in the 80s when HIV was called GRID it, meaning the virus, acted differently than it does today. reasons unknown the HIV spread fast and hard and broke down the immune system really really fast. today, you can be infected with HIV and not even know it.
Yes, seaturtle. I remember when it first surfaced here in Australia, I had a good friend who was diagnosed one Thursday and was dead eleven days later. Admittedly he wasn't great about going to the doctor, but before diagnosis he wasn't really noticeably sick -- just a persistent head cold that wouldn't lift. After the diagnosis, it escalated to pneumonia, and just took him. (It was later suspected of being pneumocystis, but there was no point in going back then to check it.)
But even before that, before the "gay cancer", I had another friend who died suddenly, undiagnosd, that I've always believed was AIDS. This was in 1981, so it was long before any recognised pattern, and she had been an IV drug user for a year or so. 19 years old, and she developed a fever that led to a coma, and over the course of just three days all her vital organs unaccountably collapsed. At the time, it was completely bewildering, and very, very frightening.
As we know now, it was the attempt at medication as much as anything else that killed people in those early days.
And now it's a history that most people don't know.
Stay well, seaturtle.
You might very well think that. I couldn't possibly comment.
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