Cardi, you need to educate yourself and calm down.
About 80 percent of the population carries one form of human papillomavirus or the other. It's transmitted sexually, but by skin-to-skin contact, so condoms only reduce the risk slightly. Some of the strains cause neoplasms (which can develop into cancer), others cause genital warts.
If you have any irregular cervical cells, the first stage to a neoplasm, you'll go for a colposcopy where they take a closer look at your cervix and will probably take some biopsies. Nine times out of 10, everything will be OK, and they'll just do another colposcopy and/or get you in for smears every 6 or 12 months. It can take a few years for your body to clear the virus, and it's easy to catch it again, but it doesn't mean anything bad will happen. And if does, as said, often mild laser treatment will get rid of it.
If you're under 25, you might want to ask your GP or a GUM clinic about having the HPV vaccine if you were too old to have it at school. If you're 25-45, you might want to consider buying it privately.