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My First Year With Herpes Or How I Was Re-born a Modern-day Posted: 08-07-05 15:15pm
My first year with my friend herpes.
Or
i am re-born a modern-day leper.
By christopher scipio
homeopath/herbalist
it was 1990, I was 24 years old and I
didn?T think my life could get any worse.
I had just finished college and my
financial situation was worse than dire.
The country was in the midst of an
economic depression. A long dismal winter
had just given up the ghost and to top it
all off I was in the middle of a horrific
break-up with a vengeful girlfriend.
Of course it was pathetically naive of me
to think that life couldn?T get any worse
and life wasted no time proving that fact.
My relationship with this beautiful,
vivacious, urbane woman had begun most
promisingly. We had courted very
romantically by letter and phone for six
months before ever getting together. I
was still at university when we first met
and we were separated by a distance of
about 1200 miles. We started off as
friends and the love between us grew
slowly with all the optimism and passion
expected with us both being in our
twenties. Sadly, what was so wonderful by
distance was a nightmare close up. When
my classes ended and I flew down to move
in with her it took no time at all for
things to go very very wrong. Our sex
life was hot despite the fact told me she
had herpes. She told me that she could
tell when she was getting an outbreak and
as long as we refrained from having sex at
those times, it was cool for us to have a
natural unprotected sex life. I believed
her, and she certainly sincerely believed
that to be the case as well. She had only
very recently gotten the disease herself
from a man she had casually slept with and
who didn?T tell her he was infected.
We got along in bed much better than we
ever did out of bed. The tall beautiful
fair-skinned princess and her tall, black
dread-locked artist. The sad fact was
that we didn?T get along at all. Instead
of creating harmony we created war. And I
must say that I am to blame for much it.
I was at a time in my life where my
tolerance for certain things was very low
and I was very angry about how the world
was treating me and I certainly didn?T
enjoy the treatment I was receiving from
my beloved- but I definitely contributed
more than my fair share to the discord.
Once we were in the same space together
the chemistry between us was bad, bad,
bad. The relationship ended after a
mercifully short time leaving us
scattered, raw and dumb-founded.
Two days after the notorious breakup we
were reunited by a particularly cruel
twist of fate. Less than 48 hours after
swearing I would never see her again I was
sitting beside her in the waiting room of
a hospital. She was looking at me with a
combination of guilt, sadness and
white-hot enmity. I didn?T know how to
feel or what to say to her. I was
floating around out in space trying to get
a grip on the situation.
You see dear readers I was in the midst of
what I would later find out to be my first
herpes outbreak. It has started out as an
itchy irritation on my foreskin but had
quickly turned into a raging swelling
colony of tiny lesions and I was
overwhelmed by pain and all the flu-like
symptoms typical of first outbreaks. I
had no idea what was happening to me. I
do remember hoping at the time that it was
anything but herpes or aids. I would have
even considered syphilis or gonorrhea to
have been preferable. The doctors said
they couldn?T tell what it was that I had
and had insisted that my ex-girlfriend of
two days come in with me so we could both
be tested at the same time.
Even though we both hated each other at
the time- and i?M sure she still does
today, I remember feeling sorry for her.
I knew even then that if it proved true
that she had given herpes to me, she would
have been devastated too. So there we
were with all those mixed emotions
dreading the worse and hoping for the
best.
Of course the doctor?S tormented us by
making us wait about a week before the
test results would be back. They had
taken a swab of my lesions and sent it off
somewhere. When the phone call eventually
came in the news was good. I had tested
negative for herpes. The doctors said
they still didn?T know what it was that I
had, that possibly it was just an
infection of my foreskin from having rough
sex. I was over the moon with relief and
wasted no time in calling her to tell her
the good news. For one brief moment we
actually had something positive to share
together. That test result was a big
reprieve for both of us. Sadly, and once
again ironically, it turned out only to be
a reprieve for one of us.
To her credit she had been upfront with
me. At the time I really had no idea what
the implications and risks were. I was
however prepared to take the risk, I just
had no idea that this would literally be a
very ironic last interaction in what had
been the worst relationship both of us
would ever have in our lives.
I went on with my life and forgot all
about herpes. But herpes didn?T forget
about me, not for a second. I got another
outbreak two months later and then another
one a month later. It was angry as hell
and I stormed into a different hospital
demanding to know what was wrong with me.
At this hospital the doctors were more
competent and took one look at my penis
and told me that it was obvious that I had
herpes. They confirmed this with their
own cotton swab test- there was not blood
test for herpes in canada available at
this point in history. They told me that
false negatives were common for herpes
because if there wasn?T enough virus
present on the skin at the time of the
test, then you would get a negative result
even though you had herpes. They told me
there was nothing they could do for me and
that I would have this disease for life
and that my sex life would never be the
same. I wanted to call my ex-love and
blast her for what had happened. And even
though she at the time was wrecking
vengeance against me by trying to destroy
my career and telling everyone who would
listen how badly I had treated her, I
didn?T have the heart to throw this in her
face. So I have never told her that she
gave me herpes and i?Ll never tell her.
I do not possess the power to describe the
world of pain and shame the eventual
diagnosis of herpes would thrust me into.
In many ways I felt like my life was truly
over. I felt dirty in a way that I had
never experienced before. Just saying the
word herpes sent a chill thorough my whole
body. The doctors were cold and
unsympathetic. I couldn?T discuss this
with anyone in my conservative west-indian
family even though we were otherwise
close. I didn?T have anyone to talk to.
Strange fatalistic fantasies went through
my mind all day long, day after day. The
mere thought of having to tell someone
that I had this thing made me want to run
for the cover of enforced celibacy.
I felt cursed like some old testament
character. Sure I had been an problem,
not unlike most men my age, but I had
definitely not been enough of an problem
to deserve to be punished by the gods this
way. This was definitely overkill in all
meanings of the word.
My first realization after being able to
admit to myself that I had herpes was that
it was forever. No matter what I did or
who I became I was never going to be a
?Whole? Person. That I was ?Marked? For
life. That I had joined an outcast caste.
I was one of the many modern day lepers-
those sad morally challenged people with
herpes. I was a victim and I sure didn?T
like the feeling. What a burden to have
to carry all the rest of my life.
Yes, I was now one of them. But I had no
real idea of what being one of them really
meant. To find out would take years and
many experiences both liberating and
devastating.
Why am I telling you all of this? Part of
it is narcissism to be sure. It?S human
nature to want your story preserved
somewhere in the ether and this is my way
of making sure that some people know what
happened to me and how I felt about it.
But the larger part of my motivation is
for my own rehabilitation. I refuse to be
a victim to this disease and to society?S
mean, irrational fear and loathing of
those of us who are stricken with sexually
transmitted diseases. I wasn?T living a
high-risk lifestyle- I got my herpes in
the context of a monogamous relationship.
But even if I had been doing high-risk
activities, I in no way deserve to be
scorned or ostracized because of it. The
worst place to be when you have herpes is
in the closet. If you want to feel like a
leper and allow others to treat you like
one, be my guest, but I am determined not
to live like that. Instead of being
imprisoned by this disease, i?Ve decided
to free myself. I am no longer afraid of
saying the word and letting people know
that I am one of ?Them?. I have herpes
but herpes doesn?T have me. I am at peace
with the virus and the virus is at peace
with me. I am at peace with my place in
this world and I have discovered the joy
of encouraging others to liberate
themselves from the stigma.
In part two of this story- nine years in
the wildness: my personal and professional
quest for a holistic herpes treatment
plan, I will chronicle how I transitioned
from being a victim of herpes to being a
holistic herpes treatment specialist and a
herpes spokesperson. I was able to turn
the biggest negative in my life to one of
the biggest positives in my life and the
journey is just beginning. We are truly
living in a herpes nation with 60% or more
of the general population in north america
having either type one or type two
herpes.
Christopher scipio
homeopath/herbalist
holistic viral specialist
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