Scene Magazine - November 2021

Page 23

Scene 23 understanding and empathy are “life-saving” and “exceptional”. Through regular contact with people with very serious illness we hear the deep-rooted appreciation and benefit of being “community, not clinical” and “nowhere else where HIV is so much a ‘given’ and their only peer-support”. For many newly diagnosed “being part of something and knowing they’re not alone” is a pivotal moment in coming to terms with being HIV+. Richard, one of our most recently joined service users, and now a volunteer, said: “I’m not exaggerating when I say that I credit Lunch Positive with rescuing me from a very dark and lonely place. As a single gay man I was alone. Moreover, my HIV status added another dimension to the challenges I was facing. “I’ve been an ‘out’ gay man since my late teens, diagnosed with HIV in my mid-20s. However, having lived through some of the deadliest years of AIDS. So, as an older gay man I found myself alone, lonely and without purpose.

LUNCH POSITIVE

Continuing a 40-year tradition of community-led support ) Lunch Positive has now been running for

more than food, important as this is. Through the HIV lunch club and shared meal sessions, we bring people together in a unique, safe and supportive community space, helping people overcome challenges living with HIV, finding friendships and peer support, breaking the cycle of social isolation and loneliness.

12 years, having proudly and directly evolved from grassroots HIV support that started almost 40 years ago at the much valued Open Door project. When Open Door closed, its volunteers founded Lunch Positive as a new and forward-looking group, continuing the community-led ethos in new ways. Since then it’s gone from strength to strength, fulfilling an important community mission, crucially being led and provided by the community it serves, people with HIV.

Through these approaches, along with a range of additional community activities, a wide range of people’s needs can be met – all improving health and mental wellbeing. This includes an HIV food bank and outreach of food delivery to people experiencing vulnerabilities at home; HIV befriending and buddying scheme, helping people share peer-support, form supportive friendships and get practical help; winter support scheme providing extra heating and food to people in crisis; peer-support and wellbeing activities; telephone companionship, advice and information; helping people in recovery; and engagement with specialist services.

While HIV treatments have massively improved, and the experiences and circumstances of the ’80s and ’90s are far less frequent, we do still encounter people with serious health issues – physical and mental, ageing and frailty, cancer, people who come along for friendship and support knowing that they are approaching the end of their lives. Stigma, challenging life circumstances and disadvantage, including poverty, insecure housing and homelessness remain, as sadly they have done for decades.

Just before Covid hit, the charity was invited to present at the prestigious King’s Fund health think tank exploring the impact of our work, specifically being community-led. Soon after, Public Health England published similar good practice examples of our work. Community news has also reflected the outstanding Covid response over the past year and a half, including almost 35,000 meals provided to people in need, consistent companionship and mental health impact, and the 14,128 hours given by volunteers. As people rightly say, Lunch Positive is so much

“It took all the courage I had to attend my first lunch. When I arrived, the team made me feel very welcome. Equally important, our shared experiences and medical concerns gave me the confidence to stay. “Since then, my life has gone nothing but upwards. Lunch Positive not only provided me a safe space but also a means to participate in the community as a volunteer. I now have a set of new friends and new ways to add meaning to my life.” We recently hosted a community lunch for a visit by Winnie Byanyima, executive director of UNAIDS, whose moving commendation of Lunch Positive was “…you have built and you sustain a community of people with HIV. Awesome!” This is of course all because of community itself – the involvement of people with HIV, allies, friends and supporters. Thank you all for all you do and being ‘all about community!’. ) Grassroots peer-led charities depend on the

support of the whole community, volunteering, practical and fundraising. To find out more about our work, how to get involved, and how to support us, visit www.lunchpositive.org or email info@lunchpositive.org.

CAVIN: SERVICE USER AND VOLUNTEER

No one has greater insight into living with HIV than those who are themselves HIV+ and have experienced these issues. This is reflected in the quality and sheer scope of community-based support that’s provided by our volunteers.

“Luckily a nurse at the Lawson Clinic referred me to Lunch Positive when we were chatting about my mental health during a routine blood test.

Our service users themselves came up with our slogan, ‘all about community!’ and among many things talk about how being part of Lunch Positive “is the family they no longer have”, has “kept them fed when they hadn’t eaten for days”, and “is the only place they feel accepted and belong”. Our conversations with people experiencing mental health issues, sometimes including suicidal thoughts, frequently tell us our


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Articles inside

More To Me Than HIV. The Exhibition

4min
pages 24-25

Jason Reid: It´s Not all Live, Laugh Love

4min
page 20

SHADES OF GRAY

5min
pages 40-41

WORLD AIDS DAY DIARY

1min
page 21

Lunch Positive

4min
page 23

Saving Lives With Dr. Steve Taylor

4min
page 30

World Aids Day

4min
page 31

Innovation and collaboration in HIV

4min
page 32

HIV SERVICES DURING COVID: THE EXPERIENCE OF TWO TEAMS

2min
page 33

LONG-TERM SURVIVOR

2min
page 33

Out of the Darkness

4min
page 36

Soul Food

4min
page 37

NAVIGATING THE TRANS HEALTHCARE CRISIS

5min
pages 38-39

Spotlight...

4min
page 42

‘IL SIGNIFICATO DI TE’ – IAN FARRELL IS BACK!

4min
page 43

Still Taboo

6min
pages 44-45

Hello, Dolly

4min
page 46

#Daleypop

5min
page 47

CLASSICAL NOTES

5min
page 48

All That Jazz

2min
page 49

ART MATTERS

2min
page 49

At Home

4min
page 50

Book Review

4min
page 51

HYDES’ HOPES

2min
page 52

ARTS CORNER

2min
page 52

CRAIG’S THOUGHTS

5min
page 53

HOMELY HOMILY

2min
page 54

STUFF & THINGS

2min
page 54

RAE’S REFLECTIONS

5min
page 55

TRAVELLER’S TALES

2min
page 57

Benefit gig to honour Conrad ‘Connie’ Guest

1min
page 60

Birmingham Pride to return in September 2022

1min
page 60

David Puck creates murals for West Midlands drag queens

1min
page 60

Dr Naomi Sutton becomes ambassador for Birmingham’s HIV/AIDS Memorial

1min
page 60

Bid to bring the European Gay & Lesbian Sports Federation (EGLSF) EuroGames to Birmingham in 2024

1min
page 61

New measures announced – including £200,000 to support hate crime victims – after attacks in Birming

1min
page 61

SHOUT Festival to return in November

1min
page 61

BAR STOOL PREACHERS

4min
page 62

Shades of Gray

5min
pages 40-63

FAT PIGEON ART

3min
pages 26-33

BRIGHTON SAUNA

8min
pages 34-39
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