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Are Vampires Real? Like Vampires finding their true love and loving them endlessly?

29 January 2011 200 views 5 Comments

I’m just wondering if it is true that once a Vampire finds his/her “true love”, will they love them endlessly? That is if Vampire’s are real..and they are right?

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5 Comments »

  • Masaj Mahrod said:

    Step away form “Twilight”.

  • Lalalalalalalalala said:

    i wsih that was true!
    iv read everybook of twilight its so sweet!

    But sadly i dont think it could be true in most history vampires are seen as horrible, its nice to belive it though..i like to think so
    but factually i highly doubt it and no matter what you type in google it wont help (tryed it!)

    hope this helps!

  • jadorecati said:

    First off like the person said above back away from the Twilight they call it FICTION for a reason. The myth of vampires….

    New research suggests that the vampire floklore originated from human beings that suffered a gentic disease, late in the Middle Ages. A certain scientist, Dr David H. Dolphin, had been researching the myth of vampires for a long while, when he stumbled upon this interesting fact.
    In his paper, Dr Dolphin had advanced the theory that vampires are actually normal people who suffered from one class of incurable hereditary diseases, known commonally as porphyrias–of which there are at least 8. Porphyrias is a slight malfunction in the bodies chemicals and sufferers become afflicted with the same symptoms as the fabled “vampires”. Their bodies usually became grotesquely disfigered, and they had extreme sensitivity to an forms of natural/unnatural light (even the exposure to sunlight had patients’ bodies left with sores and scars).
    Sometimes, the patient’s fingers would fall off, and resemble that of animal claws. Lips and gums would stretch so that the teeth would become more pronouced, of course giving a resemblance to the vampire bat.
    Dr Dolphin concluded, that because of this, victims would only venture out at night, and also may grow their hair long as it was protect against the deadly night. And–most controversially of all–he argued that porphyria victims in the past instictively sought the haeme their bodies lacked, by biting and sucking the blood of others.
    Today, people suffering from this disease can just take a simple needle daily, weekly, or whenever it is needed, and they are set, but when looking at all of this back in the Dark Ages, one only has to see the uproar it would bring amoungest the supersitious socities of our past. Victims suffering the disease were usually located in concerntrated parts of Europe and the world–thus, bringing the fabled myths and ledgends from Translyvainia.

    Also I’d like to point out Twilight is a completely different way of showing vampires than the “norm” look at Dracula, The Vampire Chronicles, history itself like Elizabeth Bathory. You cannot believe everything you read, but if you do want to believe that in Meyer’s world yes that is how it happens.

  • Kahla Cullen said:

    according to stephenie meyer- yes

  • Artemis said:

    Well, let me put it this way.
    Some humans with genetic diseases often have a craving for blood, in which they are sometimes called vampires, but I think people with that kind of mental disability would rather drink blood than look for true love. Plus, they couldn’t love endlessly because they wouldn’t be immortal.
    Real vampires that are immortal would basically be walking corpses that don’t usually live with another vampire because of their tendency to fight, so (1) if they fell in love with a human, the human would be too freaked out to stay around them, and (2) they wouldn’t fall in love with another vampire
    Real vampires which are not immortal could not love endlessly either because of course, they’d eventually die.

    As for if vampires are real, that depends on what your definition of vampire is. For example, vampires you see in movies are generally extremely off what the original legend is.

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