DavidFarrant
Paranormal Novice
For Mike
What you say about astral projection (and its possible effects of potentially being used to weaken people or ‘drain them of energy) being the cause of cases (or stories) of vampirism, is interesting Mike.
In one of my books (in a chapter headed “They Come by Night) I put forward a very similar possibility about the visitations of the Incubus and Succubus; male and female ‘demons’ respectively that are said to visit sleeping humans by night.
Victims are suddenly awakened in a completely paralyzed state, unable to scream or even move. There appears to be a strong sexual implication accompanying such visitations, although many of the people I have interviewed about these experiences are slightly reluctant to go into this, probably due to natural embarrassment.
But the point is, that after and between these visitations (when they occur), ‘victims’ begin to have nightmares and become prone to bouts of sleep-walking. People also become anaemic and lose their appetites and develop an aversion to bright light.
All these, of course, are common symptoms of alleged cases of vampirism, and I put forward the strong possibility that cases of ‘vampirism’ infact derive from such visitations which can be traced back for centuries.
I say that Bram Stoker himself was most likely aware of such cases when he came to write his fictional novel “Dracula”; indeed, that this is where he got the whole idea from.
Vampires, I’m afraid, are entirely fictional; notwithstanding how ‘hyped up’ (with the sexual element invariably thrown in) these stories become for the sake of horror movies or even to attract personal publicity.
So yes, I have to agree with you – albeit in a slightly different sort of way.
David Farrant
What you say about astral projection (and its possible effects of potentially being used to weaken people or ‘drain them of energy) being the cause of cases (or stories) of vampirism, is interesting Mike.
In one of my books (in a chapter headed “They Come by Night) I put forward a very similar possibility about the visitations of the Incubus and Succubus; male and female ‘demons’ respectively that are said to visit sleeping humans by night.
Victims are suddenly awakened in a completely paralyzed state, unable to scream or even move. There appears to be a strong sexual implication accompanying such visitations, although many of the people I have interviewed about these experiences are slightly reluctant to go into this, probably due to natural embarrassment.
But the point is, that after and between these visitations (when they occur), ‘victims’ begin to have nightmares and become prone to bouts of sleep-walking. People also become anaemic and lose their appetites and develop an aversion to bright light.
All these, of course, are common symptoms of alleged cases of vampirism, and I put forward the strong possibility that cases of ‘vampirism’ infact derive from such visitations which can be traced back for centuries.
I say that Bram Stoker himself was most likely aware of such cases when he came to write his fictional novel “Dracula”; indeed, that this is where he got the whole idea from.
Vampires, I’m afraid, are entirely fictional; notwithstanding how ‘hyped up’ (with the sexual element invariably thrown in) these stories become for the sake of horror movies or even to attract personal publicity.
So yes, I have to agree with you – albeit in a slightly different sort of way.
David Farrant