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​A revitalized blog with one mission: to present a moment that jolts your day, triggers new thinking, gets you through traffic tangles, and relieves job stress. Or, more prosaically, accompanies you through the early miles of bike touring through France and Italy. Wherever you are, I aim to change your day.

Virtual AIDS 2020 Conference Adds Focus on COVID-19; HIV 2020 Alternative Conference in Mexico City Cancelled due to Coronavirus

4/15/2020

 
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The 23rd International Conference on AIDS will broaden its focus to include the current global pandemic of COVID-19 corona virus. The conference was scheduled to convene in San Francisco and Oakland, July 6-10. More than 25,000 researchers, clinicians, and activists are expected to participate.    

The International AIDS Society, the organizer of the bi-annual AIDS conference, found itself in the unique position of convening AIDS 2020 during the rapidly developing new pandemic of COVID-19. In the midst of travel restrictions and shelter-in-place mandates in many countries as well as a desire to protect HIV participants from exposure to the new virus, the IAS had already switched for the first time to a virtual format for its proceedings this summer. 

Historically, a different city in the world hosts the bi-annual conference, the largest HIV/AIDS gathering in the world. San Francisco previously hosted the AIDS conference in 1990. That occasion made history when AIDS activists, led primarily by ACT UP San Francisco, disrupted a major address by Health and Human Services director Louis Sullivan. Shouting “Shame! Shame! Shame!” the protesters made it impossible for Sullivan to be heard. The incident reflected the enormous anger and desperation of People with AIDS at the federal government’s slow and disorganized pursuit of HIV treatments and cure.  

This summer AIDS 2020 returns to the Bay Area for the first time in 30 years. Organizers stated that the virtual conference will retain its focus on San Francisco and Oakland and their respective responses to HIV/AIDS. San Francisco is known for its “model of care” and for its researchers, including Jay Levy, MD who became the first American to independently identify the AIDS virus.

The protests that marked the 1990 conference have been repeated to varying degrees in the following AIDS international conferences. Activists and many community-based AIDS workers objected that the United States, especially San Francisco/Oakland, were inappropriate sites given the Trump era discrimination of immigrants from third world countries and those from marginalized groups. When the IAS refused a change of venue, the activists organized an alternative conference, HIV 2020: Community Reclaiming the Global Response scheduled to take place in Mexico City July 5-7.  However, COVID-19 overturned these plans as well. The Mexican government has suspended all large events in the country due to COVID-19 concerns through August, and HIV 2020 has been cancelled. Other options are being explored.  

Sedition Trial Entangled with 1918-1919 Pandemic

4/11/2020

 
This COVID-19 outbreak reminds me of the two other pandemics in the last 100 years. I lived through the horrors of the long AIDS years, and I researched the global scourge of the 1918-1919 flu for my biography of Marie Equi. This excerpt from the book shows how the first pandemic entwined the threat of illness and death with a struggle for justice and freedom.
 
Set-up: Marie Equi is an early woman physician and publicly known lesbian who lived and worked in Portland, Oregon. She became a political radical after being abused by the police during a labor strike. For speaking out against the U.S. joining World War I, Equi was charged with sedition. Her trial was set during the equivalent of “sheltering-in-place.”
 
Excerpt from: “Marie Equi, Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions”
 
Equi tried to delay the start of her trial as long as possible. Like other
radicals, she anticipated trumped-up charges, biased juries, and fraudulent
court testimony. As a result, she adopted the wisdom of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn,
“a prominent radical known to many as “The Rebel Girl.”  Flynn explained,
“Time was our greatest asset.” For radicals, she believed, “A trial was
tantamount to a lynching.”
 
Equi intended to feign illness to postpone the start of her trial, scheduled
for November 6, 1918. She hoped a jury might be more sympathetic once the
war had ended. At first she considered having her appendix removed and then
requesting two weeks or more for recovery. Then she planned to ingest a noxious
thyroid compound along with a morphine solution to induce fever and
nausea. She settled on something less dire: rubbing an ointment in her nose
that would trigger influenza-like symptoms. Equi figured her deception
might merit empathy or even exploit fears of the influenza pandemic plaguing
the nation.
 
They had neither treatment or vaccine to offer
​
The first wave of the so-called Spanish influenza struck the East Coast
and the Midwest in the spring of 1918. No one paid much attention to the
peculiar flu that came on quickly and initially struck soldiers and sailors, and
after a few weeks the number of cases dropped and the danger seemed to have
passed. In the fall, however, a second, more virulent wave slammed the general
population, especially young adults of all classes. The rapid onset of symptoms
often meant a patient complained of fever, headache, and backache one day
and then struggled to breathe the next before suffocating to death. Not until
the onset of AIDS sixty-five years later would the nation exhibit so much
panic and fear of a mysterious, deadly disease. Physicians struggled with an
enormous demand for diagnosis and care although they had neither treatment
nor vaccine to offer. During the course of the pandemic, nearly 30 percent of
Americans became infected, and 675,000 died. Half of the fatalities among
American soldiers in Europe were due to the epidemic. The psychological
impact of this toll must have staggered the population.

"...I'd go through hell to help one of my boys." 
​
Portland’s first case of the new flu was believed to be a young soldier,
diagnosed in early October 1918. The state’s board of health quickly ordered
all places of public gatherings closed: schools, theaters, churches, libraries,
and assembly halls. No meetings were allowed, and people were advised to
avoid crowded streetcars and wear gauze masks at all times. The number of
cases soared so high that the public auditorium and several schools were
converted into emergency hospitals. Portland registered 157 deaths the first
week of November when Equi’s trial was set to begin, but the federal court
system disregarded the risks of transmission and announced plans to begin the
fall session as scheduled. Equi put her ruse into effect and induced symptoms
the night before her court appearance. That same evening she learned that an
acquaintance of hers, a young Wobbly named Morgan, really was ill with the
flu and had been taken to the emergency hospital.

Equi Feigns Illness 
 
Equi’s trial began on Wednesday, November 6, 1918, in Portland’s
federal courthouse at Sixth and Morrison Streets with Judge Robert S. Bean
presiding. Bean was a dignified and distinguished judge who had previously
served as Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court before assuming a position
as a US District Judge in Portland. As planned, Equi’s attorney Heckbert
informed Bean that she was ill with influenza and needed rest. Madge Paul, an
undercover informant, had already informed US Attorney Haney of Equi’s
deception, and he requested that a court physician examine her and advise
the court of her condition. The doctor determined Equi required, at most,
forty-eight hours of rest. Judge Bean ordered Equi to appear in court on Friday,
November 8 or forfeit her $10,000 bail. During the same court proceedings,
Haney revealed that he had received regular reports of Equi’s activities and he
knew of her ploy to delay her appearance. Equi was furious that her plan had
been exposed. At first she blamed one of her attorneys of double-crossing her;
then she suspected Madge Paul, the informant who had befriended her.
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Marie Equi with her daughter Marie outside the federal courthouse in Portland, Oregon, 1920. Oregon Historical Society.
A reflection of the intensity of the times came with a telephone call that
evening from a nurse at the influenza ward who informed Equi that her friend
Morgan was dying and begging to see her. When one of her friends advised her to
delay her visit, Equi exploded and yelled, “That dying boy is alone and wants
me, and I’d go through hell to help one of my boys.” She grabbed a bunch of
red carnations from a vase, rushed to the patient’s bedside, and stayed with him
through the night until he died. She was distraught for days afterwards—angry
with herself for not providing more care and furious with the government for
keeping her from her patients.
 
On November 7, George Vanderveer arrived in Portland, ready to serve
as Equi’s lead counsel the next day, but all plans were tossed aside once the
dailies broke the news the war-weary public longed for: the war had ended.
Portlanders erupted in deliriously happy, raucous celebrations. Longshoreman
left the docks and marched downtown, whistling, shouting, and ignoring
attempts by the police to maintain order. Office workers several stories above
rained paper scraps on a street parade below. Everyone ignored flu precautions
and littered the streets with face masks. Oregon had sent thirty-five thousand men
to the war, a full 14 percent of the state’s adult population, and everyone wanted to
banish the dread scourge from their lives.
 
Equi took comfort in delaying her trial until after the war had ended. Several
hours later, however, all celebrations stopped.  People on the streets were stunned into
silence when they learned there was no peace, not yet. An overeager wire correspondent
on the front lines in France had filed a premature report, and Germany had yet to surrender.
The next morning, Equi’s trial resumed.
 
Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions, Michael Helquist, Oregon State University Press, 2015. Available in print at bookstores and in Kindle at Amazon.
 
Note: the courage and example of Marie Equi is now memorialized as part of the Rainbow Honor Walk in San Francisco and in Portland’s Walk of the Heroines. 
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Marie Equi bronze sidewalk plaque in San Francisco's Rainbow Honor Walk.

MARIE Tshirts now available

9/17/2019

 
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Get your own Marie Equi t-shirt to honor the fiercely independent lesbian doctor who fought for equal rights and battled for economic and social justice.
 
I’ve created a Marie Equi Tshirt Shop at CafePress, an online product store.  It’s simple:
Go to https://www.cafepress.com/MarieEquiTshirtShop
​​Place your order (there are “female” and “male” sizes) 
Then proceed to check out and select among the payment options. You can also order by phone. You should receive your t-shirt in about two weeks. 
Note: the back side of the t-shirt reads:
Marie Equi
Radical Politics & Outlaw Passions
A Biography
MarieEqui.com



Celebrate Marie!  Take a selfie and show us on Facebook or send your pic to me at this site. 

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Not Her First Time in San Francisco: Marie Equi's Plaque Settles Into the City

8/10/2019

 
With the recent installation of Marie Equi's bronze plaque as part of the city's Rainbow Honor Walk, I thought you might be interested in Marie Equi's first visit to San Francisco.
​

The year was 1897. Equi and her girlfriend, Bessie Holcomb, left their Central Oregon homestead for the "Queen of the Pacific," as San Francisco was known. They took Southern Pacific's California Express from Portland, crossing the San Francisco Bay at Carquinez Strait in a ferry long enough to accomodate all the train cars. A few hours later, they reached the Oakland Mole, an immense wooden causeway that jutted into the the bay toward San Francisco. Passengers disembarked for ferries and the final leg of their journey. The newly built Ferry Building with its slender, graceful clock tower was set to open later in the year. Their ferry docked nearby.

Equi and Holcomb took rooms on Market Street in the seven-story Donohoe Building, one of the better addresses a dozen blocks from the Ferry Building. The department store Weinstock & Lubin filled the street level of the building. Equi took a cashier position at Miss Tillie Taylor's restaurant on Post Street. The elite Olympic Club faced Miss Taylor's establishment.

In 1899 Equi began her medical training first at the College of Physicians and Surgeons located at 14th and Valencia Streets. In the autumn of 1900 she transferred to the new campus of the University of California Medical Department, located on a fog-swept hill overlooking Golden Gate Park. Her studies were in one of three buildings that were linked to the city by a single trolley line.

Something apparently went awry during Equi's second year of study, and she chose to complete her medical studies at yet another school and in another city, Portland. She graduated in 1903 from the University of Oregon Medical Department.

Equi made several other significant trips to San Francisco. Look for more installments, culminating in Equi's stay on Barbary Lane (er, Macondray Lane) after serving time in San Quentin Prison.
​
Excerpts from "Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions," Oregon State University Press, 2015. Available at bookstores and online.
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Celebrants in Marie Equi t-shirts. Michael Helquist, author, fourth from right.
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Michael Helquist (left), author, and Dale Danley

The Kids Are More Than All Right: Young Bike Advocates

7/25/2019

 
Tonight San Francisco Bicycle Coalition (SFBC) members will gather to honor advocates of better, safer streets in the city. The 2019 Golden Wheel Award will be presented to former SF supervisor Jane Kim and to People Protected founders Maureen Persico and Matt Brezina. (People Protected mobilizes activists to form a temporary human barrier on city streets that lack adequate bike infrastructure).

To prep for tonight's celebration, I reviewed the latest issue of SFBC's "Tube Times." For me the 16-page newsletter is impressive for its production and editing quality, readability, and diversity of perspectives. Featured is the article "The Kids Are All Right." It highlights the work of young SF bike advocates who take their demands for safer streets to their schools and neighborhoods and to City Hall. In the words of 14-year-old Oscar Denmark, "It is important for kids to advocate because it is our world as well, and we will be living on it for many years to come." The youth advocates recently promoted -- and won! -- safety upgrades to a street where a soccer teammate was hit and killed by a driver. One of them advised readers of a city newspaper, "It shouldn't take our friend to die to fix this problem." 

Join our first ever @PeopleProtected crosswalk! Weds May 1, 5-6.30pm Montgomery @ Mkt. @SFTRU @walksf @sfbike & @PeopleProtected are demanding SFMTA implement turn restrictions and get cars off market now! Cars slow buses and kill people walking & biking https://t.co/EBfP1RhhMk pic.twitter.com/tv5elOPSD7

— People Protected □ □ □ (@PeopleProtected) April 24, 2019

✨The Golden Wheel Awards are TONIGHT! Grab your ticket online and meet us at the Green Room to celebrate. ✨https://t.co/hT5tBuInV4

— SF Bicycle Coalition (@sfbike) July 25, 2019

San Francisco Museum Features LGBTQ+ Journalism in Early HIV/AIDS Years

7/14/2019

 
A new-to-me find today: The American Bookbinders Museum in SoMa (35 Clementina St, San Francisco). Engaging and interesting for its bookbinding machines of all sorts, displays of book art and covers, and its lecture series. Well worth a visit and a look also at the special exhibit about LGBTQ+ publications of the first decades of the 20th century.

Today's event featured long-time gay journalist Randy Alfred who talked about the city's LGBTQ+ Journalism in the early days of AIDS/HIV. During this period he worked in print (as editor of The Sentinel newspaper) as well as the host of a popular radio program where he interviewed pioneers in AIDS research and clinical care.

These were the years (1980s) when the "Bay Area Reporter" newspaper's readership was primarily gay men (as intended), when the bi-weekly "The Sentinel" newspaper slipped from offering breaking news about AIDS policy, and when the monthly publication "Coming UP!" (today's Bay Times) emphasized diversity and inclusiveness of matters of importance to women as well as to men, provided in-depth analysis, and presented extensive coverage of the political, medical, social behavioral aspects of AIDS in San Francisco. (disclosure: I wrote for "Coming Up!" from 1982-1985)..

Alfred offered his reflections on both the commendable AIDS coverage as well as the Initial unconscionable lack of reports about the AIDS/HIV epidemic in different publications. Thanks to Randy Alfred and to the GLBT Historical Society in San Francisco for co-sponsoring of the lecture as part of the Queer Voices lecture series presented by the American Bookbinders Museum. 
​
#lgbthistory #museum #HIV/AIDS #bkbindersmuseum
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National Park Service, Oregon Sec State Honor Marie Equi

6/24/2019

 
Just in time for Pride Month, lesbian activist Marie Equi (1872-1952) is being honored by the National Park Service (NPS) and the Oregon State Secretary of State for her courage and commitment to economic and social justice.
 
The New Bedford Whaling National Historic Park, part of NPS, triggered the attention to Equi with an exhibit featuring her contributions during the 2018 Pride Month. The profile of Equi highlights her early life, her role as an early woman physician in the West, her controversial fights for women’s and labor’s rights, her romantic and intimate relations with women, and her adopting a child. Equi’s inclusion in the story of the United States by the National Park Service is significant for spotlighting, for the first time, a lesbian doctor and political radical. Read her NPS profile here.
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On the West Coast, the office of the Oregon Secretary of State  has included Marie Equi among the “Notable Oregonians” featured on its website. Equi is recognized for woman suffrage work, her fight for labor justice, and her opposition to World War I.  The site also notes that Equi was the first publicly known lesbian in Oregon.* Equi first settled in the state in 1892 when she joined her girlfriend on a homestead outside The Dalles, Oregon along the Columbia River. After a relocation to San Francisco, Equi returned to Oregon to receive her medical degree and to practice in Pendleton, Oregon and then in Portland. She lived the rest of her adult life in the state. Equi was beloved by many for her commitment to justice and her fierce defense of the underdog.
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​*Based on research for Equi’s biography, “Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions,” Oregon State University Press, Michael Helquist, 2015.  Available in print and kindle, from independent bookstores and online at Amazon. Also see marieequi.com.

Marie Equi Leaves San Quentin, Recovers at Barbary Lane

6/22/2019

 
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Hold on, Mary Ann Singleton, you’re not the first to seek refuge on Barbary Lane.  Before you escaped Cleveland for the enchantment, intrigue, and sexual freedom of 1970s San Francisco, lesbian agitator Marie Equi camped out there in 1921, direct from doing time at San Quentin Prison. The difference, of course, Mary Ann, is that your muddled, earnest striving fits neatly into the raucous print and film series “Tales of the City,” created by novelist and screenwriter Armistead Maupin. He placed you and the other fictional denizens in a mansion-like set of apartments along the legendary Barbary Lane.
 
Marie Equi’s journey to “Barbary Lane,” however, was all too fraught with real danger, conflict and suffering. She struggled with being an outsider most of her life. She was the daughter of immigrant parents; her father was Italian, her mother, Irish. The family was snubbed for not being enough of either community. Equi’s family was working-class, and she had to drop out of high school to help support her six siblings. She worked in the gritty textile mills until she could take it no longer. Her plight was even more precarious since she was uninterested in marriage as a means of financial support; besides she was attracted to women. It was a time, in the 1880s and 1890s, when the word “lesbian” was neither known nor used.
 
Equi fled to Oregon to live along the Columbia River on a homestead with her girlfriend. She studied medicine on her own, and then bucked the trend to enter medical school when few women did. She graduated in Portland in 1903, and she became known as a passionate advocate for social and economic justice. That’s how Equi got in trouble. She fought for woman suffrage, she distributed birth control information when it was illegal, and she provided outlawed abortions. She marched with jobless workers, picketed at labor strikes, and fought with police. When the U.S. joined World War I, Equi objected to its exploitative, capitalist motives. For speaking out against the war, the federal government charged Equi with sedition. She was convicted and then sentenced to three years in prison at San Quentin, starting October 19, 1920.
 
Ten months later at San Quentin, “Equi collected her possessions changed into the new clothes and hat provided by the state, and said goodbye to her cellmate “KT” and the other women. …The other inmates cheered her release, and she vowed not to forget them. She completed the required paperwork, took the five dollars cash allotted each discharged prisoner, and walked with guards through the gates. There one of her cousins waited to take her to the ferry and leave San Quentin behind.”
 
From the San Francisco dock, Equi was driven to her refuge on Macondray Lane, not the fictitious Barbary Lane where transgender landlady Anna Madrigal tended to her family of seekers and supposed misfits featured in “Tales of the City.” (The actual pathway was named in 1912 to honor the pioneer San Francisco merchant Frederick W. Macondray). Instead of Anna Madrigal, Charlotte Anita Whitney welcomed Marie Equi into her mid-block one-bedroom apartment.
 
Whitney was from an aristocratic family in Oakland, across San Francisco Bay. Like Equi, she was unmarried and had worked as a suffragist before becoming a political radical convinced that fundamental economic and social change was needed in the country. Whitney and Equi had known each other for nearly ten years. They were confidants, perhaps lovers, and they supported each other in the ways independent women must. Two months before Equi’s release, Whitney had taken an apartment on the wooded, well-tended walkway lined by a serpentine rock outcropping on the south side and houses and apartments on the north – all situated high on San Francisco’s eclectic Russian Hill.
 
From the windows of Whitney’s home, Equi could scan the Marin County headlands across the bay.  San Quentin Prison, mercifully, did not mar the view. After months in close concrete quarters, she was just a few steps away from the flowers, shrubs, and trees of the hideaway lane. No longer confined with strangers, she spent her days and nights with an intimate companion of her own choosing, and she tried to make sense of her prison ordeal and what lay ahead.
 
Macondray Lane for Marie Equi, and Barbary Lane for Mary Ann Singleton. One real walkway and one imagined path. Both held the promise of what so many of us seek then and now -- a safe home and companions of our own choosing.
----
If you’re new to “Tales of the City”  by Armistead Maupin, treat yourself to a romp through San Francisco by reading all eight books in the series. Don’t miss the excellent and most recent web miniseries of the same name that premiered on Netflix June 7, 2019.
 
For the life of the fiercely independent Marie Equi, see “Marie Equi, Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions,” 2015, Oregon State University Press, Michael Helquist.  A Stonewall Honor Book. Available at independent bookstores and online. At Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Marie-Equi-Radical-Politics-Passions/dp/087071595X

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Marie Equi Closer to Memorial in San Francisco

6/11/2019

 
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Ready for production: prototype of Marie Equi plaque with David Perry, RHW director; Michael Helquist, Equi bio author; and Dale Danley, Equi bio editor. ​
Early lesbian physician and political agitator Marie Equi will be memorialized next month in San Francisco with a 3 by 3 foot bronze plaque installed in the sidewalk of the city’s historic Castro Street neighborhood. Her likeness, signature, and a brief description of her will appear on the plaque. Equi was selected for the honor once her story of service and activism in the United States became better known following publication of a biography of her in 2015.

On June 3rd the Rainbow Honor Walk (RHW) hosted an unveiling of the next nine LGBTQ honorees, including Equi. Their plaques will be placed in mid-July. The nine will join 28 others installed already. RHW seeks to honor and preserve LGBTQ history with recognition of deceased individuals who contributed to their communities and beyond.

The honor for Equi comes in stark contrast to public regard for her at the peak of her medical and political career in the World War I era. The U.S. government castigated her as one of the most dangerous radicals on the West Coast because of her professional stature and her following among many laborers fed up with low pay and long hours. Authorities also resented Equi’s refusal to be intimidated. She was also controversial for living openly with her female lover. (She and Harriet Speckart are among the first publicly known lesbians on the West Coast).

In addition, Equi roiled the body politic by providing women with birth control information and abortion services. For speaking out against US involvement in World War I, Equi was tried and convicted for sedition. She served ten months in the women’s wards of San Quentin Prison. 

Equi's plaque reads:
Marie Equi
(1872-1952)
​
American physician and political radical 
who fought for peace, an eight-hour workday, women's suffrage, 
and their right to birth control. 
Others to be honored in the July installments include Chavela Vargas, a Costa Rican singer; ballet dancer Alvin Ailey; singer Josephine Baker; Queen frontman Freddie Mercury; trans activist Lou Sullivan; U.S. Congressman Gerry Studds; and English poet W.H. Auden. 

For a list and description of all the honorees, see www.rainbowhonorwalk.org. For more information on Marie Equi see marieequi.com and the biography of her, which I wrote, “Marie Equi, Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions), Michael Helquist, Oregon State University Press, 2015. Book is available at Amazon and independent bookstores in print and ebook formats.

#stonewall50 #castrostreet #lgtqhistory #marieequi #womansuffrage #gay #lesbian #freddiemercury #pride #womenshistory #RainbowHonorWalk

How Arizona Reminded Me of Paris

3/26/2019

 
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Going to Arizona last month relatively soon after major back surgery – and with my neurosurgeon’s approval -- reminded me of an episode 26 years ago when I astounded my doctor with my travel plans.  

“You want to go to Paris now, in the winter, after having PCP?” he asked. “It’s going to be cold and wet. Couldn’t you go somewhere south, somewhere it’s dry and warm?”

It was mid-November 1993, and I had just beaten a bout of the often deadly AIDS-related pneumonia. After ve days in the hospital, I was discharged to ten days of IV treatment at home.

A few days later I was proposing to my doctor a long flight to Europe where my lungs would be subjected to the cold, fog, and rain. I explained that my partner at the time had his heart set on celebrating his 40th birthday in his favorite city. My doctor relented with warnings to stay warm and dry and avoid long exposure outdoors. (I’ve always thought he agreed partly thinking I should do what made me happy given my overall prognosis. Unexpectedly, I became a long-term HIV survivor). 

So off we went on the day after Thanksgiving for nine days in Paris. It WAS cold and wet and I stayed indoors more than usual. The city was amazing in winter. We were grateful to be staying   in a large, warm and cozy apartment in a 400-year-old building on the Ile St. Louis. 

Back to last month and Arizona. My husband, Dale Danley, and I had planned this trip long before my diagnosis of disk degeneration. The surgery went well, but a fair degree of nerve pain had yet to resolve. We knew travel would be uncomfortable for me and that our long hikes would be curtailed. I was good for about a mile with a cane. But it was Arizona, sunshine and warm days. Or so we thought.

Our first night it snowed. The next morning the temp was 26 degrees. Our windshield was covered with ice. I scraped some of it off with the end of my cane. We were so not ready. We had debated at home how many T shirts and shorts we’d need.

But we had a wonderful trip visiting longtime friends in Sedona and in the tiny town of Clarkdale before settling in Tucson at a sprawling luxe hotel where a Leadership Conference for LGBTQ choruses was convened. Dale attended sessions while I walked around the compound, spent time in the fitness room, and slept a lot. I loved being in the desert again.

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