1.
Rumors of sneezing, kissing, tears, sweat, and saliva spreading AIDS caused people to panic.
Ryan White
2.
My name is Ryan White. I am sixteen years old. I have hemophilia, and I have AIDS.
Ryan White
3.
Because of the lack of education on AIDS, discrimination, fear, panic, and lies surrounded me.
Ryan White
4.
I believe in myself as I look forward to graduating from Hamilton Heights High School in 1991.
Ryan White
5.
The desire to move into a bigger house, to avoid living AIDS daily, and a dream to be accepted by a community and school, became possible and a reality with a movie about my life, The Ryan White Story.
Ryan White
6.
Most recently my battle has been against AIDS and the discrimination surrounding it.
Ryan White
7.
I was labeled a troublemaker, my mom an unfit mother, and I was not welcome anywhere.
Ryan White
8.
On December 17, 1984, I had surgery to remove two inches of my left lung due to pneumonia. After two hours of surgery the doctors told my mother I had AIDS.
Ryan White
9.
Listening to medical facts was not enough. People wanted one hundred percent guarantees.
Ryan White
10.
Financial hardships were rough on us, even though Mom had a good job at G.M.
Ryan White
11.
I came face to face with death at thirteen years old.
Ryan White
12.
AIDS can destroy a family if you let it, but luckily for my sister and me, Mom taught us to keep going. Don't give up, be proud of who you are, and never feel sorry for yourself.
Ryan White
13.
The school I was going to said they had no guidelines for a person with AIDS.
Ryan White
14.
My studies are important to me. I made the honor role just recently, with 2 A's and 2 B's.
Ryan White
15.
I'm just one of the kids, and all because the students at Hamilton Heights High School listened to the facts, educated their parents and themselves, and believed in me.
Ryan White
16.
Entertainers, athletes, and stars started giving me support.
Ryan White
17.
How could these people in the public eye not be afraid of me, but my whole town was?
Ryan White
18.
I spent Christmas and the next thirty days in the hospital.
Ryan White
19.
I received thousands of letters of support from all around the world, all because I wanted to go to school.
Ryan White
20.
Eventually, I won the right to attend school, but the prejudice was still there.
Ryan White
21.
The first five to six years of my life were spent in and out of the hospital.
Ryan White
22.
Twice a week I would receive injections or IV's of Factor VIII which clotted the blood and then broke it down.
Ryan White
23.
Given six months to live and being the fighter that I am, I set high goals for myself.
Ryan White
24.
Mayor Koch, of New York, was the first public figure to give me support.
Ryan White
25.
This brought on the news media, TV crews, interviews, and numerous public appearances.
Ryan White
26.
People would get up and leave so they would not have to sit anywhere near me.
Ryan White
27.
A lot of my time was spent searching, thinking and planning my life.
Ryan White