Scene magazine - October 2021

Page 44

44 62 Scene Gscene

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Don’t fear ) We all know that at the end of October is Halloween, in many countries, a time for remembering the dead and now more commercially associated with the supernatural, horror and ‘trick or treat’. Some people love to be thrilled by a sense of fear, it certainly gets the blood pumping when goosebumps send you the shivers. But real fear is no joke, it is one of the strongest emotions we experience and can have dramatic effects on our behaviour. The HIV information campaign produced by the British government in the ‘80s used fear as a motivating tool. The images of tombstones and icebergs created a fear of HIV in the general population and marginalised communities where HIV was prevalent. The aftershocks of those campaigns are still affecting people today some 40 years later. Fear of HIV can dissuade people at risk from getting tested. This is particularly sad, as treatment is so effective now that there is ZERO risk of a person with an undetectable viral load passing on the virus to somebody else through sex. We use the mantra Undetectable = Untransmittable, or U=U for short.

“The HIV information campaign produced by the British government in the ’80s used fear as a motivating tool” For people living with HIV the greatest burden of this fear is stigma. Stigma makes people fear being discriminated against, or treated differently in their relationships, communities, workplaces and services such as the NHS. The best way to combat this fear and stigma is through educating people that HIV is controllable and people living with it can now lead healthy lives. Living in an age of Covid, we know that HIV is simply a virus, and that fear and misinformation can cause people to make irrational decisions that may even increase infections, (think of anti-vaxxers, and not getting tested for either virus). There is nothing supernatural about HIV. In its education campaigns, the Martin Fisher Foundation tells us that HIV isn’t scary anymore. We have known about HIV for over 40 years, and it is time to put the stigma and fear of the 20th century behind us. We can’t move forward if we are stuck looking backwards. The Sussex Beacon’s Peer Mentoring service can help people living with HIV develop skills and strategies for sharing information about their status. Visit www.sussexbeacon.org.uk to find out more. In our project More to me than HIV, we are fighting this fear and stigma by normalising living with HIV. We will show a wide range of portraits of people, all of whom are living with HIV, but contrary to the images of fear, are living ordinary and sometimes extraordinary lives, just like anybody else. Our participants will be professionally photographed by Angus Stewart, and the images will be displayed at an exhibition in the Jubilee and satellite libraries in the city of Brighton & Hove. If you’re living with HIV, and would like to show that world that there is nothing to be scared of, please visit www.moretomethanHIV.life.

While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of statements in this magazine we cannot accept responsibility for the views of contributors, errors, or ommisions, or for matters arising from clerical or printers errors, or an advertiser not completing a contract


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Relaxing Kneads Professional Massage raises £300 for LGBTQ+ charities

1min
page 5

Brighton & Hove Frontrunners raises funds for Lunch Positive

1min
page 5

New report on supporting trans and nonbinary survivors of sexual violence

2min
page 6

Terrence Higgins Trust launches World AIDS Day Ribbon Walk 2021

1min
page 7

MindOut plants Suicide Memorial Tree in Hove

1min
page 7

City Council shares updated Trans Inclusion Toolkit with schools

2min
page 8

Helen Jones, MindOut CEO, steps down

1min
page 9

Hull University announces scholarships for LGBTQ+ students

1min
page 9

Winnie Byanyima, executive director of UNAIDS, visits Brighton

3min
page 10

Free QTIBIPoC Mental Health First Aid Training course

1min
page 11

New study reveals main healthcare issues facing TNBI and QTIBIPoC communities

3min
page 12

Brighton Half Marathon to take place on Sunday, October 10

1min
page 13

The winds of change are afoot at Actually Gay Men’s Chorus

1min
page 13

My Transgender Date

2min
page 15

The Little Big Life

2min
page 39

STUFF & THINGS

2min
page 39

Laurie's Allotment

1min
page 40

ARTS CORNER

2min
page 40

CRAIG’S THOUGHTS

5min
page 41

ROGER’S RUMINATIONS

2min
page 42

TWISTED GILDED GHETTO

3min
page 42

RAE’S REFLECTIONS

4min
page 43

LGBTQ CHURCH/ PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

2min
page 44

TURN BACK THE PAGES

4min
page 45

Book Reviews

6min
page 46

AT HOME

3min
page 47

CLASSICAL NOTES

10min
pages 48-49

All that Jazz

2min
page 50

ART MATTERS

2min
page 50

Design of Birmingham HIV/AIDS Memorial revealed

2min
page 52

Birmingham LGBT agrees new premises

1min
page 53

Birmingham Bulls RFC announces new sponsorship deal

1min
page 53

Local drag act debuts family- friendly queer shows

1min
page 53

MEDWAY AND GRAVESHAM PRIDES 2021

4min
page 54

SPOTLIGHT ON... MARK FARRELLY

4min
pages 38-56

LOVE IS NOT AN IDEOLOGY

2min
page 37

CHELSEA GIRL

4min
page 36

10 QUESTIONS WITH... DIVINA DE CAMPO

6min
pages 34-35

MAKE IT RIGHT. OR PAY BACK, IN KIND

4min
pages 16-17

AMBER CADAVEROUS

6min
pages 26-27

QUEER IN SPIRIT

6min
pages 24-25

DONNA SUMMER: I’M A RAINBOW

5min
page 30

WHO YOU GONNA CALL?

10min
pages 18-20

TAKE IT ON THE CHIN

4min
pages 14-15

MIGHTY REAL

8min
pages 31-33

TALES OF ARMISTEAD MAUPIN

7min
pages 28-29
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Scene magazine - October 2021 by Scene LGBTQ+ Magazine - Issuu