+ may feel the same, regardless of whether s/he has ever been
- personally at risk.
-
- One reason for setting up such support groups in the US is (I guess)
- because of the scope of the gay community *as* a community there,
- especially in places like San Francisco, the extent to which people
- live within that community and the devastating effects of AIDS on that
- community and the people in it, including the survivors. Some people
- who are HIV- have seen AIDS cut a swathe through their whole social
- and emotional lives.
-
- The Names quilt has a giant section devoted just to members of a gay
- men's singing/acting group. Now just imagine how it might feel to be
- a member of that group who was HIV-. Lucky, yes, but what else?
- Perhaps not so different from going on a plane trip with the group, a
- trip that ended in a crash that *you* survived but many of your
- closest friends didn't.
-
- So when someone is not only a survivor of the crash, but is also
- friend, colleague, relative, lover or nurse to many people who are
- dying in it, I see every reason why s/he might need *exactly* that
- kind of help.
-
- Diana
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- Diana Bental, JANET: diana@uk.ac.ed.aisb
- Dept of Artificial Intelligence, INTERNET: diana@aisb.ed.ac.uk
- University of Edinburgh, UUCP: ...!ukc!aisb.ed.ac.uk!diana
- 80 South Bridge, Edinburgh EH1 1HN, UK
-
- That's straight as in sword, Maeve
-