http://www.nytimes.com/2001/01/15/opinion/15HERB.html
January 15, 2001
IN AMERICA
State of Denial
By BOB HERBERT
I asked Esther Ross if she had given much
thought to H.I.V. or AIDS
before she learned that she had become infected with the
virus.
"No," she said. "I was young. I
didn't think it applied to me. I
thought it was all about people who were white and
gay."
Ms. Ross, who lives in the Crown Heights section of
Brooklyn, is
39 years old and black. She learned that she was H.I.V.
positive
eight years ago. She was stunned, which is a testament to
the power
of ignorance and denial. Given her lifestyle, it would
have been
almost miraculous if she hadn't contracted the virus.
Ms. Ross, who courageously agreed to talk on the
record, has
recently made a torturously difficult effort to turn her
life
around. She now counsels young people about the dangers
of H.I.V.
and AIDS. She is plagued by guilt and suffers from
depression. Her
story is terrifying.
"I don't really know how I got it," she
said. "I was doing drugs
crack, heroin, whatever I could get my hands on. I didn't
use
needles, but I shared a lot of other paraphernalia with
people who
may have had the virus."
She most likely contracted the virus through sex.
"There were a
lot of people," she said.
I asked if she had ever traded sex for crack.
"Sure," she said, her voice low.
The H.I.V. test results came on a slip of paper
handed to her by a
young woman at a clinic in Brooklyn. No guidance was
offered. No
counseling. Ms. Ross saw the slip of paper as a death
sentence. "I
started crying," she said. "And then I got up
and walked out."
I asked her what she did after that.
She said, "I went out and got high."
Reform would have to wait a few years. Ms. Ross
promptly followed
a course almost perfectly designed to spread the virus to
others.
"I ended up using more drugs," she said.
"I ended up prostituting."
She said she did not tell her johns or
anyone she was having sex
with that she was H.I.V. positive. Her
reasoning was both brutal
and complicated. In one sense, she tried to deny to
herself that
she had contracted the virus. But there was another, more
malignant
motive: "I said if somebody gave it to me, I'm going
to give it to
somebody else."
Ms. Ross continued to do drugs, off and on, for a
few years. Once
when she was high she fell onto the tracks in a Manhattan
subway
station. She eventually stopped turning tricks, but she
continued
to have unprotected sex with men.
This is not an extraordinary story. There are
variations on this
vicious theme in neighborhoods across the country.
Conditions are
especially rough in communities that are both black and
poor. It is
there that the plague of H.I.V. and AIDS is rampant,
feeding off
the dangerous sexual behavior, the widespread use of
drugs, the
ignorance and the denial about the disease, the shortage
of
preventive efforts and the chronic inadequacy of health
services.
The result is an enormous tragedy that is not yet
fully
comprehended.
About four years ago Ms. Ross got into a program at
the Bedford
Stuyvesant/Crown Heights H.I.V. Care Network. She finally
managed
the difficult work of kicking the drug habit and
confronted the
reality of her behavior and her H.I.V. status.
She told me: "It's late for this, I know, but
I am so sorry for
the people that I may have infected. That is my biggest
regret. I
can't make anything up to them I don't know
them. I couldn't even
tell you their names. But I am sorry."
Ms. Ross is now dedicated to spreading the word
about the dangers
of H.I.V. and AIDS. She's a peer counselor at the care
network. She
believes that some African-American youngsters are having
sex as
early as 9 or 10 years old, and intercourse by boys and
girls in
their early teens is common. "They are not thinking
about
consequences," she said, "and probably not
wearing condoms."
When she talks to youngsters she finds that their
attitudes are
similar to those she once held. "They think that
this is not about
them," she said. "A lot of the women think that
to show love to a
man they shouldn't use a condom. They think they can
recognize the
people who have the virus. They think gay white men have
the virus.
They think their peers who have money or a nice car do
not have it.
It's tragic. When I ask them if they think I have the
virus, they
say no. When I tell them I've been living with it for
eight years,
it blows them away."
The New York Times on the Web
http://www.nytimes.com
|