The Good Old Bad Old Days

Blog Category: HIV prevention — Blogged by: Chris on January 15, 2008 at 5:46 pm

Three things I know for sure after living half my life under the cloud of the HIV/AIDS epidemic is that life is complicated, sex is complicated, and HIV is complicated. There are almost-countless numbers of tributary issues that flow into the ocean we find ourselves navigating, metaphorically speaking, that it can sometimes feel as if we’re trapped in a perfect storm of relentless waves of watery doom.

But I’ll be damned if the New York Times editorial didn’t dash off more than half a dozen of them (and that’s just the tip of the iceberg, to belabor the high seas references) in a mere 403 words with a thorough veneer of judgment buoying the proceedings. There’s the “problem with these young whippersnappers of today” angle; the “people are irresponsibly letting their guard down” angle; the “what is the deal with young men of color?” angle; the “gasp! people drink and do drugs” angle; and the hope-undermining “nobody even knows how long these treatments are going to work, anyway” angle.

Each of these points needs a nuanced dissection and discussion of its own, but the most important thing to get at is the underlying nostalgia for the Good Old Bad Old Days that often tints the discussion of the AIDS epidemic now, particularly across the generations in communities of men who have sex with men. When the disease was new and terrifying, the Times informs us, the gay community helped change behavior by preaching loudly against taking sexual risks. Hold the phone. Are we really going to argue that if only we could go back to when we were all terrified, to a simpler time when AIDS was all but untreatable and we buried friends who died after being horribly ill that the complicated business of prevention would all but take care of itself?

I can’t believe that anybody who actually lived through those first waves of the epidemic could ever think it would be worth going back to that time, even for what they perceive as our own good. Instead, I would argue, that it’s more important than ever for us to look toward the future with cautious optimism by sharing our stories with each other, stories of our hopes and dreams and our successes and failures and our pleasures and our problems in all their messy complication. You know, to tell the stories of our real lives now and acknowledge the possibility of a better future. That was what was at the heart of early and mid-period HIV prevention efforts, and what lies there today, often encumbered by funding dollars with strings attached. That is the true power that needs to be unleashed again.

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2 Comments »

Comment by Mr. M

January 17, 2008 @ 11:42 am

Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
I agree with you on most of your points. However a healthy dose of fear may not be the worst thing. As people live longer with this virus they face the side effects of years of ingesting toxic chemicals often as strong as chemotherapy. There seems to be some evidence that these drugs expidite the onset of usually geriatric related health concerns. Is that something people should know? I know the information may only be ancedotal at this point, but…

I am not saying that you should go around spewing fear based rhetoric. Fear is never a functional cornerstone but can it be used as one of the many tools in your arsenal? I don’t know…

Comment by over 40

January 18, 2008 @ 11:08 am

Amen, brother! But Mr M has a point. Many of the young guys are so ignorant, that they are fearlessly engaging in unsafe behaviour. I\\\’m not saying we need to exagerate the fear. But a healthy dose of reality needs to get through to this new generation or we will be seeing shades of those good old, bad old days in the future.

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