Joined: 07 Aug 2005 Posts: 6 Location: Bellingham, Wa
the Ethics of a Life-long Herpes Infection Posted: 11-16-05 11:26am
The ethics of a life-long herpes
infection.
From day one my own personal life-long
herpes infection has presented me with
several ethical challenges. It has
challenged me on the question of who to
tell and when. It has challenged me on
the issue of what to say and how to others
with herpes. It has challenged me on the
question of “do I have any
responsibilities towards trying to prevent
the people in the community who do not
herpes from getting it, and if so what are
they”?
On how to tell and when:
when I was diagnosed with herpes the
doctors told me that it was safe to have
sex with others as long as I avoided
having sex during outbreaks and that I
would get warning signs of when an
outbreak would be coming. Luckily, we are
working with much better information these
days. A person with herpes is potentially
contagious every-single day of the year
and safer sex including using a
combination of a condom or dental dam and
an anti-viral gel is the best way of
ensuring that one isn’t inadvertently
spreading the virus.
I was an irresponsible coward when I first
got herpes. Because the doctors told me
that I wasn’t contagious without
outbreaks and because I was in the habit
of using condoms, I decided that I only
had to tell someone that I had herpes if
and when it seemed like the relationship
was turning serious and there would be
regular sexual contact. I had justified
my cowardice by thinking that the risk to
others was too small to stick my neck out
and get the rejection due to a herpes
leper. Please don’t be like me. Not
telling someone before you have sex that
you have herpes is absolutely the wrong
thing to do. There’s no real way to
justify it. I now tell potential lovers I
have herpes even before the first date.
It gets the weight of this guilt most
herpes people have off my chest and to me
it feels like the right thing to do.
Many people tell me that it’s okay if
you’re not going to have sex with
someone to wait and see if the
relationship becomes serious before
telling them about herpes. Sure this is
much better than waiting until after sex,
but to me it still isn’t good enough.
If you care about someone, if you respect
them , why not tell them as early as
possible so they can decide if they want
to invest the energy and time in getting
to know you better? Isn’t it a bit
manipulative to allow someone to develop
feelings for you without warning them that
they risk a life-long viral infection if
they get involved with you? Think about
it. If you wait until they are already
emotionally attached to you, they may feel
compelled to continue with the
relationship when they may not have if you
had told them up-front. It takes more
courage and integrity to tell early but it
feels better to have the weight off your
chest and the person you tell will usually
respect you for giving them the choice.
I am especially appealing to men since I
believe that men are not as protective of
their sex partners when it comes to
telling about herpes as women are. Guys,
please don’t have sex with anyone
without telling them about your herpes.
And if they don’t know the facts don’t
understate the risks- herpes is a more
physically and emotionally devastating
disease for women than it is for men and
it is much easier for a man to give a
woman herpes than it is for a woman to
give it to a man.
On how and what to say to others with
herpes:
i am a holistic healer- a herbalist and
homeopath. My family have been healers
for many generations in my native country
of trinidad and tobago and as far back as
africa. I had little to no interest in
treating herpes as a healer until I got
herpes myself. Wanting to change a
negative to a positive, I decided to make
the holistic treatment of herpes the
cornerstone of my practice. The bible
says “the stone that the builder
refused, I will make my cornerstone. Bob
marley and the wailers sing about it
too.
It didn’t take me long once I decided to
become a holistic viral specialist to
realize that I was confronted with a
daunting challenge. Most professionals
including all the herbalists and
homeopaths I know rely heavily on
referrals to build their client-base.
Here I was now working with a client-base
that I was never going to get a lot of
referrals from. My patients with herpes
don’t go around telling the world that I
helped them with their outbreaks. Some of
my patients have yet to tell their
significant others that they have herpes,
many have not told their closest friends
and their family. I am not a company. I
don’t have an advertising budget. The
only way for me to reach out to others
with herpes and encourage them to come for
me for treatment was to speak out in
public about my herpes work and about
herpes in general. This forced me to be
far more out of the closet than would have
been my personal choice.
I seem to always create challenging
situations for myself. Speaking to others
with herpes is not a task for the faint of
heart. Some people like to shoot the
messenger- I have the bullet-wounds to
prove it. But I can say that speaking to
others with herpes has been and continues
to be one of the most gratifying
experiences in my life. I feel a deep
bond with many of the people with herpes
who interact with me. I felt this kind of
bond when I played team sports. I’ve
felt this kind of bond all my life with
other black people. There’s something
about “us against the world” that can
make people tight with other. I love my
herpes friends. I love my herpes
patients- even the ones who misbehave. I
am not grateful for getting herpes, but I
don’t regret it either. Nevertheless,
the truth hurts, and I have some bitter
truth to tell others with herpes:
having a lover who also has herpes isn’t
a free ticket for unprotected sex. Even
if you both have the same strain even if
one gave it to the other. Having
unprotected sex with each other can and
often will make one or both partner’s
cases of herpes worse. It’s called
re-innoculation and it’s a message many
with herpes don’t want to hear.
If you have herpes or cold sores you are
potentially contagious everyday and there
is no sure way to tell if you are shedding
virus. So do consider using a
condom/dental dam combined with an
anti-viral gel when having sex and do be
careful about sharing wet towels or wash
cloths with opthers.
No two people get herpes the same way so
you are going to have your own individual
experience with the virus and will have to
find your own way of dealing with it on
all the different levels you will have to
deal with it.
A cure for herpes in our lifetime is
unlikely and there are no quick-fix
solutions for managing herpes. Herpes
cannot be managed with a topical agent
alone- whether it be creams, lotions, or
essential oils. Managing herpes takes
changing your diet, managing stress and
other triggers, and may also require
either taking herbal medicine or drug
therapy.
You may not get fewer outbreaks as you get
older. While this is often the case,
since no two people get herpes the same
way, other diseases, menopause,
self-abuse, re-innoculation by unprotected
sex and other factors can change the
pattern of frequency and severity of
outbreaks at any point during your
life-long journey with herpes.
Cold-sores are just as contagious if not
more contagious than genital herpes and
you can infect others when there are no
signs of sores present.
Having herpes does make you more
vulnerable to other sexually transmitted
infections including hiv and genital
warts.
Daily use of l-lysine is an ineffective
strategy for treating herpes and can do
more harm than good. There are more
effective natural remedies for herpes
without side-effects.
On talking to those who don’t have
herpes:
the reality check for me is that the
mainstream and alternative media do not
want talk about herpes. They would prefer
to keep us in a ghetto. There is a lot of
misinformation floating around and people
without herpes have few places to turn to
hear the facts about herpes. They don’t
hear the facts in their churches, young
people are not being educated enough about
herpes in school. Most parents aren’t
teaching their children about herpes,
older siblings are not passing information
down to the younger ones.
It’s really up to us who have herpes to
try harder to dialogue with those who
don’t.
Hiv won’t be the last word in human
population control from the world of
viruses. If we don’t learn how to
better protect the population from getting
herpes and other sexually transmitted
infections we are going to be in a lot of
trouble. Herpes is a gateway disease it
provided easy access through your mucus
membranes for any sexually transmitted
virus.
It is my unshakeable conviction that those
of us in the herpes community need to be
more vocal in the media and to also reach
out to those around us. Each one teach
one. Each one reach one.
Christopher scipio
homeopath/herbalist
holistic viral specialist
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