On Vampires
Once, a decade or two ago, I was a hypochondriac. I still am, and all of the diagnoses I've accrued in the past few years have not once actually been what I thought they would be (major depression, not manic; egg and wheat allergies, not lactose intolerance; and where the heck did Asperger's come from and why hadn't I heard of it before now?), but I digress. At any rate, I had the kind of doctor who was quite happy to listen to my self-diagnosis, run tests, confirm it, and then prescribe meds (always DAW; or dispense as written; no generics for his patients). All of those tests involved drawing blood, which is no doubt why I never developed needle phobia -- how could they confirm I was <disease of the week here> if they couldn't draw that blood?
Anyway, at some point my overactive imagination and I wondered if vampires got the leftovers from all of these blood tests, and it entertained me for quite a while afterward. Then after unwisely avoiding doctors like the plague until about when I married
To quote (or at least paraphrase) Arther C. Clarke, "Any technology, sufficiently advanced, is indistinguishable from magic." I think I'll just go on believing that the blood drawn today is sitting on a table somewhere. Vampires are gathered around, swishing and sniffing and sipping and frowning and comparing, much like wine tasters; maybe reminiscing how 1971 was a good or bad year for the A+ type, and noticing any irregularities which they can then report to the lab techs.
Then again, maybe it's just the blood loss talking.
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I like that theory myself.
Though, the entry brings up exactly why I hate doctors and generally don't go unless I'm practically dying myself- The "oh boy, your self diagnosis must be right! Here's some drugs" thing... I've already jumped through that hoop too many times.
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Were vampires responsible for the death of George Washington?