By Josh Kruger
From TheBody.com
September 15, 2014
Josh Kruger
When I first seroconverted, I tried to serosort -- to have sex exclusively with men who were also HIV positive. Then, I realized how much it limited my relationships.
Like life in general, the longer you live with HIV, the more receptive you become to change. Or, rather, the more receptive to change you realize you must be in order to be happy. Fighting the universe isn't just a full-time job: It's a miserable way to wake up every morning.
When I first seroconverted, I didn't think life was over: I did, however, look at the world with a bit more hostility. Newly HIV positive, I was no longer in the "Clean U B 2" club, and everything about me felt other. HIV-negative men were on one side, and I had accidentally switched teams.
Read on...
From TheBody.com
September 15, 2014
Josh Kruger
When I first seroconverted, I tried to serosort -- to have sex exclusively with men who were also HIV positive. Then, I realized how much it limited my relationships.
Like life in general, the longer you live with HIV, the more receptive you become to change. Or, rather, the more receptive to change you realize you must be in order to be happy. Fighting the universe isn't just a full-time job: It's a miserable way to wake up every morning.
When I first seroconverted, I didn't think life was over: I did, however, look at the world with a bit more hostility. Newly HIV positive, I was no longer in the "Clean U B 2" club, and everything about me felt other. HIV-negative men were on one side, and I had accidentally switched teams.
Read on...