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Blood Lust: People who Consume Blood & Mitigation (Protect your Blood/Life)


By April A Taylor

January 10, 2022

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Below are a few consequences for those who consume other people's blood, which is typically done unbeknownst to them. Despite the several desperate and deceitful manners in which people try to obtain blood for consumption including going into the medical field, there are some measures one can take to prevent their blood from being consumed:

  • Insist on knowing what medical professionals are putting in your body and have this well documented.

  • Insist on knowing how flesh and parts of your body that are removed are being disposed. Put in writing that it can not be used in any manner, such as experimentation or medical development. Consult an attorney if needed. Dispose of your own flesh and fluids properly, so it can not be used or consumed.

  • For blood and fluids that leave your body as a result of a wound or menstrual cycle, spoil the blood by treating it with materials that can not be consumed such as poisons. Completely and properly dispose of blood that leaves your body. While it may not be your belief, others may believe in blood consumption and other manners of flesh consumption.

  • Understand and know that the science and medical industries are rooted and established in non-traditional pagan religious beliefs. Manger your health care accordingly.


In Leviticus 17:13-14

For the life of all flesh – its blood is its life. Therefore I say to the Israelite people: You shall not partake of the blood of any flesh, for the life of all flesh is its blood. Anyone who partakes of it shall be cut off”


 

  • It Could Give You A Blood-Borne Pathogen

Everyone has accidentally ingested some blood in their life (who hasn't had a busted lip?). This is almost always your own blood, though, and minimal quantities are unlikely to hurt you. In fact, it's believed that drinking a couple of teaspoons of uncontaminated blood is usually safe for most people. The key word here is uncontaminated, and that's where a potentially serious side effect of drinking blood can develop. Unless a vampire knows beyond a shadow of a doubt that their blood donor has no harmful illnesses, they are taking the risk of contracting hepatitis B, hepatitis C, or HIV.

Although all three of these medical conditions can usually be managed with proper treatment, it's never wise to expose yourself to a blood-borne pathogen. Hepatitis B and hepatitis C target the liver, and, in some cases, this can become life-threatening. HIV led to 1.1 million AIDS-related global deaths in 2015 alone. Ultimately, the risk of getting a blood-borne pathogen makes using an unscreened blood donor a potentially devastating side effect of drinking blood.

  • It Might Brand You As A Psychopath

Drinking human blood is not an automatic indicator that someone is a psychopath. In fact, most people who are part of the vampire lifestyle are never convicted of an aggravated offense, nor do they have issues with addiction or abuse. However, this doesn't stop the social stigma associated with drinking blood from influencing the viewpoint of people and even some medical professionals.

In the 1880s, German neurologist Richard von Krafft-Ebing published a book entitled Psychopathia Sexulais. The neurologist's work included taking a look at the brutish sexual nature that he attributed to what we now call clinical vampires. As a result, the viewpoint that real-life vampires are psychopathic is still adhered to in some circles.

  • It Could Mean You're Breaking The Law

Drinking someone's blood, even if you have a willing donor, is prohibited in some places. For example, Louisiana takes a strict stance against all forms of human hematophagy. The law against consuming human blood is most likely linked to the state's history of voodoo, but this doesn't mean that a vampire would be given a legal exception.

Instead, if a person is found guilty of drinking another person's blood, they could be sentenced to time in prison or face a fine.


  • It Could Mean Spending The Rest Of Your Life In Jail

If you happen to be unlucky enough to get caught drinking human blood in Louisiana, you're probably not going to end up with a long prison sentence. However, there are numerous possibilities related to vampirism that could easily lead to a life in prison. A prime example is a case of the unstable behavior that is sometimes associated with clinical vampirism. In 1978, France was terrorized by a man's two-day spree, which involved deeply biting a preadolescent victim, terminating three people, drinking blood from the deceased, and eating part of a corpse's leg.

The culprit may or may not have been a clinical vampire, but his actions fall under the psychiatric definition of this condition. Someone who commits egregious offenses of this nature is almost certainly going to be locked up for life.


How can such practices impact your health? Why? What are your religious beliefs?




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