Posted on 07/16/2015 4:44:30 PM PDT by markomalley
A small study of people who self-identify as vampires were, understandably, reluctant to reveal their blood- and energy-draining proclivities to doctors and psychologists for fear of rejection and being labeled mentally ill.
According to a Reuters story, Research led by D.J. Williams, director of social work at Idaho State University, indicated that people who identify themselves as real vampires that is, needing others blood to gain energy would not disclose their practices to those in the helping professions and risk reactions like ridicule, disgust and possible diagnosis of a mental illness.
Newsweek, in a short piece headlined Real Vampires Exist and They Need Counseling Too, framed the topic as about how one self-identifies, comparing the social stigma of coming out as a vampire with coming out as transgendered.
So do real vampires exist? Sure they do: many animals suck blood, including leeches, vampire bats and female mosquitoes. Humans, however, cannot drink blood safely for several reasons including the risk of blood-borne pathogens and iron toxicity: humans, unlike true vampires, have no way of preventing the iron-rich blood from causing a life-threatening condition called hemochromatosis.
Other self-identified vampires claim to drain not blood, but some sort of psychic energy or life-force from others; since these energies have not been proven to exist and are unknown to science, doctors dont worry about that kind of vampirism.
The study, published in the latest issue of the Canadian journal Critical Social Work, had a very small sample 11 people and there was no attempt to determine whether or not the vampires self-reports were accurate. Just because a person claims to be a vampire doesnt mean he or she is one, of course.
Clinical Vampirism
There are many people who genuinely believe themselves to be werewolves and vampires. Clinical lycanthropy is a recognized medical condition in which a person believes himself or herself to be another animal, typically a wolf or canine.
A German man named Peter Stump (or Stubbe; spellings vary) claimed in 1589 that a belt of wolfskin he owned allowed him to change into a wolf. He said that when he changed form, his teeth and hair would grow and he had a desire for human blood. Stump confessed to killing at least a dozen people while in the form of a wolf; there was no real evidence that he could actually turn into a wolf, of course, and its clear he was mentally ill. He was found guilty of murder and decapitated on Halloween of that year.
Though Stumps case is an extreme example, hes not alone. In 2011, for example, a 19-year-old Texas man named Lyle Monroe Bensley broke into a womans apartment and bit her neck.
According to an ABC News story, The woman, whose name has not been released, broke free and fled the apartment, speeding to safety in a neighbors car early Saturday. When police arrived on the scene, they found Bensley, wearing only boxer shorts, hissing and growling in the parking lot. He quickly scaled two fences before he was captured, yelling all the while that he didnt want to have to feed on humans.
Though the victim of that self-proclaimed vampire escaped with only a scare, another later that year wasnt as lucky. This time it was a young Florida woman who killed a 16-year-old shed dated named Jacob Hendershot.
According to a CBS News story, Stephanie Pistey says she believes shes part vampire and part werewolf. Florida police say that, in July, Pisteys friends lured Hendershot to a house, killed him, and then left his body in a storm drain.
Pistey told a local TV station I know this is going to be crazy, but I believe that Im a vampire and part werewolf.
Pistey, who claimed to drink blood, and whose MySpace handle was VampireBlood1616, said in interviews that Some people have called me a bavie before a bio-experiment vampire. Pistey was found mentally incompetent to stand trial.
There are others as well, including Joshua Rudiger, a San Francisco man who claimed to be a 2,000-year-old vampire and who in 1998 slashed the throats of three victims killing one of them in an attempt to get their blood.
Researchers Philip Jaffe and Frank DiCataldo, writing about clinical vampirism in the Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, note that Both clinical and forensic psychologists and psychiatrists have described cases that involve acts that are strongly reminiscent of some aspect of the mythical vampires behavior Clinical vampirism is one of the few pathological manifestations that blends myth and reality in dramatic fashion and contains a hodgepodge of nosological [disease classification-related] elements, including schizophrenic, psychopathic and perverse features.
Self-Identifying as Vampires
People like Stump, Bensley, Pistey and Rudiger are rare, of course, of course. Most self-described vampires are harmless, and psychopaths exist in every community. Vampires are everywhere in fiction and pop culture, and convey elements of power, romance, eroticism and immortality. Its not surprising that many people identify with vampires and some even claim to be them.
People are drawn to the vampire subculture for the same reasons they are drawn to any subculture: for a sense of community and shared interest. For her book Piercing the Darkness: Undercover with Vampires Today, Katherine Ramsland researched vampire subcultures and interviewed many self-professed vampires.
She noted that A huge part of vampire culture involves role-playing, both official and unofficial. Its a way to escape, and to have fun. Some people wear capes or perform arcane rituals; others have vampire fang dental implants. For the vast majority of vampires its harmless role-playing with a Gothic twist, not fundamentally different than Civil War re-enactors or Star Wars cosplayers one might see at Comic-Con.
The new studys authors, Williams and Prior, note that People with real vampire identities, at least those within this sample, are fearful that clinicians will label them as being psychopathological in some way (i.e., delusional, immature, unstable), perhaps wicked, and not competent to perform in typical social roles, such as parenting.
However, mental health professionals routinely treat patients with a wide variety of illnesses and belief systems. Unless a persons belief that he or she is a real vampire is causing significant disruption in a persons life and Williams suggests otherwise, noting that vampires are successful, ordinary people then most psychologists likely wouldnt be concerned at the belief.
But because some vampiric practices notably the attempted drinking of human blood be dangerous, this places a counselor in a difficult position if a patient says he or she does this. Mental health professionals are obligated to report people who may be a danger to themselves or others.
A vampire patient who voluntarily engages in that behavior (and not, for example, out of an addiction or diagnosed compulsion) could be considered a threat and involuntarily committed. Though unlikely, its certainly possible, and thus people who claim to engage in vampirism have some basis for concern.
Its not a matter of the social acceptance of leading a vampire-inspired lifestyle, its a question of whether any harm is being done; given the rare-but-real history of violent acts committed by self-identified vampires, its a legitimate concern.
Where is this country when we're even having this discussion?
It’s a sad situation, all those poor vampires constantly getting dragged out into the noonday sun to see if they sparkle, smoke, or do anything else interesting!
Is Vampire Discrimination a Thing?
UHH, No, dumba$$ (author), Vampirism isn’t a thing, unless you’re a small South American Bat.
Are there people involved in bat discrimination? Same on them.
Idiots.
Who am I to argue over how one self identified.
No. We (America) are being punked here.
If people think Bruce Jenner is now a woman, they’ll believe anything.
How bout we just make it legal to kill vampires at will and watch how fast these idiots decide to quit playing make believe.
There is a group over in Philly that has a huge party every year. The main guy is a Libertarian who Ron Paul tried to talk into running for office. In Philly it would be an improvement, and the guy doesn’t hurt anyone. They were profiled in a book called “Not in Kansas Anymore”.
Ever see how the godless left reacts when they see a cross?
If I can’t see them in a mirror then why should I care? ;’)
If we are supposed to accept something as ridiculous as vampires— then absolutely pedophilia is soon to be a condition needful of acceptance.
At some point people must demand this foolishness stop.
Truly, the world has gone mad.
If everything is to be accepted...
Then I say Furies are driving everyone mad because there are too many wrong-doers amongst us.
So everybody must play make-believe with me and be good and make all the Furies go away.
My make-believe is just as theirs, isn’t it?
If not...I need to start an all-butt-hurt group to be equal.
I was a vampire, back in the 70s. But I got better when this witch turned me into a newt.
Nah, pedophilia is a condition which requires that we rethink our lack of eunuchs.
There are needy people who suck your energy. I have felt absolutely drained when with one of them.
If they sparkle take off and nuke the nest from orbit. It is the only way to be sure.
I would pay to see Blade kill the cast of Twilight.
;)
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