i’m lucky. i think artists are really lucky in that we can make something out of our experience, and that’s very therapeutic. i found that being able to make something and express, you know, the joys, traumas, whatever, and to put it on a canvas and then step away, so that what i’ve expressed is away from me, it’s over there. that’s very, very therapeutic.
it sounds like your art kept you grounded.
yes, absolutely. also, i’ve got a husband, craig, and we’ve been together 37 years. we met one year before my diagnosis, so he’s been with me since the beginning. that’s been really my stabilizing factor in my whole experience.
how did the conversation about your diagnosis go with your family?
to tell you the truth, emma, the details are really blurry because i was in a tailspin. you know, hiv was considered a death sentence and we weren’t even given kind of parameters of how long we might live. now, i think that the conventional wisdom is that after diagnosis without proper treatment, you probably have a longevity of another five to 10 years. in those days, though, it seemed a lot shorter. people were dying really quickly. i thought that i’d be dead within a year. we sold everything, packed up our bags and moved back to canada. we were here in the middle of 1986.