In the mid-1980s, San Francisco was the epicenter of a quiet, devastating storm. While the world watched from a distance, paralyzed by fear and the stigma surrounding the emerging HIV/AIDS epidemic, a quiet movement of radical compassion was taking root. At the heart of this movement was the Shanti Project, an organization that dared to offer something many thought impossible: a hand to hold when the world looked away.
For John Emmons, a young man then living in Denver, the distance between the comfortable life he knew and the reality of the crisis felt like an unbridgeable chasm. Yet, an internal call to service drew him to the Bay Area in 1985. What he found there was not merely a city in mourning, but a city in the crucible of transformation, where volunteers like him were learning that the most profound medical intervention was often the simple, steady act of presence.
The Call to Service: From Denver to the Frontlines
When John Emmons arrived in San Francisco, the AIDS crisis was rapidly evolving from a medical mystery into a humanitarian catastrophe. In Denver, the epidemic remained largely abstract—a headline on the evening news. However, Emmons felt a visceral pull toward a specific, albeit undefined, purpose.
"I wasn’t running toward a city," Emmons recalls. "I was answering a calling."
This calling brought him to the doors of the Shanti Project. Founded in 1974 by Dr. Charles Garfield, Shanti—a Sanskrit word meaning "inner peace"—had pivoted from its original mission of supporting those with terminal cancer to becoming a lifeline for the city’s burgeoning HIV/AIDS community. Through the organization’s rigorous Peer Support Volunteer Training, Emmons underwent a metamorphosis. He moved away from the desire to "fix" the unfixable, learning instead the art of holding space. He learned to navigate the uncertainty of a terminal diagnosis and discovered that caregiving was not about providing solutions, but about providing companionship in the face of the unknown.
Chronology of a Crisis: Building Bonds in the Shadow of Loss
By 1986, Emmons was fully integrated into the Shanti volunteer network. He was paired with two men, Joe and Charles, both of whom were navigating the early, terrifying stages of an HIV diagnosis.
The relationship between a volunteer and a client at Shanti was never strictly clinical. It was, by design, an exercise in human connection. As the months passed, the boundaries between volunteer and friend blurred. Emmons was welcomed into the intimate circles of Joe and Charles, witnessing their lives beyond the sterile environments of clinics and hospital wards.
- 1985: John Emmons arrives in San Francisco, enrolling in Shanti Project training.
- 1986: Emmons begins providing direct peer support to Joe and Charles.
- 1987-1989: The peak of the epidemic sees Emmons deeply embedded in the social fabric of his clients’ lives, navigating the intersection of Pride celebrations and the encroaching reality of loss.
- March 1990: Joe passes away, marking the first of the profound losses in Emmons’s volunteer career.
- 1991: Charles passes away, one year after Joe, closing a chapter that would redefine Emmons’s understanding of human connection.
Supporting Data: The Impact of Peer Support
The impact of the work performed by volunteers like Emmons is difficult to quantify, yet the data surrounding Shanti’s model remains a gold standard in public health. During the 1980s, when medical treatments were ineffective or nonexistent, the "Shanti model" focused on psychological and emotional stability.
Research conducted during the era demonstrated that social isolation was a primary driver of morbidity among AIDS patients. By providing consistent, non-judgmental support, volunteers like Emmons effectively lowered the cortisol levels and depression rates of their clients. This "social armor" allowed individuals to remain in their homes longer, reduced the frequency of emergency hospital visits, and, perhaps most importantly, ensured that no one died in total isolation.
The collective efforts of the Shanti Project during this period served as a buffer for the San Francisco healthcare system, which was overwhelmed by the sheer volume of patients. By mobilizing thousands of hours of volunteer labor, the organization provided a form of palliative care that bridged the gap between institutional medicine and the dying person’s need for community.
The Pride Paradox: Joy and Sorrow in Tandem
Perhaps the most poignant moment in Emmons’s tenure occurred during a San Francisco Pride celebration in the late 1980s. The city was a kaleidoscope of color, music, and defiant joy. For many, the parade represented a victory of spirit over societal rejection.

Emmons and Joe stood in the middle of the crowd, surrounded by the infectious energy of the day. Yet, while the world cheered, Joe was in a state of quiet, profound reflection. He was acutely aware that for him, the celebration was not just a reclamation of identity, but a countdown.
"That moment stayed with me," Emmons notes. "It captured the contrast we were all living. We were celebrating life while standing on the precipice of death."
This duality—the ability to hold space for both intense joy and agonizing grief—became the hallmark of the volunteer experience. It was a lesson in emotional resilience that transcended the political and social activism of the time, touching on the fundamental human experience of mortality.
Collective Compassion: The Role of the Lesbian Community
One of the most critical aspects of the early AIDS response, according to Emmons, was the unsung labor of the lesbian community. When families disowned their sons and the federal government remained largely silent, lesbian women stepped into the void.
They became the primary caregivers, the errand runners, and the advocates. They organized meal trains, cleaned homes, and stood in hospital rooms where doctors were often afraid to enter. Their contribution was not merely a service; it was a fundamental shift in the social contract of the city. Emmons credits this collective compassion as the lens through which he redefined the meaning of "community." It was a lesson in radical empathy: showing up for others simply because they were human.
Implications: The Legacy of Presence
The deaths of Joe in 1990 and Charles in 1991 were not endings for Emmons; they were the beginning of a life-long commitment to the principles of the Shanti Project. Through his loss, he realized that he had been shielded from death for most of his early life. By walking the final miles with his friends, he gained a perspective on mortality that shifted his priorities.
"I learned that death is not something to avoid," Emmons says. "It is part of what makes human connection matter."
Official Reflections on the Shanti Legacy
Today, the Shanti Project continues to evolve, serving those with chronic illness and social isolation, but the shadow of the 1980s remains a guiding light. Official statements from the organization emphasize that the "peer-to-peer" model, which was forged in the fires of the AIDS crisis, is now a proven intervention for any community facing systemic neglect.
The implication of Emmons’s story is clear: in an era of digital isolation and increasing societal fragmentation, the need for intentional, physical, and emotional presence is greater than ever. The resilience of the AIDS generation remains a blueprint for how society can respond to crises—not with panic, but with the quiet, persistent, and often heroic act of showing up.
Conclusion: Pride as a Vessel of Memory
As we reflect on the history of the LGBTQ+ movement, we often focus on the legislative victories and the public spectacles. But as John Emmons’s journey reminds us, the true soul of Pride lies in the private, quiet moments of care. It is a mosaic of memory and loss, woven together by individuals who chose to stay present when others turned away.
Nearly forty years later, the lessons of Joe and Charles live on. They teach us that while the crisis may change, the fundamental human need for connection does not. We are, at our best, a community that carries the weight of the past to illuminate the path forward, ensuring that those we have lost are remembered not just for how they died, but for the profound love and companionship that defined their final days.
