Archive for December, 2005

Home for the holidays

Wed 28.Dec.2005

It's semester break. I'm at Jake's house. Jake is Steve's cousin. I've got nothing terribly exciting to report. I'll be here until January, except for a brief stint in the City for New Year's Eve. We won't be doing the Times Square thing, just a little gathering in Steve's dorm.

I'd also like to note that the pressure in my sinuses is about pushing my right eyeball out. I'm considering having them removed; my sinuses, that is, not my eyeballs.

Some Thoughts on World AIDS Day

Tue 13.Dec.2005

World Aids Day happens every year on 1 December. You'll notice now that it is well past 1 December. You'll notice it because I've just pointed it out. If you choose to consciously not notice it, you're just being silly. Stop that right now.

I found it to be a different sort of experience this year, something a bit quieter, a bit deeper than before. I was trained by the Red Cross to educate my peers, young people. We are the generation of imitation, riding on the coattails of all that came before us. What is our rallying cry? We have no Kent State. We have no liberation, no revolution. It seems nobody is interested enough anymore. I try to educate my peers on how to not contract HIV, because that's the best way I know to fight it. It seems like it falls on deaf ears.

I fight AIDS because it is a worthwhile cause. I think that it's important, it doesn't get enough attention, and that some people are maliciously or ignorantly spreading misinformation. It's just a cause for me though. What made it different for me was speaking with one of my professors. For me, AIDS is a disease which kills tens of thousands of people in the US and millions of people globally each year. For her, it meant the loss of friends, classmates, and colleagues. She remembers when Ronald Reagan first mentioned AIDS publically, four years after the first outbreak and two years after the virus had been isolated. I was 16 days old. Hearing her talk about it gave me new resolve. The job of an activist, I learned, is twofold. The first is to raise awareness, educate the public, and influence policy-makers. The second is to remind those who pioneered this cause that the fight isn't over, and there are still people carrying on the torch.

Soul Food

Tue 06.Dec.2005
Soul Food by horsedreamer.
I'm a bad, bad blogger. Here it is almost a week later, and I still have yet to mention World AIDS Day. Be sated by a picture of my cat. If you aren't she'll eat your soul. [EDIT 16.Jan.2006] Apparently if you don't include enough text in an entry with a photo, it'll start knocking the previous entry around. I'll looking into a way to fix that problem, probably something involving clearing the float or something like that. You don't need to know what that means. Mostly I'm just writing more text so I don't have to worry about it right now.