Random question, but when you get tested, do they give you some indication of your t-cell count initially?
I think your best bet would be to join a support group. People who have been through what you are going through would provide the kind of support you need right now. Here, you'll just get a page or two or shitty quips and feigned pity.
If you live in a first world country, your life expectancy with HIV is almost normal and prospects continue to improve. That is not to say that this diagnosis will not change your life, but it is not the humongous deal that it once was.
Only that it can greatly affect intimate relationships with people and can hold a stigma. For the OP, like others have said don't see this as a dead end and whatever the situation may be don't look for regret or blame.A nurse told me living with HIV is alot easier than living with diabetes, so that might make you feel better.
Unless you have both.
Well, that's...something. I'll make sure to keep that in mind as a type 1 diabetic.A nurse told me living with HIV is alot easier than living with diabetes, so that might make you feel better.
Unless you have both.
Do love yourself as you are, HIV or not.
I have a close friend who was recently diagnosed.
There is a knee jerk reaction to HIV by people who don't have friends and family members who actually live with it, to see the reality of what it means to live today with consistent treatment.
You will life a full, fulfilling life, and barring roughly the same everyday dangers anyone else faces, can live to an old age -- older than some people without an illness, older than some people with another life altering one, older than some people who have HIV as well.
You will need to take care of yourself. You are probably a smart person, probably already doing so, and will just need to make a few adjustments.
You will live and love and laugh and you will not be alone now or in the future.
It's ok to be scared, that will get better. There are support groups and counselors and doctors who can hold your hand as you go through the steps to wrap your mind around it. It's what they do, and they are good at it, and they are available for you.
You are still you. Your life is still your life. If you haven't already, you can still find the love of your life. You can still raise beautiful children. You can still wake up everyday and tell someone you care about them or love them, and have them say the same in return.
This isn't a roadblock in your life. This is just a part of it.
That's the next batch of thest. Normally you go through the first test which is 95% accurate. A second test goes through and that validates the infection.
After confirmation, that's the time you need to know how grave your infection is. Part of it includes counting the T-Cells.
Yeah there is one available. It's mainly helmed by volunteers from the LGBT community. At this point, you will just need all the support you can get. However shallow it is.
Unfortunately, not in a 1st World country. But yeah, thanks for making me realize that part. Good thing is that we can count on the government to at least should the ARV meds to keep life going.
Thanks for everyone. Every bit of encouragement helps. I'm afraid the infection is already severe. Fever and chills have been on and off for a month. Fungal infection is already evident.