By: Jonathan J. Pena
Thursday, June 1, 2017
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Philosopher Kahlil Gibran once wrote, “Out of suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are seared with scars.”
I believe
that we are all products of our environment. That the experiences we are
exposed to greatly influences our behavior and process of thinking,
which we
carry with us throughout our entire lifetime. The products of my
environment
lead me down a path of immense suffering; it was one I desperately tried
masking by
altering myself with my great escape into drugs. My addiction, my
sexuality, my HIV-positive diagnosis, and the loss of my mother to
cancer were all struggles that have left
there mark.
When I was
five years old my parents got divorced because my dad was unfaithful to
her. I was totally devastated. As I got older, I started to carry
feelings of blame
and started to believe that I had done something wrong to cause my
father not be around my mom and his two first-born sons. Around this same time, I was also feeling displaced
from my peers because I just felt different from everybody else. I didn’t
necessarily fit in with any of the kids or groups in school, and feelings of
loneliness seeped in. I don’t believe that children are capable of
processing the emotions of a divorce, nor the complexities of ones sexuality.
All I knew for sure is that I was in a lot of pain and feeling very inadequate.
All of that
emotional weight and pressure needed a place to go or a way to be
released, and
I found my escape in drugs. It started with pot and escalated into
harder
drugs. In the end, I became addicted to crystal meth and my life became
completely unmanageable. My relationships with family and friends
suffered or
completely disappeared. I was losing countless jobs, tons of money,
along with
my dignity...and my life. My addiction to crystal meth led me into
prostitution. I couldn’t hold down a steady job so in order to manage
any sort
of bills and my habit, I sold my body to any man who was willing to open
up his
wallet. Somewhere, in the middle of all that, I became HIV-positive. I
was
already struggling with the mere idea of my self worth, and testing
HIV-positive completely shattered me because who was going to love me
knowing that I was so tainted?
Today, I am living a sober life and approaching my one-year anniversary. My outlook on being HIV-positive has changed, and I no longer view myself as being tainted or unlovable. I am completely adherent with my medication and as such, my viral load is undetectable. I have realized the importance of maintaining and respecting my emotional and physical health, which includes taking my medication every day. Being HIV-positive doesn’t define me, but rather it is a part of me.
Through sobriety and therapy, I have
also become employed and living in my own apartment. I was recently accepted into North Carolina State
University, where I will begin classes in the Fall 2017. I am studying to be an Oncology social worker with the hopes of
being a support system for those who have lost a loved one due to cancer. I
have re-established my connections with the people that I love and that love me
in return. I am grateful, humbled, and
renewed in my purpose in life through my sobriety.
Read more blog posts from ADAP Advocacy Association, here.
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