Coming out is not an easy process – as most of you would know. I came out to my parents as being gay when I was only 16. Lest you think it was a case of bravado, I must hasten to add that it was done more as an act of frustration and rebellion. I inflicted my mother with this terrible bit of knowledge during a quarrel, in a moment of unthinking angst and rage. You find out very quickly that what is said cannot be taken back. Luckily for me, my family accepted me for what I am – and I did not suffer the fate of being thrown out of my home… something, unfortunately that continues to happen to teens the world over who come out to their families.
With the act of coming out, comes the fear of rejection and uncertainty. With my brother’s constant badgering – “Is there something you want to tell me…?” - I finally caved in.
I blurted out: “I tested positive for HIV!”
An awful silence descended and I just closed my eyes, willing darkness to close in and cover me. After a very pregnant pause, my brother told me, “It’s not the end of the world…” and he proceeded to give me an awkward hug. Waves of relief washed over me… but before that could abate, he said, “I think you should tell mum and dad.”
“Oh, no,” I thought to myself… “Oh, no.”
I was a nervous wreck for two days – I was trying to psych myself up to tell my parents about my condition. I’ve never felt so alone and vulnerable. It was like the final judgement – what would they say or do if I told them?
My father had always been a stern disciplinarian since I was young. Emotionally distant, he seldom showed any signs of affection, like most men of his generation. My mother and I had a stormy relationship when I was a teenager – I always felt she wanted me to conform to society’s norms and I resented this, seeing it as a sign of her tacit disapproval of who I was.
So now I was HIV+… how would I tell them?
I burst into their bedroom one night, after dinner and announced: “I have something to tell you.” I felt as if I was rushing towards a speeding train. My pulse was racing, and I could hardly keep my voice from wavering.
When I did say the words: “I am HIV-positive…” I was unprepared for what followed. My father, a man of few words and resolutely undemonstrative… he came up to me and hugged me. He proceeded to assure me that I was still his son and that he would continue to help take care of me. My mother burst into tears – in between sobs, she professed love for me as her son, interspersed with the primal weeping that only mothers can make when something terrible has happened to their children.
Suffice to say, it took awhile before I could recover my composure. The future looked bleak, but thanks to the reassurances of my parents, I had an emotional anchor to hang on to. That love and support still continues to help me in times of depression or need. I am so grateful for that. Other HIV+ people I have met have not had that luxury – many have not told their parents or families. Most have not come out to their families as being gay, much less HIV+. The stigma and discrimination surrounding this disease has isolated many – and continues to do so till today.
With my second coming out, came relief. I felt that I could share the burden of my disease with my family – I need not do it alone anymore.
The big question for many HIV+ people is – who do you tell? In Singapore, the dilemma is even made more acute because of the various legislation that has been put in place.
The Infectious Disease Act requires that those who know they are HIV+ to inform their partners of their sero-status before having sex. Then there’s the provision that even if you don’t know your sero-status, but have indulged in risky behaviour – you can be charged. Unless you have informed your partner of your past risky behaviour, who then goes on to voluntarily commit the act. You are also not liable if he had a test done just before sex, or if you practiced safe sex. The penalty? Conviction to a fine not exceeding S$50,000 (USS34,000) or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 10 years or both.
The Singapore government has decided use this piece of heavy-handed legislation to force people to use condoms during sex. Whether this will work or not is debatable – how far can you modify human sexual behaviour with a piece of legislation?
So how do HIV+ people deal with this? Gay culture with its heritage of anonymous sexual partners has spawned the “don’t ask don’t tell” response. At saunas or through internet hook-ups, people have anonymous sex without asking for each other’s sero-status – it is assumed the onus on protection is on both parties. Most know how HIV is transmitted – and that condom use is the key to preventing transmission of HIV. It is generally assumed condoms will be used especially for these anonymous or first-time hook-ups. And with strong prevention messaging, it becomes the norm to use condoms – and peer pressure comes into place for people to use condoms.
One or two HIV+ people I know have told me they will tell potential partners they are HIV+ - usually over the net, protected by anonymity. And if the partners are OK with it, they go ahead with a meeting or hook-up. Others have stopped having sex altogether – or they look for other HIV+ people for sex. Sex is such a strong, basic, primal urge – would it be possible to stop it altogether? If you had HIV, would you tell a stranger you were about to have sex with?
Meanwhile, the climate of fear engendered by the Infectious Disease Act has served to further increase the sense of stigma and discrimination HIV+ people feel. And it has helped drive people who practice risky behaviour underground.
This is the second installment of a 6-part series which will run every other Friday.
讀者回應
gavin
gavin_ireland@hotmail.com
it is not formal religion that can save a broken world that is self-destructing, but the Son's undiscriminating Love that covers a multitude of sins... i, a sinner myself, wish all the hurting but wonderful, young people here, will somehow, sometime soon, just feel a hug from the heavenly Father above, too...
The simple acceptance of his family to his sexual orientation and the subsequent unquestioning support of him upon revelation of his hiv status.
If only more families are as supportive as yours.
wanted to cry when i read the part about how your father hugged you. i resolutely believe in a heavenly Father's love you
Of course, I come from a different background where families openly accept gay children. So maybe I'm spoiled. However, I came of age in the 80s when HIV was death sentence, so I think I have a balanced view. While many readers love the 'openess' here, I am left wondering how the hell the writer got HIV in the first place. This little morality tale might read better if we see where he was psychologically and morally. Towards the end of the article, he wrote about anonymous sex and whether people admit they have HIV. It sounds incredibly naive; not only that, it reveals where he was and what kind of man he was, and how little he'd thought about the cause and the effect. I don't mean to judge; I'm for forgiveness. But if you side-skip the mistake, and just leave it in the passive (like Reagan's lovely "mistakes were made"), any aftereffects just sound hallow.
I particularly love the line "how far can you modify human sexual behaviour with a piece of legislation?" Why do we have any damn laws regarding stealing, murder, or rape?
Most of the spread of HIV and the AIDS crisis has been lodged in the heart of a key period of the gay rights movement, mostly in the US. Many early leaders died younger than they should have because of it. Many people died ignorant how they even got it in the first place. However, AIDS is one of the most studied and researched diseases in the world now. People who are HIV+ need to spend more time talking about how they screwed up and less time about acceptance. We've got a lot of people who are HIV- who can talk about loving families or finding acceptance, thank you. We're in a different world than 20 years ago, and as long as gay people continue to build bath houses and haunt small parks, we're going to have more stories like this. Why can't people say "don't do what I did"?
Also, the other comments show how hard it still is for many people in Chinese communities in Asia to come out to family. I have more compassion for people who are struggling to juggle a flowering relationship with a gay man or woman while dealing with parental pressure to marry than I do for people who contract HIV. The real crime is the neo-confucian hierarchy that's torturing these poor people. The 'martyr's halo' of the HIV+ needs to be thrown out. It was earned when governments didn't care; now there are counseling centers and hot lines all over the world. Why can't we spend more time focusing on how people can build real relationships than on 'damage control' for the hot-to-trot set?
If you leave your keys on top of your porche in south Chicago, and you come back and find it gone... YES, it's theft, and you have the right to get the police after the jerk who stole it, but you're an idiot. And if you have anonymous sex and get HIV, then YES you have a right to good medical treatment and support, and you shouldn't be feared or get prejudice in the work place (by all means, if you are fired for HIV, sue, sue, sue), but... you do know you are an idiot, right?
In the 1980s, and the early 90s, people with HIV were given a great deal of compassion because a) it was practically a death sentence, b) it hi-lighted prejudice and hate in society when they lost jobs, and c) let's face it, it was the "in" Hollywood thing. We've been through that, and we now have many more rights and freedoms than anybody in 1983 could have imagined. Obama is stalling for health care, but huge things are coming in the USA; huge things have already happened in Europe.
We need to stop seeing HIV+ people as victims; they're idiots. If I can throw my own story out, I'm HIV-, but I was an alcoholic for six years. I am healthy and happy now, but I have to be careful with my health. I accept the stupidity of my actions, and I would never claim to be a victim. I was an idiot, and the consequences are all mine. I expect the same from people who have anonymous sex online, in bathhouses, in bars, etc. The science on HIV is better than on many, many diseases, and it's oh so easy to avoid.
Finally, I haven't drawn any conclusions because I haven't seen his first story: what did he do? He is side-stepping it, and I would like him to go back and address that. When people screw up, I'm all in favor of picking them up and helping them out. However, he needs to say: I screwed up. That's all.
Perhaps it's because compassion is so lacking in Asia, at least for HIV+ people, that his story stirs people. Of course, I wish him the best. But gays need to move beyond finger pointing and guilt and being victims. A lot of damage was self-inflicted. Period. So good riddance to fetish-filled parades and let's persuade straight people that we're also looking for love, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness just like them!
'Of course, I come from a different background where families openly accept gay children. So maybe I'm spoiled. However, I came of age in the 80s when HIV was death sentence, so I think I have a balanced view.'
This admission is not an excuse to belittle or steam roll over other people's opinions. Perhaps if the post was a mis-guided attempt at a more conciliatory tone, then this very public display of misconceptions and prejudices can be forgiven.
I feel SL Yang portrays an intriguing picture and appreciate his point of view, but understand he by no means aims to cover the whole spectrum of experiences a HIV+ person may undergo.
As for misconceptions or prejudice, I am prepared to defend what I said. Thank you for the blank bullets, but, your point? What did I say that was misconceived or prejudiced?
I never wrote about "the whole spectrum of experience a [sic] HIV+ person may undergo," so maybe I'm getting hate mail for the wrong post.
I don't have HIV and I don't pretend to know what it's like. I also don't have diabetes or liver failure or thousands of other conditions. I was speaking about a condition that is in personal control. Do you get it? Likely not.
I think the point here isn't as much about feeling sympathy for Mr. Yang (or Daophos and his alcoholism, for that matter) as it is understanding how much empathy we, as human beings, possess and have yet to attain. Daophos is right that there is more information on HIV than ever before; there is no excuse to be misinformed. And yet, ironically, there is also more ignorance on the subject, ignorance that continues to breed pain and disconnection and callousness. It is one thing to be able to see and read the notes on the page. It is an entirely other matter to be able to appreciate the music and let it stir up the soul.
Why is there ignorance on the subject? I remember being in High School biology classes in the 1980s when there was just speculation, and I was all ears.
Why do you raise a point [i.e. Asians are ignorant about basic science] and then fall into bad poetry? "It is one thing to be able to see and read the notes on the page. It is an entirely other matter to be able to appreciate the music and let it stir up the soul." Huh? Tell that to a 16year old who is thinking of having sex. Good luck! Can we all grow up and be adults in reality? STDs are real, marriage institutions are real, and prejudice against gays is real.
The one thing that disgusted me with the American 'left' is that it's caught up in the symbolic. Obviously, many have followed here. Get over the bloody post-modern theories and get out and organize! It's how the weekend was won by workers, it's how 40 work hours were won (an alien concept in Asia, I know), and it's the only way forward. Or you could blog endlessly like most liberals in the US do.
Juz stay positive and healthy do what ever you can to stay alive and shower more love and concern to people around you. There is a consequence in every action.
There is no point crying over spilled milk.. just wipe it off quickly and move on. There is still plenty of things waiting for you to fulfill and only you, Yang can fulfill it no others. Just meditate intently n you will be 'reborn' or i say transform.
In near future, you'll be able to share your experience with those who have suffer the same consequences as you. And you can pass on your positive hope to them.
The world is beautiful after all =)
One Life Live It :-)
It can be both a warning and it can be an inspirational . It can inspire those who have contracted HIV or it can frustrate some who cannot understand why HIV can be contracted by safer- sex educated gay persons. ( ie: why do people put themselves at high risk) I feel it is mainly written for the former reason. BUT... everbody can see and take out of it something different.
All the above comments we can also take something from, and meditate on. BUT..there is no denying that it is a brave move on the authors part to write it publicly, and to be subject to the positive and negative criticisms, especially in the country he lives in. Very brave. It would not be easy, and I'm sure he is not looking for sympathy.
We should also follow the story in all its parts until its final episode part before being too harsh in judgement.
to be fair, if Daophos has been cruelly harsh on the writer, he has also been harsh on himself (alcoholism).
he is basically lashing out at the culture of irresponsible sexual gratification and fetish that has led to the death of many in his home environment, and which is now taking its sad toll right here, and in Asia, as we debate. illegal poppers and stimulants are even blatantly sold in one chatroom at least.
the courageous writer and his tough critic will have served a useful purpose here, if they only make us ALL realise that we excuse ourselves, and our friends, far too easily for our and their addictive behaviours, to which there are inevitable consequences...
the culture of irresponsibility and thoughtless self-gratification has just got to stop. or more will pay the tear-filled price.
the writing is on the wall.
P.S. to the writer, i would add that it should be obvious you have the gratitude of the majority here for your sharing, which can't be easy. and like Gandalf said to Pippin in the third movie of the Lord of the Rings, this is not the end...
I think there are some who are judging others for where they have sex, rather than what they do. Risk is risk.... precautions are precautions, regardless of the setting.
Your still going to be at risk of injury during turbulence if you dont wear a seat belt in an aircraft whether your flying first class or economy class.
What does anyone want to do with that info anyway?
A guy I went on a date with blurted out his positive sero-status in the cab home. I was utterly blown away by his frank openness, and it got me to rethink my own sexual behaviour. We went on to spend a whole night talking about our sexual attitudes.
People shouldn't be blamed for their mistakes - who hasn't screwed up in their choice of partner - and everyone ultimately pays for them. I believe fundamentally that no condom means no sex, and I don't feel as if anyone has an excuse not to use one. Ever. However, if I or a friend should become positive - whether from a bareback orgy or simply giving a blow-job with a mouth ulcer, those around them need to reach out, like Mr. Yang's family, and care for them.
Holding them down and berating them with 'you idiots' and 'fucking stupids', and I'm looking at YOU, Daophos, is not going to get them to share their stories in the public arena - and only by hearing these stories will people begin to take safe sex seriously again. Unfortunately there's no rehab for HIV, so all we can do is learn to live with it for the time being - if not necessarily in our bloodstream then in our community.
And comparing being HIV positive to being an alcoholic is palpably absurd. You can't become an alcoholic from one glass of wine. Not all HIV positive people are sex addicts or sauna prowlers.
Daophos: you nauseate me. You think HIV+ people are "idiots"? YOUR an idiot! To think someone can use a condom all the time every time is a fantasy. Also, condoms sometimes break. Or there is cut in mouth your not aware of. There ARE other ways to get HIV other then being slut bb bottom, so ease up! If you claim to never have bb in your life you are a LIAR. Stop attacking people who cant be 100% strong 100% of the time...and had bad luck to pick the wrong partner. Or bad luck with breakage or open cut in mouth. Thats all it is, bad luck. They are not "idiots", they are human being who deserve compassion...unlike you. And if you dont think his Dad hugging him is special, your sadly unaware or how social custom is in most of asian world, and much of USA too..you spoiled turd
There basically needs to be a more effective treatment, therapeutic vaccine, or cure. Until then, we need to take as much personal responsibility as we can take. While I have never practiced unsafe sex, there was a lonely time in my life when I visited bath houses with the intention of just being "hands only" and at times ended up sucking someone who chatted with me for a while. Hoping he would date me afterwards - and a couple of times that happened. Sometimes I thought I was having sex with a low-risk guy and found out that he had done some high risk things in his past and hadn't been tested yet. Do I deserve HIV or syphilis because of that? I don't think so. Nobody does.
Sometimes, in the heat of the moment, protection responsibility escapes people - they end up doing more than they intended. Sex is a messy escape into bliss; a natural high. If people are lonely or have other harsh issues then sometimes they don't care for themselves as much as they would when they are in a more stable place.
It's all so human and my opinion is that NO-ONE deserves HIV no matter what they do.
What we need is a non-judgemental discussion of how to have soul sex and make connections with our sexual partners. Most of all, we need to get this thing cured. The "status quo" that one can die from something that usually bonds people peacefully, is unacceptable.
The writer has already paid a price for his action, and have to live with this dreadful disease for the rest of his life, the least we can do is to hear his life account and provide some morale support.
Have an open mind that he is just sharing his life experience living with HIV. Surely every readers should be able to gain something out from this article.
For the HIV-, it is a living lesson that it is important to take safe sex seriously, while for the HIV+ , rememberiit is not the end of the world, cherish your life and live it to its fullest.
no, it's not HBO, it's life, and we thank you for the first-hand real life lessons, including those in the coming parts........ they may well be priceless.
I just read up on your article ... thanks for writing ... and you know, stay healthy ... dont let anyone bring you down ... if you believe you are doing the thing you like ... love ... or live for ... ... ... or ... something you believe in strongly ... stay focused ;)
... hugs and kisses and love ...
best wishes always,
Mr. Yong ;) (hey we share the same surname!)
Daophos: Do you remember the first time you lost your virginity ? What did feel like ? Im just trying to make you see that, everyone's timeline is different ... you must have heard or seen this before ... but others havent ... also, you sounded smart enough to construct sentences in fluid order, yet you werent smart enough to know when to keep your mouth shut ... like other smart and smarter people on fridae ... who might not only smarter, but more considerate and sensitive than you
maybe you will learn ? you do grow dont you ? not just age i hope ... ? This is apparently not your topic, and im glad you moved on ...
All I can say is, one doesn't really know until you are wearing the shoe....
Did he get kicked out of here? Dont see him posting any of his "saddness" anymore...but hey - he did get of yall to read, and post,...and think....
"The scientific literature has documented more than 70 different reasons for getting a positive reaction..."
[WHOSE ANTIBODIES ARE THEY ANYWAY?]
Factors Known to Cause False Positive HIV Antibody Test Results
By Christine Johnson
Continuum Sept./Oct. 1996
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