Slowly—very slowly—he did get better. “It took me a really
long time to become undetectable, like years,” he says. But for Ben, it was
like playing a game where he just kept working toward his goal. “Just keep
playing, keep playing, keep playing,” Ben’s doctor would tell him. Today? “I’m
very healthy. It’s learning how to deal with it, learning how to know that you
have it, but not live because of it. You live in spite of it,” he explains.
Ben credits his personal will to live—and many, many
medications—with the fact that he’s alive today. “I’ve seen so many people, so
many good friends, who have passed away. They get it and they die. They give up.
You don’t have to give up. I don’t ever give up on anything, and maybe that’s
something that’s helped me.”
Then, a few years ago, Ben began to stay consistently
undetectable. “It was like, guess what, we won. That was an amazing moment,” he
says. “It’s so cool that I get to live with it. It’s not beating me, and it’s
not going to as far as I know. I won’t let it. I do everything I can do so it
won’t.”
Ben admits it isn’t always easy. Some days, insurance and
medications and phone calls and appointments are just too much, and the
temptation to give up and be done is almost too much to bear. And then he
remembers how far he’s come. “You can get through it, and you can get there,
because I have, and I have nobody,” he says. “There was one point when I didn’t
think I would be 48 years old, because back when I first heard about it, people
were living for six months.”
He also feels hopeful about how far the disease has come in
terms of treatment, medications, and supportive organizations like The Damien Center.
“I have a really good life, and that’s amazing to me,” Ben says. “It’s really
amazing to me that I’ve gotten to see so much of it happen. I want to see it
end, and I really believe that I’m going to. I really believe that in my heart
and in my soul.”
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