HIV positive speakers, youth HIV/AIDS educators and AIDS activists-schools, jails, colleges and universities-Bob Bowers-Madison, Wisconsin-United States
HIV positive speakers-Bob Bowers aka Da Pirate-Youth HIV/AIDS education-United States and Madison, Wisconsin

HIV positive speakers, AIDS activists, youth HIV/AIDS education by long-term survivor Bob Bowers Da Pirate-Madison, Wisconsin-United States

HIV positive speakers in schools, jails, prisons, colleges, universities-Wisconsin & United States

 
HIV positive speaker and youth HIV/AIDS educator Bob Bowers
HIV positive speakers-Bob Bowers Da Pirate-Youth HIV/AIDS educator-AIDS activist-Madison, Wisconsin-United States
Bob Bowers, also known as "Da Pirate," or "One Tough Pirate,"  is a 27-year thriving survivor of HIV/AIDS. To broaden his message of survival, youth prevention through education, hope and compassion, he founded HIVictorious, Inc. in 2005. As an HIV positive speaker, Bob knows first-hand the importance of putting a face to the disease in hopes of reducing AIDS stigma. He is far from the 'stereotypical' image of a person with AIDS, thus having a profound and lasting impact on his audiences. He is generously outspoken about his life struggles and personal choices prior to the time of his infection. Through his public speaking, he shares how HIV disease has helped him to make better choices and to appreciate the very simple beauty of day-to-day life. "For everything negative I can say about HIV, I can also find something positive to say. It's all about choices and playing the hand you are dealt."

Contracting HIV over two decades ago, before HIV testing was available, and shortly after receiving his ‘official’ diagnosis before anti-viral medications were available, Bob’s hope for survival turned immediately inward to mind, body and spirit. Since that dramatic turning point at a young age and through an 11-year marriage, he continues to fight the daily battles of adverse drug reactions through his intense desire to live. His tough muscular and tattooed appearance is softened by his inner sincerity and compassion while sharing his 27-year experience with this devastating disease.

Mr. Bowers is truly dedicated to making a lasting difference in the fight against HIV/AIDS, as well as other social issues. He is a powerful and motivating public speaker that reaches out to a large array of diverse audiences. He is a tireless and passionate advocate helping to shape HIV/AIDS policy. He is also active in fund-raising events, camps for youth affected or infected by HIV, guest-speaking engagements, and youth prevention education in schools, colleges, jails and community organizations. He has been interviewed through TV, Radio, Magazine and Newspapers, and has written articles featured in Web-MD, The Body, and AIDS Project Los Angeles’ Positive Living. The feature length documentary, “The Fire Within”, follows his life during 1999 as a moving story of courage, passion for life and the healing use of choice. Some of Bob’s awards are: FWA Winner of Best Speaking Panel-Human Sexuality, San Diego State University; AIDS Network Client Services Volunteer Award and AIDS Network Executive Director's Award for Outstanding Community HIV/AIDS Service, Madison, Wisconsin.

Bob is living proof that there is nothing impossible in this world if you apply yourself physically, spiritually and emotionally. He is a champion for hope and survival despite some of the difficult circumstances that we ALL face in life. Mr. Bowers states,
Compassion is our cure.”
®

 
To know a real-live hero is an awesome responsibility...a bit like knowing an angel,  This is what you are for so many people...the lives you touch are forever changed. You plant the most important seed in the minds of young and and old...this too can happen to you! We love you and cherish you. Not one moment of our friendship will be wasted! Take care and you will always be 'Our Pirate"

Marty Bell
 

youth HIV/AIDS education, prevention, HIVictorious awareness, advocacy, in schools, colleges, jails and universities-Madison, Wisconsin-United States

Learn more about Bob's mission of youth HIV/AIDS prevention through education.

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HIVictorious

Bob Bowers is in-your-face muscular.

He's tattooed from neck to ankle and silver hoops dangle from pierced ears.

Photographs in his East Side Madison apartment show him clutching women by their curves or straddling a Harley-Davidson, bear-brown eyes crinkled in a grin.

Bowers looks like a pirate who eats small children, as one buddy, a Los Angeles police officer, once put it.

Beefy and heterosexual, he defies stereotypes of a man infected for 21 years with human immunodeficiency virus, much less a sensitive and passionate advocate for HIV and AIDS education.

Bowers, 41, has pared his life down to those two essentials: Staying healthy and reaching out.

ACT II AIDS ride organizers invited Bowers to speak at today's opening ceremony as well as at the closing ceremony on Aug. 7.

"I'm the Mother Teresa of HIV," Bowers said in his raspy voice. "I'm spreading the word but not making any money.";

Bowers is part of a pandemic that has infected 38 million people and killed more than 20 million people worldwide. Nearly 1 million Americans are infected with HIV.

In Wisconsin, more than 8,400 people have contracted HIV -- 5,500 of them developed AIDS -- since 1982.

Activism

At a recent speaking engagement, summer campers at Jefferson Middle School first notice Bowers' tattoos and muscles. But it's his sensitivity and blunt delivery that get his point across.

Over the scraping of chairs and murmuring, an AIDS Network staff person gives his AIDS/HIV tutorial.

But once Bowers starts talking -- covering topics most adults talk around -- the teens stop fidgeting and even shush each other.

"I got HIV from using a needle one time. One time," he tells them, brown eyes full of tears as he holds up his index finger. He points next to his pelvis. "I was thinking with Mr. Twinkie instead of my brain."

For 40 minutes, he talks about monogamy, virginity, peer pressure and condoms, using terms not often heard in school counselors' offices.

"Using condoms means you are having safer sex, not safe sex," Bowers says. "A condom can break. ... Hey, man, you can get stuff that makes AIDS look pretty."

He warns girls that boys will say anything to convince them to have sex without a condom, mentioning lines older women have probably heard but that tender girls might gobble up.

"Does it hurt?" one boy asks about AIDS. The kids also question him about drugs, death, myths and anal sex. They want to know how people reacted to his HIV. He answers them all.

"There are no stupid questions," he says repeatedly.

Living with AIDS

Since his diagnosis, Bowers has been in the hospital numerous times, watched friends die and watched his 11-year marriage flourish and then die.

His tattoos tell a story.

In 1990, he got his first one, an eagle, just because he wanted one. Subsequent tattoos have more meaning.

"Courage" inside a heart on his arm marks his 15th year of survival. His 17th year is represented by the Japanese symbol for "warrior" on his lower arm. A mako shark on his left arm pays homage to one of his 40 friends who have had AIDS and died.

"The next (tattoo) is going to ... be a phoenix," Bowers said. "It symbolizes ... my willingness to never give up and the beauty of life."

Bowers contracted the virus in 1983 when he shared a needle to shoot up crystal methamphetamine, a pure form of speed, with a girlfriend and another couple in a Hollywood hotel. He was 19.

"I (injected drugs) one time due to peer pressure and experimentation," he said. "I couldn't believe that was all it took."

Swollen glands and flu symptoms sent him to a clinic a year later. Doctors told Bowers, then a clean-cut body builder, he had AIDS-related complex -- now called HIV. He was among the first 100 clients at the AIDS Project Los Angeles. A year after his HIV diagnosis, he developed AIDS.

"I went back two or three times and got re-tested," he said. "I didn't look the part and I didn't feel the part. ... I never imagined in my wildest dreams I was dying of something."

Initially he thought it was the end of a life that had already seen a lot of suffering.

"I don't think people realize the magnitude about the length of survival and all the hills and valleys I've travailed to get here," Bowers said.

He asked questions, participated in surveys and got involved with HIV activist organizations. He learned he didn't have to live the rest of his life alone.

No woman has ever said she didn't want to be with him because of his status, but he admits it's a complication.

"It's like having a third person in a relationship. ... I'm always afraid I would possibly infect that person, and there's a part of me that feels tainted or dirty," Bowers said.

Living for connections

In Wisconsin, where nearly 60 percent of AIDS cases stem from two men having sex, Bowers puts a new face on advocacy, AIDS Network caseworker Mary Vasquez said.

"HIV in the U.S. is primarily a disease of homosexual men," said longtime friend Howard Jacobs, who contracted the virus as a teen in New York having sex with a man. "Bob has the ability to bust that stereotype. It's a very, very powerful thing."

Bowers puts that and his positive energy to good use.

He talks to schools and other youth support organizations, often working with AIDS Network staff.

"Over the years, AIDS groups (on the West Coast) have become corporate giants, a very cold machine, so to speak, where there's locked doors, security guards," he said. "AIDS Network has been a lifesaver and when I speak for them I say how grateful I am to them. They are compassionate to their commitment and although they're well-established, it's still very grassroots."

Bowers spends Tuesdays talking to small groups of inmates at the Rock County Jail with AIDS Network staff. His heterosexuality helps alleviate discomfort among the men when it comes to discussing HIV, he said. Women tend to open up more quickly and ask questions.

Living so close to death has made him more spiritual, more inclined to forge real connections with people.

"When I really talk real with somebody, that's when I know I'm glad to be alive," he said.

Bowers still cries over stories people tell him. One juvenile offender told of an uncle who died on the porch to which his family relegated him after he contracted the virus.

"Dying on your porch," he said. "I can't believe people still do that."

Bowers' efforts extend into cyberspace via his Web site, www.onetoughpirate.com. When he's not feeling well, it's the people who reach out to him that help him stay positive.

"Bob is a champion and a voice for the underdog," Jacobs said. "He's not afraid to tell what his life is like and what he needs to survive. Madison is lucky because he can relate that to legislators."

Bowers said he's connecting with Madison, not just the HIV-positive community.

"I love it here," he said. "It reminds me a lot of Portland (Ore., near where he grew up). It's not as wild and crazy as Los Angeles. I can become involved more and still take care of myself."

Struggling to survive

A big part of Bowers' story are the drugs helping him live. They're also the worst part of survival.

He lists medications like he's talking about pop stars. He's familiar with them all.

In 1989 he began taking AZT. The resulting stomach pain curled him into a ball.

Then came protease inhibitors and combination therapy or drug "cocktails," which is like being on chemotherapy.

A documentary, "The Fire Within," by Leanne Whitney followed Bowers through 1999.

The film shows him fighting bouts of vomiting which left him weak and moaning on the shoulder of his petite former wife, Shawn.

"I don't want to puke anymore," he said in the film. "I'd rather die than keep taking this (stuff)."

His body no longer makes its own testosterone and his thyroid doesn't work, so he takes drugs to replace their functions. One HIV drug elevates his cholesterol, so he takes another to control it. One drug damaged his heart. Another put him in a wheelchair for months with nerve damage.

One HIV drug, which he still takes, can give him diarrhea without warning.

Over time, his virus has become resistant to most drugs. "Until last year, I had no treatment options left," Bowers said. "I was doing non-traditional combinations on a wing and a prayer -- sort of the anything-is-better-than-nothing therapy."

For some reason, it's working. His virus is at an undetectable level in blood samples.

He takes about 30 drugs a day in two doses. He hurries them down in two or three swallows, punctuated by a gulp of water. He injects testosterone into his thigh once a week.

He'll continue this combination until his virus learns to fight it. Then he'll try the new drugs on the market.

"I'm trying to get as much life out of this drug as I can," he said.

His t-cell count has been as low as 106 -- below 200 is full-blown AIDS. It's now 540, so his current status is "AIDS asymptomatic." He'll always have AIDS, but he's free of AIDS-related symptoms.

Through it all, Bowers has been his own advocate, having doctors change his cocktail until he's taking a minimal number of drugs with the least side effects.

"I'm not OK with just being alive," he said. "I want more."

Death When asked about death, Bowers first talks about suicide, not death from AIDS-related illness.

Almost half of Bowers' 40 or so friends who have died with AIDS committed some form of suicide -- either giving up on medications or taking action to end their life.

"My greatest accomplishment is survival in general," he said. "I'm committed. I'm not going to take the easy way out."

His longevity struck him on his 35th birthday, the age at which his mother died of breast cancer when he was 9.

He had been sure he'd die before turning 30. "That was prior to AZT, so 35 just was not going to happen," he said. "Thirty-five was just, like, wow. It took things to a deeper level spirituality."

Survival has meant 20 years of medications and illness, of watching new acquaintances react to his HIV status, of friends dying, and of people greeting him by asking "How are you feeling?"

But mostly, his life's a blessing.

"That's why my speaking is so emotional," Bowers said. "I'm out there way beyond my time. I've seen miracle after miracle after miracle. Too many to count. ... And I've survived."

~Lisa Schuetz Wisconsin State Journal

You can read more about Da Pirate and view news videos here: "IN DA NEWS"

HIV positive speaker in schools, colleges, jails and universities-Wisconsin & United States
HIV positive speaker and youth HIV/AIDS educator
Madison, Wisconsin and the United States

Bob Bowers-aka Da Pirate

Bob Bowers came into our lives unknown and in need. Now he is well known and provides need for countless others. We are truly blessed to have someone with his energy, determination and desire to be "the best he can be for himself and for all of us". He is a gifted and generous man as he gives and gives and gives and asks nothing in return. He has inspired numerous University of Wisconsin-Madison students by telling them like it is . When he is done talking with them, THEY GET IT and hopefully "won't get it"  if you know what I mean. Thanks Bob for demonstrating how one person does make a difference!!!
 

Marge Sutinen, Director

Midwest AIDS Training and Education Center
Madison, Wisconsin
 

Bob Bowers featured on Channel 27's
"People Making a Difference."
 
 
Out of every trauma in our lives comes something good if we choose to see it that way! I so choose!

 --Bob Bowers

 
You're such an inspiration. I'll never forget the day I met you 8 plus years ago, when you had just started speaking I believe. Look at you now. You're a rockstar!

~Tanya
 
 
 
 
   

I have been an HIV positive speaker for many years now. Whether I'm speaking in middle schools or universities, I'm sincerely humbled by and
thankful for the love and respect that the students have shown me. The youth I speak with appreciate hearing about HIV/AIDS from someone
who actually lives with the disease and who doesn't "sugar coat" facts about HIV/AIDS, as well other STIs. It's good to be a Pirate!

 
I have never known anyone who has HIV/AIDS. Bob Bowers was a real guy who has AIDS. It was really interesting to hear about a real person who has it. To have the courage to get up in front of people and tell that story in a real and plain way is truly admirable. Through hearing about HIV/AIDS from a real person, I understand it better. It was almost as if it was becoming more real. People always say AIDS won't happen to me, but this just proves that it can happen to anyone.

~ Chloe S.
 
Just wanted to say thank you for your cause. My son has numerous friends who are HIV positive. We both appreciate the work you do and for being such an amazing role model for young people today. We love you.

Birgit and Andrew
 

Compassion is our cure! Bob Bowers Youth HIV/AIDS education in schools-HIVictorious-Madison, Wisconsin-United States

Bob was so inspiring. He really taught me that no matter who you are or what is going on in your life, you always need to be your own person. The way he is able to talk openly about his hardships and not turn away any questions in front of complete strangers that couldn't possibly understand what he is going through, is amazing. Bob Bowers is a true life hero in my eyes. He is so brave to take on this disease and just do what he has to do to get through it. I wish I had that kind of drive and courage in my own life.

~ Erin B.

 
You are a very great speaker. Mr. Bowers, you are a very wonderful, helpful and educated person and you made it even better because you know exactly what you were talking about because you have experienced it. You have made an impact on so many people's lives and on mine too. You are a hero to many people and you are a hero to me. I hope you keep speaking around the world and helping people with HIV/AIDS because they need you. Thank you for taking the time to talk to our class. Good luck!

Sincerely,Mckenzie S.
7th Grade-Marshall Middle School

 
 
 
   
Bob and students from Lodi High School after speaking to the student body about HIV/AIDS prevention and living with the disease
 
I really enjoyed Bob Bowers' presentation about HIV/AIDS. I thought that he did a very good job of bringing the facts to us. I was amazed that he has been HIV positive for over 20 years. I enjoyed that he was honest with his opinions and how he was able to make us think about things we don not usually think about. I was amazed at his determination to survive.

~ Steve U.
 
"It was amazing to hear you speak today. Thank you for all the wonderful things you told us. Your an amazing person and I am happy you do what you do. Even if you open one person's eye that is wonderful. Thank you again!!"

~Heather
 
Bob Bowers was a very interesting and informative speaker that I thoroughly enjoyed listening to. Bob has a very inspirational story and I thought is was particularly courageous of him to get up in front of so many people and explain that he is an AIDS survivor. Bob did a very good job of mixing facts with real-life experience, another aspect of his presentation that I thought was very well-done. He provided enough technical information, such as how HIV is transmitted, yet he also touched on the emotional side of the disease, explaining the way he felt when he found out he was HIV positive. In addition, I liked the way Bob asked for audience participation, but did not make it awkward or make us feel like we had to participate. Overall, I thought that Bob had a very inspirational life story and thoroughly enjoyed listening to his presentation

~ Elizabeth P.
 
   
 
What I really liked about last Wednesday was our guest speaker Mr. Bowers. His story was not only moving but also extremely empowering. He really talked straight from his heart, which was very admirable. He talked about his experiences with HIV and sort of "told it like it is" without sugar coating anything. He made HIV seem very real in that he put a face to the disease. We have been learning about what HIV is and what it does to the body etc., but we have not had a lot of opportunities to hear from people who have experienced the disease first hand. It is really awesome that he is such a strong person and does not let hate and ignorance interfere with his life.

Katrina-University of Wisconsin-Madison
 

Da Pirate-One Tough Pirate-Madison, Wisconsin-United States

Madison, Wisconsin AIDS activist & Youth HIV/AIDS educator Bob Bowers One Tough Pirate's MySpace profile   Madison, Wisconsin AIDS Activist, youth HIV/AIDS educator and long-term survivor-Bob Bowers Facebook profile   Da Pirate's YouTube videos channel

I learned a lot from Bob but didn't feel like it was a lecture telling us to not have sex so you don't get HIV/AIDS. It was more like he was our friend telling us about the disease., including ways to get it, ways to prevent it, and the consequences of having to deal with it for the rest of your life. I feel so appreciative that we got the chance to hear this gifted speaker talk to us. 

Sarah-Edgewood High School, Freshman

 
 
 

AIDS documentaries-The Fire Within-HIV/AIDS feature length documentary film-movies

 
 
If you think life is tough, you have not seen this film. Give yourself a reality check and find out what daily life is like for someone who has had HIV for 16 years (by the way...I think Bob is at 23+ years now and going strong!!). Bob's story is inspiring, I have seen the movie 3 times now and every time I watch it, I am amazed at his strength and courage. Bob shares every part of his life in this movie and despite all the pain, he manages to live life to its fullest and continues to give back by speaking at schools and teaching people what they need to know about HIV. You can't help loving Bob by the end of this movie, he is truly a hero! ~As reviewed on NetFlix.com
 

 

Documentary on AIDS-HIV/AIDS documentaries on long-term survivor Bob Bowers The Fire Within

 

We go through what we go through to help others go through what we went through.
~Unknown

 

one tough pirae logo-Da Pirate Bob Bowers www.onetoughpirate.com OTP

 

"We are not lepers or indispensable; we are brothers, sister, sons, daughters, parents, and yes, even grandparents who for one reason or another were infected with the AIDS virus. The “H” in HIV stands for Human. If we can unite to end AIDS, we will hopefully put right many other divisions that face us as a world." 

~Bob Bowers a.k.a. Da Pirate

da pirate tattoos full sleeves

Click photo to view Da Pirate's full sleeves tattoos now in color                 

 
 

youth hiv/aids prevention comprehensive sex education in schools in Wisconsin and the United States-Bob Bowers

 
   

HIV positive speaker Bob Bowers addressing students at New Trier High School

Your presentation in the auditorium today was absolutely great. You showed me that there really is hope for those who have HIV/ADS when they have the attitude that you have towards this disease. You show a lot of courage going up in front of people you don't know and talking about this infection. You are the most inspiring speaker I've ever listened to. You never give up and you fight it like it's another day. I really appreciate this experience and I admire your courage through it all.

~ Tom F.
 
Bob is one of the best speakers I have ever heard in my life. I really enjoyed learning about his experiences. I never realized how many people in the world are suffering from HIV. Now that I have heard Mr. Bowers speak to us, I would like to do as much as I can to inform other people throughout the world and help them to understand more about HIV and its affects on life. I am very glad that I got to hear him share.

Scott S.
 

 

 

Bob Bowers-Youth HIV/AIDS educator and AIDS activist-Da Pirate-Madison, Wisconsin-United States

Click to view more photos of youth HIV/AIDS educator and AIDS activist  Bob Bowers a.k.a. Da Pirate

 
I thought Bob was very inspirational and did a good job speaking to us about HIV/AIDS. It amazes me that a man who has lost so much, can be so strong and able to tell people about his problem. Having the tremendous courage to be able to get on stage and present your life like that is truly astonishing. The way he spoke was grasping and kept me attention the entire time.

~ Stephen G.
 
Bob,

Your speech was great. I was amazed at how happy and energetic you are. To tell you the truth, you are more optimistic about life then I am, it's great, just great! I also liked how you aren't afraid to talk about HIV/AIDS, you're completely comfortable and I really admire you and aspire to find the simple joys in everyday life like you do. Thanks for helping me to realize  that even though things can be bad at times, that you should always stay on the positive side of things. Even though HIV/AIDS is horrible, you have turned it around and made it something amazing. You use it to teach others about prevention and other things associated with HIV/AIDS.  Thank you very much for sharing your energy and information with us.

~ Ashley M.
 

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"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter."

~Martin Luther King Jr.

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Da Pirate Bob Bowers www.onetoughpirate.com youth hiv/aids prevention education wisconsin & united states

Youth HIV/AIDS education, prevention in schools & colleges-advocacy & awareness-HIVictorious-Madison, Wisconsin-United States
 
da pirate tattoos flames full sleeves
 
HIV positive speaker Bob Bowers a.k.a. Da Pirate-Accomplishments
 
HIV positive speaker Bob Bowers at the International AIDS Candlelight Memorial Key West Florida
 
Photos of HIV/AIDS survivor Bob Bowers a.k.a. Da Pirate who has been living with HIV/AIDS for 25 years
 
stories articles on surviving people living with HIV/AIDS
 

youth hiv/aids prevention education in high schools colleges university photos pictures

 
AIDS Memory Wall remembering honoring people who have died of HIV/AIDS
 
photos/pictures of people living with aids/hiv Bob Bowers has been HIV positive for 25 years
 

HIV/AIDS information resources links wisconsin united states

 

HIV positive SURVIVOR-Da Pirate Bob Bowers One Tough Pirate

 

Da Pirate Bob Bowers Family Photos

 
hiv/aids survivor, speaker, educator, bob bowers birthday photos -da pirate
 
Exercise with HIV/AIDS Information links resources importance of lean body mass resistance cardiovascular
 
HIV/AIDS awareness posters contest/campaign prevention education What if it Were You? A project of HIVictorious Inc-Madison, Wisconsin
 
 

spider webs elbows flames tattoos

 

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YOU are simply amazing. I so respect what you are doing. I really appreciate you and don't even know you. Just reading your site blew me away. You give hope to people who most of the time have none. Thank you for sharing your gift with the world. That gift is knowledge and educating people as well as the compassion you have for others. I firmly believe you have been given the chance to live this long because of what you are doing with your life. take care and know even complete strangers support what you are doing.
peace and love,
 
TracyLynn

............................

Dear Bob,

Over the years in the social groups I attend to, I can say I met many a person. But not a single one of them has made me take the few moments I did out of my day and revel in your awesomeness. And I've known some people that have had their fair share of shit happen to them. But I spent some time on your site links, and you made me not only commend you for the courage you have, but actually realize what little things I take for granted every day just by being alive. I hope this message reaches you in the BEST of health, and I hope your time on this planet is longer and more prosperous than you ever dreamed it could be. Again, I feel compelled to wish you congratulations on not giving up, and good luck in helping others. I would say don't quit fighting, and don't give up,  but I think you already have plenty of motivation and faith of your own. I just hope my few little words fan what blazing flames drive you. Thank you for being such a beautiful human being.

With the utmost respect and high regards, E. Bojan

..........................................

 
   

HIV positive speaker Bob Bowers with students at La Follette High School in Madison, Wisconsin - Go Lancers!

HIV positive speakers-Youth HIV/AIDS education, prevention, awareness in schools in Wisconsin and the United States See more photos from Bob's speaking presentations and other HIVictorious events
 
I liked Bob's presentation. I thought it was very informative and  I liked how honest Mr. Bowers was about his personal life and how he grew up. I also liked how he told us that you can get out of any situation. The whole "Don't judge a book by its cover" really applied to him. I liked how he put his problems in a funny way and made us all laugh (as well as him) at his problems, rather than being all "poor me." It's so cool to see how he has survived and that he is willing to teach and inform students rather than feeling sorry for himself.

~ Nicki D.
 
As I was listening to the life story of Bob Bowers, I was glad to see him standing in front of 160 freshmen as he told us what he has gone through. Bob was able to show me that people with HIV are like every other person, except they have to be aware that they have HIV. I am now able to understand that he doesn't see having HIV as a handicap, but only an opportunity. I have learned many different things from Bob. He has convinced me that there are ways to prevent the world's largest epidemic and everyone can help.

~ Marc. P.

 

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"Courage is being scared to death but saddling up anyway"

~John Wayne

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My Dearest Friend,

Nearly two weeks after you spoke so profoundly here at the International AIDS Candlelight Memorial in Key West, people are still talking about it. Your warmth, humor and the reality of this disease were a welcome addition to our annual service. As always you moved those who heard you to tears, to action, and to applause. Here at the “end of the world”, it is so easy to forget that there is a world out there that struggles beyond what some can imagine; that this fight is about more than just getting services and going to the doctor. You helped to remind those present that this is about all of us, One Human Family, working together to bring an end to this thing we have come to call AIDS…and that we must “Never Forget”.

 
 
 

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Learn more about Bob Bowers a.k.a. Da Pirate

 
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Time Capsules-Madison 150 Time Capsule-Overture Center on State Street in Madison, Wisconsin
Da Pirate sails into Madison History
 
   

On November 1, 2006 the winning entries for Madison's Time Capsule were announced. The time capsule will be opened in 2056. There were a total of 109 entries chosen, including some of my HIV meds and news video. On November 15th I placed my HIV medication into the time capsule...

 
 
   

Da Smooooooooooothest tat artist continues on Da Pirate's canvas-Mad thanks Smooth!

 

yin yang symbol tat pirate tattoos flaming skull logo otp one tough pirate

In our last meeting we had a guest speaker that was the most courageous person I have ever met. He came to class unashamed to discuss any questions we had for him. Likewise he said things that were raw and uncut which made a big impact on many students in the class because that is how we relate to other people sometimes. Sometimes the message doesn't go through as well if we had a more formal presentation. Bob Bowers' presentation was real and in your face.

~Curtis M.-UW-Madison

 
 
   

I had the honor to speak again to the students and staff of Marshall Middle School in Marshall, Wisconsin about HIV/AIDS. As a long-time DS. As a long-time HIV positive speaker, I am always most impressed with the knowledge that the youth possess about HIV/AIDS. Thank you for your respect and attention, Marshall! I look forward to presenting for your school again in the future!

 
Bob Bowers was a very interesting and informative speaker that I thoroughly enjoyed listening to. Bob has a very inspirational story and I thought is was particularly courageous of him to get up in front of so many people and explain that he is an AIDS survivor. Bob did a very good job of mixing facts with real-life experience, another aspect of his presentation that I thought was very well-done. He provided enough technical information, such as how HIV is transmitted, yet he also touched on the emotional side of the disease, explaining the way he felt when he found out he was HIV positive. In addition, I liked the way Bob asked for audience participation, but did not make it awkward or make us feel like we had to participate. Overall, I thought that Bob had a very inspirational life story and thoroughly enjoyed listening to his presentation

~ Elizabeth P.
 
 
 
HIV positive speaker and AIDS activist Bob Bowers, One Tough Pirate, also known simply as "Da Pirate," has been h and surviving HIV/AIDS for 27 years. Bob started as a youth HIV/AIDS educator  with peer education programs in Los Angeles shortly after his diagnosis. To broaden his personal message of prevention through education, hope and awareness of the disease, Bob founded the nonprofit HIV/AIDS educational organization, HIVictorious, Inc. in 2005. HIVictorious addresses youth HIV/AIDS education and prevention and provides AIDS awareness in Madison, Wisconsin and throughout the United States through Bob's public speaking and it's AIDS awareness poster contest, "What if it Were You?" Mr. Bowers long-term survivor of HIV/AIDS, and someone who has lost dozen of friends to AIDS, Bob is wholeheartedly committed to educating today's youth and young adults, about the realities of HIV/AIDS as well as living with AIDS long-term. Mr. Bowers is a champion for hope and survival despite some of the difficult circumstances that we ALL face in life.
One Tough Pirate-HIV positive speakers in schools, jails, colleges and universities-Bob Bowers-AIDS activist-Youth HIV/AIDS educator and long-term AIDS survivor

"Compassion is our cure." ™ ~ Bob Bowers

 
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HIV positive speakers-Youth HIV/AIDS education-Bob Bowers aka Da Pirate-Madison, Wisconsin-United States