From: foucault@netcom.com (Howard Arthur Faye) Subject: The Fight, As It Were Date: Fri, 24 Feb 1995 02:22:26 GMT Sender: foucault@netcom16.netcom.com The recent, angry reponse I made in the ongoing discussion of Greg Louganis' revelation of his medical situation provides me with an opportunity to reflect on my own situation, which I have been convinced by my caretakers to regard as "wondrous". I think they are fooled by a few good test results and the fortune I have had in retaining my mental acuity despite the place on the timelime of disease progression I find myself (somewhere between "late stage" and "end stage"). I am profoundly unhappy that Greg Louganis or anyone else would discover they are infected or that they are under the clinical spectre of AIDS. At the same time, I am not so sure the quality of life as an infected person cannot be kept quite high for quite a long period of time. I have been symptomatic for more than five years. When I began to feel ill, I was en route to Agrigento in Sicily and I visited a Carmelite convent overlooking the sea. On the bus I was sweating profusely and sliding against the bus window lubricated by my sweat, trying to avoid being sick on my fellow passengers by counting olive trees and anticipating the reemergence of the sea after crossing the island stopping only long enough for orange juice in Enna. I told my companion, who was as impractical and romantic as I am, that it would be perfect to die on a cot resting on those terrazzo floors before a giant arched window facing the sea. At almost every interval where I was feeling poorly and I found myself in a place I liked, I had the same sense of impending demise. Attended by WhoresWithHeartsOfGold/Nuns/Goatherds/RetainersOfBaronessRothschild, I faded away swathed in a white sheet, mumbling nonsense verse. [I recently amended by fantasy death throes after seeing _Queen Margot_ where Charles IX --Jean Hugues Anglade-- is borne on a silken litter, sweating blood as death nears.] Such opportunities have come and gone a dozen times in the last five years ruined by the equal and opposite experience of visiting the Clinic, mostly-- nah, completely-- devoid of healthy fantasy. That such places are perfumed by antiseptic cleaners and are inhabited by people obsessed with insurance forms and patient identification cards doesn't help. I almost feel guilty that I'm still here. But even as I prepare to march through favorite cities in foreign places again (a trip planned both as a gift to my Ken who has never satisfied his passion for Joaquin Sorolla [!] and Arne, who needs to be in a place more suited to his schedule *and* as a potential suicide location-- I am just thin enough to squeeze through the open windows at the top of Sagrada Familia's steeples), I spent the afternoon with a home care nurse and a social worker making preliminary preparations for being attended at home, powers of attorney/No Code/DNR, morphine drips, and even more interesting spiritual questions that inevitably arise around death. How can this be? I still have cases of good claret to drink! Is this kinetic energy, like a cartoon character that runs off a cliff but begins to descend only after realizing the ground is no longer there? Zilch CD4's, anemia, horrible edema in the ankles and feet. Shouldn't I retreat to my goose down comforter and urinal? I would love to have a witty phrase to delimit life from its terminal phase but I don't. No one-- from all of the doctors, clergy, psychiatrists and reasonably intelligent lay people-- has been of any help. I had a momentary pang of practicality and considered not going. But of course I am. It doesn't matter where I expire and I have been hungry for oily squid and prawns in garlic and Asturian cider. The best time of my life was making love with Kevin in the Hostal Palermo just off the Ramblas in Barcelona. That won't happen again but now I can concentrate on the food and drink. I sincerely hope that Greg Louganis has the will and passion for life to sustain him and keep him healthy for a long, long time. I attribute my own longevity to such a passion, a regular ration of red wine and using the minimum number of medications possible. Oh, and closeness to my family. And maybe baseball (this year might kill me!). Maybe Monteverdi too. Oh yeah-- foie gras plays a role, I'm sure. -- Howard Arthur Faye * Los Angeles, CA 'Wine is the professor of taste, the liberator of the spirit, and the light of intelligence' -- Paul Claudel