Twilight
and True Blood have made vampires the fictional theme du jour. But for one
suburban mother-of-two, the blood-sucking lifestyle is a stark reality. Julia
Caples, 45, from Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania has been drinking live
human blood from willing donors for the past 30 years. The care worker,
who says she is hooked on the practice, consumes around half-a-gallon of blood
per month and believes that it keeps her feeling young and vigorous. 'When I
feed off of a person and drink their blood I feel stronger and healthier,' she
says. 'I know scientifically there's not a lot nutrition in blood, but
maybe there's some value we haven't discovered yet. 'I feel more beautiful than any other
time when I'm regularly drinking. I'm also extremely healthy with no major
health problems, and I have an abundance of energy all the time.' Ms Caples says she finds her 'donors'
- fellow vampire fans willing to let her drink from them - at her local occult
and oddities store. Drinking
sessions take place at her home, where she cuts the donor with a pagan-like
sterilized knife she designed herself. Ms Caples says her fascination with blood
began as a young girl, during her first kiss as a teenager, when she got the
urge to bite her sweetheart with disastrous consequences. 'It was my natural
instinct and I liked the taste,' she said. 'I just got an urge and can't really
explain it. It's never gone away. Needless to say though, he never kissed me
again.' She says she and goth friends did it occasionally through her teens,
but it wasn't until she met ex-husband Donald Lazarowicz, 49, that she started
drinking live blood regularly.
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The
pair became part of a subculture who would hit New York nightclubs and
drink from each other, and married in a vampire-themed ceremony in 2000 and
drank from each other to celebrate. But when they had son Alexei, Mr
Lazarowicz vowed never to drink again. The counselor, who is still good
friends with Ms Caples and shares parenting duties, explained: 'I gave up, so
Julia didn't have to. We agreed that one of us would need to stop and focus on
parenting full time. 'Julia still likes to drink, but she's also an amazing
mother, and her children come first. She'd never let it stop her mothering her
kids.' Daughter Ariel, 24 and Alexei, now nine, both have reservations about
their mother's bizarre habit though. 'We have all these decorations at home
like coffins and dolls. I'm starting to think she's a vampire,' Alexei
says. Adds Ariel: 'I don't agree with it. I think she runs a lot of health
risks. I worry she might get a disease from someone through the blood.' Ms
Caples says she is aware of the health dangers, but all her donors are
tested before she'll drink from them.
'I meet
some donors online but I absolutely have to meet them in person first, she
says. 'And they have to get blood tests to make sure that they're not carrying
any blood borne diseases like AIDS or HIV.' Doctors believe that there is a
resurgence in blood-drinking thanks to the recent trend for vampire-themed TV
series and films.
Haematologist
Steven Gruenstein at the Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, says a variety of
cultures have been drinking blood for thousands of years but it could be due to
deficiencies in the He says: 'Blood does contain chemicals like salt,
iron, protein, and people might be driven to drink it because of a deficiency
of iron or some other chemical. 'I would absolutely discourage someone from
ingesting raw human blood,' he warns.
'There
are risks involved. HIV, hepatitis and other viral and bacterial illnesses can
be transmitted through blood, so though these risks are not large, they are
real and it would be an unnecessary danger.'
2 comments:
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whoever he was and what the circumstances are a wonder of the world
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