Popular Culture Review Vol. 13, No. 2, Summer 2002 | Page 123

AIDS Memoirs 119 elements. Reducing physical distress encompasses pain management and the easing of distress caused by nausea, vomiting, and constipation (85). According to Corr, the psychological aspects focus on maximizing three features of life: security, autonomy, and richness. He notes that to be secure is to be as free as possible from anxiety, fear, or apprehension, and that autonomy centers on a person’s ability to be self-governing. Richness, Corr observes, describes that which makes life satisfactory or bountiful. “What richness will mean for individuals must be left to their determination,” he writes. “One person might prize serenity and the absence of threat; another might choose activity, creativity, and a degree of risk or danger” (86). Meanwhile, Corr states, social task work hinges on sustaining and enhancing interpersonal attachments significant to the dying person in question. Interpersonal attachments must be honored, Corr points out, because humans are social creatures by nature. He adds: “In the midst of the challenges of coping with dying, it is critical ... that they be the interpersonal attachments valued by the person in question, not those whom others think that person should value” (86-87). Finally, Corr says that the spiritual aspects of coping with dying involve those sources from which one draws spiritual vigor and vitality. These sources depend upon the person’s fundamental values and moral commitments. Corr adds that in the name of achieving a sense of wholeness, spirituality encompasses acceptance, reconciliation, self-worth, meaning, and purpose in living (87). Corr maintains that in contrast to Kubler-Ross’ stages of death theory, a taskbased approach is designed to empower individuals coping with dying, with the person deciding “which tasks are important to me, how and when, if at all, they will be addressed...” He holds that a task-based approach does not concentrate on that which is obligatory (“must”) or normative/prescriptive (“should” or “ought”). Instead, it emphasizes choices among possible tasks. “In this way,” Corr notes, “it avoids the twin pitfalls of linearity and directedness that are prominent risks in any stage-based approach” (90). Borrowed Time In 1988, poet and novelist Paul Monette published the first personal account of AIDS—a riveting, poetic, heartbreaking work titled Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir. Borrowed Time is a ground-breaking chronicle of Monette’s relationship with his lover Roger Horwitz, and how their lives were forever changed when Horwitz was diagnosed with AIDS in 1985. More specifically. Borrowed Time is a searing, gut-wrenching account of the last nineteen months of Horwitz’s life, and how Monette and Horwitz fought against impossible odds to try to overcome the disease. And what makes the memoir all the more poignant is the reader’s knowledge that Monette succumbs in 1995, at the age of forty-nine, to the same disease that claimed his lover.