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‘I went to church every
Sunday and that’s where I
learned to drink with the other
altar boys – after the service,
any wine left was ours.’
I
was born in a women’s prison in 1972. I was taken away from my birth
mother and fostered, then six months later my mother was released from
prison and got me back – but sadly only for a short while. I was taken away
by social services and the lovely couple who had fostered me decided to
adopt me. Growing up, I knew none of this.
When I was around seven years old my parents told me I was adopted, and they
spent hours explaining how I was loved and their real child. But that was not what
I heard. All that got through to me was that my mummy didn’t want me and nor
did my daddy, and I couldn’t understand why.
Obviously at that time I had no idea about safeguarding children and how it
worked. I was in a lovely caring home and loved by my parents, yet inside I felt as if
I didn’t belong. It was as if a bomb had gone off in my head: why didn’t my birth
parents love me?
As I got to around 11 years old I started to struggle with my sexuality, although
at the time I didn’t quite know what I was struggling with. I went to church every
Sunday and that’s where I learned to drink with the other altar boys – after the
service, any wine left was ours. I also heard in church that ‘man shalt not lie with
another man’. When I started to realise that I fancied my best friend more than I
fancied my girlfriend, this was quite difficult.
Slowly I found out what and where cruising areas were – and that there were
plenty of them about 20 miles away in the nearest town. It was probably not
something that a 14-year-old should have known about.
I didn’t really know what being gay was, I just knew I liked men more than
women. This made me very frightened. I couldn’t really find out information or
even know who to talk to, and I felt alone and quite isolated.
My secret kind of came out at school when I was 16. I stopped doing A levels as
I was being bullied daily – how was I supposed to achieve good school results when
I was fending off bullies all the time?
W
hen I was 18 I had a job that took me away from the village to a
city, and I still had my secrets. On a work night out, my
colleagues warned me about a street that I should not go down,
as that was where all the gays went. I took note of the street
name and knew I would be there the next night. It was a private
members’ club and they wouldn’t let me in. I had developed ways of acting straight
so I didn’t get my head kicked in, and I couldn’t even convince a gay club to let me
in. Eventually I just pressed the buzzer and kissed the bouncer, who let me enter.
In the club it felt like I belonged for the first time in my life and I was at ease
with who I was. I met a guy older than me, ex-army, and we got into a relationship
quite quickly. It was hard being in a relationship with a guy in public, though. Once
we left the safety of the club we had to be very careful – no showing affection
towards each other as it was illegal to be gay if you were under 21 and not very
widely accepted at any age. You could get beaten up by anyone and the police were
not exactly helpful in those days.
Just after my 19th birthday I found out that he had kept a secret from me about
himself. We had gone to the hospital for his appointment for cancer and the nurse
suggested to me that I needed a test. A little confused I had agreed, and two weeks
later I was called back. The hospital told me that I had got HIV from my partner
and that I would be lucky to live another six months.
Six months to live – God really did hate me. ‘I’m only 19, what do I do, who do I
ask for help?,’ I thought. ‘My family don’t even know I’m gay yet.’
Enter my coping strategy – my old friend alcohol, that had been there for me
since I was 11. If I was going to die it was going be on my terms, dancing on tables,
off my head on drink.
My partner blackmailed me to stay with him. He said if I left him he would tell
everyone what I had got. I was very scared and very lonely. Freddie Mercury had
died of Aids, so what hope was there really for the rest of us? I saw so many of my
friends die of pneumonia and many just disappeared – so many people just dying
in front of me.
F
or the next few years I watched my partner become very ill and slowly
deteriorate in front of me. I was watching him die and in my head I
struggled with pain and fear that this was going to happen to me
quite soon. I would die a very slow, painful death.
At 25 I suffered liver failure. I woke up all yellow and was told that
this was my body’s way of telling me I needed to stop drinking. ‘Don’t be so stupid,’
I replied. ‘I’m dying of Aids and drinking is my way of coping.’
When I was 28, after a number of failed relationships that I realise now were all
based around alcohol consumption and not love, I actually met someone who
didn’t drink. Maybe I would stop drinking now, I thought.
Sadly I had fallen in love with someone who was on heroin and crack cocaine
and I quite quickly became addicted. My life took a whole new downward turn. The
weight fell off and I really did look like an Aids victim. I was once again
overwhelmed by feeling lost and lonely.
In March 2006 I overdosed on heroin and crack for the fo urth time and I was
taken to A&E and told I would be lucky to live for four hours. I remember the
horror of people trying desperately to save my life, but thought that all the pain
would be over soon – no more feeling unwanted, no more feeling that I wasn’t
good enough, no more being battered in relationships. Dying seemed the only
way for the pain to stop. I had full blown Aids, pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP),
and not much chance of living.
My parents had rushed to the hospital and entered my room in masks and
gowns. I heard my father say to my mother: ‘No father should ever have to bury his
son.’ Obviously I had overlooked the fact that they loved me as their child.
As I left the hospital some six months later, I went to detox for two months at
Hafen Wen in Wales. I was allowed home for Christmas and spent time with my
family – my mum and dad, my brother, his wife and their two kids, my two
nephews. This time was so valuable to me.
Then it was time to go to rehab in January, at Littledale Hall in Lancaster. I spent 12
months there and made a lot of new friends. I kept the fact I was HIV positive quiet, as
I wanted to be able to sort my addiction problem out rather than deal with the health
condition. I really didn’t think I would live long enough to complete the programme.
But complete it I did, and thought ‘what do I do now?’ I volunteered for a local
re-use charity, Furniture Matters, then for Lancaster Advocacy. In July 2008, with
the help of a few people, I set up an LGBT+ group called Out in the Bay. I wanted to
support other people and let them know they had options, so that maybe they
didn’t make the same mistakes that I had made in life.
Today I am the CEO of the charity, we are all volunteers and I am very proud of
what we do and stand for. We work with many agencies to try and support the
LGBT+ community.
It can be very draining at times, as finance is limited. But we offer hope when
sometimes there seems to be none, we value every single human being as an
equal, and we pride ourselves on who we are, offering a safe space for people to
just be themselves.
Robert Mee is chief executive of Out in the Bay, www.oitb.co.uk
Robert Mee grew up feeling that he didn’t belong and used alcohol
and drugs to counter his loneliness. Now, as chief executive of a
thriving LGBT+ charity, he shares his story to reach out to others
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November 2017 | drinkanddrugsnews | 13