Community | November 25, 2007 | Comment on this video (13)

HIV is not a death sentence!

jubal
This documentary stands at 22 minutes. I made it as part of my degree program in Broadcast Visual design. In this film I basically come out of the HIV closet and let the world know my status. What is remarkable about this film, that I shot in 2000 during the run up to the presidential election, is that I reveal the fact that I had at that time probably had been HIV positive for close to 25 years, however, I want to be clear that these are speculations based on factual data.

During my teenage years from 12 to 18 I became sexually active. This was in the late 60's and early 70's. HIV was just beginning to make the rounds and working its way into humanity and being spread through fast and free sexual encounters. It hadn't had enough of an incubation period to start making people sick. I was sexually molested when I was 12 years old and quite possibly I could have been infected by that man. Today I am 46 years old. However, the molestation was not a traumatic experience in the sense that I got say "raped" violently against my will. I actually was interested and intrigued by the experience as well as being afraid of being "found out" or "shamed". The man that molested me was in his mid 30's.

I wanted to make a documentary that used my own personal experience to bring hope to those who would watch this film. I especially tailored it to target those who have recently found out that they are HIV positive. I believe very strongly that beside the best of what modern medicine has to offer to people, there is another dimension to disease that is psychosocialspiritual. The psychology that is at work is pretty evident, the social interactions and repercussions that are at work are also evident, however the spiritual nature of healing is not evident and is at great risk when the other two areas are unresolved and/or in chaos. In my life this was absolutely true because I had come to loathe myself and I longed for death as a release from the shame and the guilt that I was carrying around for being such a sexually active teen. Death had become a self fulfilling prophecy in my life.

Imagine how it feels when a person first hears those words "you have tested positive for HIV" it sounds as though someone is reading your death sentence. Feeling this way is a perfectly natural reaction. However, after we have gone through our initial shock and the grieving stage then we need to move into the empowerment stage. This is the stage wherein we take full ownership of our situation, we move away from blame or trying to find a reason "why this happened to us." Energy spent on this kind of thinking only robs us of precious life energy that we need in order to live with this disease and create any sort of "quality of life" for ourselves. Also energy spent on this kind of thinking can become a trap or prison that keeps us from growing and possibly even transcending our situation. Moving into the empowerment stage turns us into self validating, self motivating and self loving individuals who readily enjoin the work of creating new realities for ourselves; realities within which we can begin to find joy.
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    Community,   Gay,   Humanism,   Educating America,   4 more
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    Death Spirituality HIV HIV/AIDS 7 more
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13 comments // HIV is not a death sentence! // Video

  • wolfess
    • +1
      wolfess  
    • A friend of mine just lost his son to A.I.D.S. I'm not too sure how long he lived with it, but I would say it was probably 20 years. Last week his partner called my friend to tell him his nurse had said if his family wants to say good-by they need to do it now; they went to LA to see him and he died last thursday. I will send my friend a link to this story -- thank you for posting this.

      Pwr 2 the peons! GUILLOTINE ignorance!

    • 1 month ago
  • jubal
    • +1
      jubal  
    • wolfess:

      Hey Thanks Wolfess, I have survived thanks to a combination of a good attitude and a good med combination. I have given up all the bad habits that take your life away from you, like smoking tobacco, drinking and using recreational drugs. I thrive on learning now, its brain food that keeps me living, along with heavy doses of gratitude. Also I am sorry to hear about your friends loss, give them my love and my warm regards.

    • 1 month ago
  • wolfess
  • jubal
  • Vickie_Lynn
    • +1
      Vickie_Lynn  
    • Thanks you for sharing your story. It is now 2010 and you shared this in 2007. I hope you are doing well. I have also been living wth HIV for a long time, 26 years now. One thing that I have learned is that there is always HOPE! Take care.

    • 1 year ago
  • jubal
  • BooksBrown
  • Vierotchka
    • +1
      Vierotchka  
    • Image
    • AIDS was first reported in 1981, the virus and its manner of transmission were identified in 1984.

      I have several friends who have been HIV positive for over 20 years and whose AIDS as such hasn't yet manifested. I remember how, in 1981, I saw a tiny one-paragraph news in the newspaper, one square inch in all, talking about this new disease which had appeared among the homosexual community in the USA. Intuitively, I felt that this was going to be a major issue, and I did something I very rarely do - I cut out that tiny one-paragraph article and kept it for years, as well as keeping myself informed. I lost several friends through AIDS, some got it from blood-transfusions, others from their unprotected gay sexual activities, and others who were drug-addicts and got it from sharing dirty needles.

      As soon as the virus was identified and the method of transmission understood, I bought large boxes of the best quality condoms for my son who was an adolescent. I just put them in his room for him to find, and would put a new box when the current box was almost empty. I also talked to him at length on the subject as new information would come through, and bought books and obtained pamphlets on the subject and give them to him. Today, at age 39, he tells me he is very grateful for all that. :)

    • 4 years ago
  • kimrich09
  • jubal
    • +1
      jubal  
    • Thank you all for visiting and watching my film. I appreciate any and all comments. Constructive criticism is most welcome; from a filmmakers POV.

      World Aids Day 2007 is coming up in just a few days and I have all this hope inside that people who love and need people will reach out in a big way and embrace HIV; the reality of HIV at all levels of social stratification. Having a day to remember and embrace creates unity in action. We all can do something to make HIV a little more tolerable for those who are suffering. Whether it is by giving of your resources or simply spending time and being with someone who is affected by HIV, the people you help will be eternally grateful.

    • 4 years ago
  • Kennygrind
  • critter
    • +1
      critter  
    • Image
    • I wanted to share this story with you of someone else who "came out" in a very public way. I think you are doing a great service to us all with your courage.

      AIDS has touched people all over the world. Rich, poor, white, black, hispanic....everybody. Social stigmas in the US seem to have increased in the last 15 years. And AIDS has not been a major part of our societies "conversation" either. I think this might be because not as many people know someone or have been personally affected by AIDS. Education is key to overcoming fears that society may harbor.

    • 4 years ago
  • joshuaheller
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