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Home » STIs Aren’t A Consequence. They’re Inevitable: Ella Dawson (TRanscript)

STIs Aren’t A Consequence. They’re Inevitable: Ella Dawson (TRanscript)

Here is the full transcript of Ella Dawson’s talk titled “STIs Aren’t A Consequence. They’re Inevitable” at TEDxConnecticutCollege conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

So, I’m going to start today by asking you guys to do me a small favor. I would love it if you could raise your hand if you have allergies. Okay, I can relate, I have a tiny nose so I’m always congested. Okay, thank you. Second question, I would love it if you could raise your hand if you have herpes. I see no hands and a lot more confused faces and that’s what I was expecting.

In the time that I have with you guys today, I want to talk about why it is that it is so socially unacceptable to talk about herpes despite the fact that almost everyone in this room either already has herpes or will encounter it at some point in the next few years. I’ll let that sink in for a sec.

My Story

So hi, my name is Ella, I live in Brooklyn, I’m 23, I work in social media, and I have genital herpes. I was diagnosed with herpes at the end of my junior year of college, it was a really exciting 21st birthday present from the universe. And I had a lot of feelings at the time, but my overriding feeling was just total confusion because I had been told my entire life that I was not the type of person that herpes and other STDs happened to.

People with herpes, in my mind, were dishonest, irresponsible, promiscuous, unfaithful, and depending on who you asked, I didn’t consider myself any of those things. And what I learned very quickly was that that really intense, deeply ingrained stereotype was the result of a very powerful social stigma that surrounds STDs like herpes in our society. So I’m going to talk a little bit about where that stereotype and that powerful social stigma comes from.

Sources of Stigma

I’m going to talk about three sources; there are more, but these are the ones that at least convinced me I’m human trash now when I got diagnosed. So, the first source of herpes stigma, and this will probably not come as a surprise, is the abysmal state of sex education in the US today. I received, yeah, it’s bad, I received abstinence-only sex education which consisted of being told that I should just not have sex if I wanted to protect myself from STDs or pregnancy, and as someone who is not planning to wait until marriage and will probably have sex later this weekend, that message was never really going to work for me.

I remember being shown very graphic PowerPoint slides of what STIs would do to my body, and in my teenage, 17-year-old Ella brain, I thought to myself, that is never going to happen to me because my body and I have an understanding, body has some respect for me so I don’t have to worry. And even if you were lucky enough to receive comprehensive sex education, you were probably taught two things that are a problem.

First of all, you were probably taught to just get tested, just get tested, just know your status but you were given no information about what to do when you test positive, at which point you’re largely on your own and you have to figure that out yourself. And even if you were lucky enough to learn how to put condoms on bananas, spoiler alert, condoms don’t prevent the risk of transmission of herpes because herpes is transmitted through skin contact and not fluids, which condoms are meant to prevent. We’ll talk more about that later.

Pop Culture and Medical Misinformation

The second source of herpes stigma is pop culture. I’m a huge media junkie, I love “The Bachelor,” so I do not want to pile on about how the media is bad, I love it, but the way that we represent STIs in pop culture is really messed up. For the most part, when we hear about herpes on television or film, it’s some sort of insult or a punchline meant to put a character down or to just be edgy. I think the best example of this for me is the line from “The Hangover,” “what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas except for herpes, that shit will come back with you.” Really great cinema.

I was recently in Vegas on vacation and I had a lot of fun telling bartenders that I had nothing to worry about in Vegas because I already had herpes. I actually got a lot of free drinks with that joke. Even in the rare case that a character gets an STD on television, it is almost always gonorrhea or chlamydia which are easily curable. And they learn like a very special lesson about being promiscuous or getting tested more frequently, and then they move on with their lives. As a result, there’s no real representation of people like me who live with very common incurable viruses like HPV or herpes, and there’s no real narrative script available to us in terms of how to live our lives now.

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The third source of herpes stigma, and this is very specific to herpes especially, is actually your doctor, the person that you trust the most to help you take care of your sexual health. Herpes tests are somewhat unreliable and they are also expensive depending on your insurance.

The Reality of Herpes

Doctors will actually commonly not test you for herpes. Even if you go in and you’re like, “I want to get tested for STIs,” chances are you’re not being tested for herpes. If you’ve peed in a cup recently, you don’t know your herpes status. And there are actually, I’ve heard many, many stories from people who went into their doctor, asked for a herpes test, and were either discouraged or denied a herpes test because they weren’t showing symptoms.