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Diary of an HIV-positive man
The Herald
(Zimbabwe)
October 11, 2008
http://www.herald.co.zw/inside.aspx?sectid=195&cat=8
He has been
living with HIV for the past five years. He took the test after
his wife of 20 years had tested positive. Tamuka (not real name)
says that day will forever be imprinted on his mind because it was
the last time he was to ever have a conversation that lasted more
than an hour with the woman he is married to. "She has hated
me since then. She lives in the same house with me only because
there is nowhere else she can go to. We don't laugh together,
and we rarely talk to each other. We talk "AT" each other
only when it is absolutely necessary - mostly about money or the
children, he said."
The reason Tamuka (42)
is convinced that his wife hates him is because, when she tested
positive, she accused him of having brought the virus into her home
and her body. She told all her friends and relatives that she was
dying, because her husband had been sleeping around with the "whole
country." "Yes, I may have cheated a few times in this
marriage but nothing out of the ordinary. I am definitely not the
"Mr Harare" that my wife, her friends, and family are
now portraying me to be. I am just a regular, ordinary man who,
strayed from the marital bed a few times. I am very remorseful that
what I did in the past has destroyed my wife and our family life,
but I don't think that the fact that we have both tested HIV
positive should mean the end of our relationship and our lives,"
he said.
What is making the couple's
plight even more difficult for the wife to handle is that Tamuka
cannot cope with the medical bills. As an administrative clerk with
a Harare based company, Tamuka says he is finding it difficult to
make ends meet. While in the past few years, he drove a decent car,
rented a house in a medium-density suburb, and managed to contribute
to a good medical aid scheme, today all that is history. Many Zimbabweans
who, enjoyed a good standard of living a few years ago, today are
barely making ends meet. Just eating three meals a day has become
a luxury, while a visit to the doctor is something that only a few
still manage without stressing for days on end. Most medical aid
schemes are now virtually useless with members having to pay ridiculous
amounts, mostly foreign currency as top ups or co-payments.
With food also now selling
in foreign currency, you wonder whether everyone is now going to
get their salary in foreign currency. If not, then one cannot help
but wonder where our policy leaders expect everyone to suddenly
get hard currency from, so that they can survive. Surveys that I
conducted this week showed me that many doctors are now charging
consultation fees ranging between USD20 and USD50. Going to a laboratory
for a test or scan can cost as much as 75USD. A CD4 count is even
going for as much as USD130. How is a person who is earning between
Z$50 000 and $120 000 expected to raise USD130 to get the all essential
CD4 count done?
Tamuka says he has been
lucky for he has never spent a day in bed since he tested positive.
"It seems God knows the problems I am facing. I have been sick
yes, but have never failed to wake up and go to work as a result.
This has made it possible for me to work as hard (I do deals on
the side) as I can so that I can afford to pay for my wife's
regular visits to the doctor. "We were both advised to take
Cotrimoxazole but so far only she is taking the drug while I go
without because I cannot afford to buy supplies for two people,"
he said.
Asked whether it is love
for his wife, which makes him put her first before himself, Tamuka
smiles and says: "Yes, I love her. She is the mother of my
children. I may have cheated on her, but this never meant I wanted
to get rid of her. Today I know better, but it is too late. I know
now, that, if you love someone, you don't hurt them; but its
unfortunate that my wife doesn't believe it." Asked whether
he does not realize that by not taking the Cotrimoxazole doctors
advised him to take and not going for regular medical check-ups,
he is putting his own health at risk, Tamuka says he also has no
option but to make sure that each time he has money, it goes towards
his wife's upkeep because he feels responsible for her. "If
I had not cheated on her, then we would not be in this predicament,"
he says.
I asked him why he was
so sure that he is the one who infected his wife and he said: "That's
the proper thing to say. Even if she had known men before I married
her, I don't have to say this to anyone. "Even if I suspect
that she could have cheated on me at some point in our marriage,
society never blames a married woman. I must be the one who brought
this into the home.
Gone now is the rented
house in the medium-density suburb. Tamuka, his wife and their three
children now stay in two rooms behind his parents' home in
Kambuzuma where they pay a small amount as rent. They don't
even remember the last time they ate "meat" as the price
has just soared beyond Tamuka's reach. His wife used to go
to Botswana to buy goods for re-sale but ever since she tested positive,
she stopped. "She says it is my responsibility to take care
of her and the children. If I didn't have enough money, she
says I would not have been able to sleep around and get HIV,"
Tamuka told me.
He shares harrowing tales
of walking all the way into town at times after failing to raise
money for busfare. His oldest child finished Form Four last year
but failed to get the required five passes to proceed. The father
says while he would want his son to go back to school, the funds
are just not available. "Imagine, if they are suffering so
much while I am living, what will happen when I am gone. Obviously
this illness is just eating me up, and it is a matter of time until
my systems just give in. "Right now my wife needs to have a
CD4 count done, but I cannot afford it and am at a loss as to what
I should do. I can only shudder to think what will happen when we
both need to take ARVs," he says.
Doctors I spoke
to said it is important for Tamuka to seek medical attention too
for his own well-being. A couple that is living with HIV, who spoke
on condition of anonymity said it was important for Tamuka and his
wife to forgive each other for past hurts and forge along as husband
and wife. The couple said both Tamuka and wife were holding onto
baggage, and they needed to let go to enjoy longer and healthier
lives. "Real treatment begins inside, in one's soul and
being. The two should heal the wounds they are nursing inside and
then they can begin to look at what medicines can do for them; the
two advised.
*Beatrice
Tonhodzayi is a Programme Officer-Media for Southern Africa HIV
and AIDS Information Dissemination Service (SAfAIDS).
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