Practicing (Self) Vampirism For Your Health?

Dr. Mosley shares a new strategy that he believes holds real promise to curing disease and restoring your health: the use of human blood.

Why is the vampire so damned prevalent (if you’ll pardon something of a pun)? And moreso today than ever before. Oh, it has evolved a bit, gone from reanimated rotting corpse to sexualized predator, but it has lost nothing in the transformation. Quite the contrary. Its sphere of influence is growing exponentially. Why? What does the vampire tell us that we need to hear? Is it the whispered hint of continuance beyond death? Does it speak of our own realization of, and horror at, our own mortality? Is there more to it than that? Does vampirism suggest some unmet physiological as well as psychological need?

If Dr. Michael Mosley and others are right, it does. I confess that I haven’t done any in-depth research into the man, but for the sake of argument we’ll take it at face value that he is a physician. We’ll also take it on faith that he has experienced the positive results he claims from having drunk his own blood. Does blood consumption really benefit a person? Like milk, does it do a body good? And if so, why should it be that this applies only when one is drinking one’s OWN blood? Scary but intriguing questions.

By TheCheezman

WAYNE MILLER is the owner and creative director of EVIL CHEEZ PRODUCTIONS, specializing in theatrical performances and haunted attractions. He has written, produced, and directed (and occasionally acted in) over two dozen plays, most of them in the Horror and True Crime genres. He obtained a doctorate in Occult Studies from Miskatonic University and is an active paranormal investigator. Is frequently told he resembles Anton Lavey. And Ming the Merciless. Denn die totden reiten schnell!

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