In fictional world of speculative fiction, few supernatural creatures can beat a vampire for a good story. But what about real life vampires? Hydra author, Lyndi Alexander, says they exist.
Is there a Psychic Vampire in Your Life?
Vampires have come a long way from the old black and white stills of Count Dracula in movies of the 1930s and 1940s. If someone came to your door looking like that cartoonish stereotypeâunless it was a Halloween costume partyâI expect you wouldnât invite them across your threshold. Â
In modern-day media, vampires are somewhat prettier and more alluring—a la True Blood, The Originals or even Buffy and its progeny. (Should vampires really sparkle in the sunlight? Donât even get me started⌠Another time.) But thereâs no question that the appeal of the dark, mystical vampire sits well across the generations.
Whatever they look like, though, one of the traits they tend to share in common is that they drink the blood of others to replenish their own vitality. As Louis says in Interview with the Vampire: âBlood, I was to find, was a necessity as well. I woke the next evening with a hunger I had never felt.â
But the literature also tells of a kind of vampire that never has to take a drop of blood from its victim: the psychic vampire. What this sort of vampire seeks out is the xi, or the life force energy inside a person. In the same way that a âtraditionalâ vampire sucks blood to strengthen himself, a psychic vampire will drain her victim of energy, leaving them with âgeneral debility, lack of motivation and energy, an emaciated physique, a pallid complexion, and an overall sense of weakness,â according to Dr. Bruce Goldberg.
Dr. Goldberg finds five types of intentional psychic vampires, as well as those who donât intend harm, but inadvertently suck up their friendsâ positive energy, a state he calls âpsychic parasitism.â
Have you ever felt like the person youâre talking to is absorbing your energy, your very breath? Weâve all met someone who just leaves us feeling exhausted and without resources after a meeting or conversation. Perhaps itâs that woman in your office who always has major drama going on and she canât wait until you step into work to tell you her latest tale of woe. Five minutes into your day, and youâre already wiped out. Or if weâre service providers, clients can also leave us feeling the same way. People who thrive on drama every moment can debilitate those of us who have achieved calm in our own lives.
For those who are intuitive or empaths, this may set you up as a victim, especially in places full of people, like sporting events, shopping malls or other crowded venues.
Dr. Judith Orloff has written often on this issue and how people might protect themselves from psychic vampires:Â the easiest one is just walk away. She also suggests that you visualize an energy shield of bright white light around you that you can use at âfamily dinners or social events where you’re trapped.â
Georgia MacLeod goes so far as to suggest that carrying an amulet might be appropriate as a defense.
Does this feeling sound familiar? Take notice of how people around you make you feel, and then take steps to strengthen yourself, set proper boundaries and feel better.
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Lyndi Alexander dreamed for many years of being a spaceship captain but settled instead for inspired excursions into fictional places with fascinating companions from her imagination that she likes to share with others. She has been a published writer for over thirty years, including seven years as a reporter and editor at a newspaper in Homestead, Florida.
She writes urban fantasy and paranormal/science fiction/science fiction romance and is a single mother of a special needs daughter, recently transplanted to beautiful Asheville, North Carolina.Â
LOVE ME, KISS ME, KILL ME blurb
Running away isnât necessarily the answer.
In her mad rush to escape a failed marriage, Sara Woods takes the first job available and lands in the middle of a mystery. Her first assignment as a news reporter for the Ralston Courier is the investigation of a string of deaths, all young women, all her age.
She becomes a patient at the Goldstone Clinic, a local mecca of healing, to deal with chronic pain from her past. But all is not as it seems at the Goldstone, its doctors and nurses are all the picture of perfect beauty and health. Patients at the clinic first seem to get better, then they deteriorate. Sara enlists the help of Dr. Rick Paulsen, who teaches her how to access her internal power, skills she never knew she had, revealing secrets from her past. Police officer Brendon Zale also takes an interest in Sara, but he acts like a stalker, watching her every move, and he won’t leave her alone.
As she digs deeper into the story, and more young women die without explanation, she tries to choose allies wisely, but not till the last confrontation does she discover the identity of her true enemy.
By then, itâs too late.