Guest guest Posted February 3, 2006 Report Share Posted February 3, 2006 I have permission from the author H, one of Thriving's board members, to send this along to the group. Although I wasn't present for the discussion (recovering from 'minor' leg surgery and didn't attend), I don't know what else I might have added. Very cogent! > > What does one expect to hear about Life Goals from a group of middle-aged gay men living with HIV/AIDS? We're not going to recapture the glory of our youth, nor, for many, even the vigor nor stamina we once imagined could be ours in our middle age. High blown notions of fame, or fortune, or lofty status we may have carried from childhood into our invincible twenties are largely irrelevant now. The compromises of life and vagaries of luck have pretty much set the parameters of our personalities within decades long habits of thought and action. Not the least of those twists of fate, of course, being to have lived the majority of our adulthood at one of the epicenters of the HIV epidemic– knowing we carried the dreaded infection in our own bodies. We saw scores of young men in their twenties, thirties and forties sicken and die, all the while wondering when our number was up. We got in the habit of reining in the horizons of our futures, taking care of the basics– medical care, income, housing– looking forward to the next trip if we were feeling well, to the next advance in treatment if we weren't. Discounting our future, we strove frantically to empty our todays of stress and fill them with present value. > > There has been no end of therapists, gurus, and spiritualists eager to teach us the secrets of living in the now. Their pills, workshops and seminars offer a day or two of present centeredness, free of the pain of the past and worry about the future. These offerings have their allure– a stilled mind, free of longing. Pushed to the boundaries, though, we'd all be sealed off in monasteries; or pushed to absurdity, lying on life support in a vegetative state. Mostly we achieved (being in) our present in small triumphs over time and responsibility – stopping into that café for that coffee and pastry instead of running to catch the next bus, or being satisfied with just getting Christmas cards out, late or whenever, instead of succumbing to the pressure of the perfect present for every person. > > As our survival lagged on we came to realize that we are among the living until we are dead. We came to experience the isolation that can come from taking ourselves, by degrees, out of the futures of the people in our lives. That isolation could be felt most acutely when friends and family would slip and let on that they, too, were silently writing us out of their futures. > > We learned we mustn't live like aspiring ghosts. So, we seek objective evidence for how far our arc has traveled. One recent study found that people who attain and maintain a CD4 count above 500 cells live as long as people without HIV. (See posting 3418) The researchers argue that their findings mean HIV infection might no longer be considered as an obstacle to obtain insurance contracts and loans if a person reaches and keeps a CD4 count above 500 cells. That's the optimistic side for those in that category who may want to shift again to longer term goals, like the dream of home ownership, for instance. On the more somber side we have the knowledge that five of our Thrivers have died in the past year. All but one in his forties or fifties. We have also seen the struggles some have shared about their hip replacements or creeping neuropathy. > > When is it safe to reclaim a stake in the future? The thought habits and behaviors some of us have developed over two decades of hearing the faint tolling of the bells are somehow, now, hard to shake off. And even if we're successful, we're still twenty years farther along that arc the end of which we've glimpsed too closely. > > These are not comfy and cozy thoughts we want to go around voicing every day. But, they intrude on our consciousness daily. On Saturday, Jan. 21st, thirteen of us sat around and did voice these somber thoughts. There was some resignation and acceptance, along with guarded optimism. In a welcome epiphany I heard of the contentment of lives lived without grand plans, lived with the simple goal of some measure of peace each and every day, and I came away strangely calmed and nurtured. This seems to happen whenever two or more of us are gathered…..I hope you can join us next time. > > Peace to you all, > Thriving SF is a group for gay men that meets twice a month at the SFLGBT Community Center, the first Sat is a social from 1-3 pm and the third Sat is a discussion on a pre-selected topic (as was January's), same time. They also have games nights at The Gazebo on the second Wed late aft/eve and last Friday of the month late aft eve. They are also in yahoogroups.com Healthfully & electronically yours, " Gravy Boat " Goldman yangzpa@... " Be present in your life and appreciate each moment because you aren't guaranteed a tomorrow; be passionate about what you do; don't live in fear; and, connect with one another. The power of love is even more relevant today. " Larson, sister of Larson, author of " Rent. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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