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Fang-tastic

Real-life vampire gets ‘aroused’ by drinking her boyfriend’s BLOOD and has avoided the sunlight for 20 years

Georgina Condon developed a taste for blood at the tender age of 12

MEET the real-life vampire who feeds off her boyfriend’s blood, avoids the sunlight and has fangs for teeth.

Georgina Condon, 39, from Brisbane, Australia, has drunk the blood of willing “donors” for more than 20 years.

Georgina Condon developed a taste for blood when she was just 12 years old
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Georgina Condon developed a taste for blood when she was just 12 years oldCredit: Facebook

The self-employed make-up artist developed a taste for the red stuff at the tender age of 12.

“Like everyone else, I had more than my fair share of cuts and grazes while growing up,” she told .

“But unlike most kids, I developed a strong impulse to taste the blood from my wounds.

“It was only when I started to see vampires in TV and in movies that I realised what I was one too.”

Georgina drinks her boyfriend Zameals blood, pictured together, every week
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Georgina drinks her boyfriend Zameal's blood, pictured together, every weekCredit: News.co.au

To ensure she looked the part, Georgina covered herself in talcum powder and borrowed her mum’s dark eye shadow.

However, dressing up didn’t suffice. With the taste of blood heavy on her mind, a 13-year old Georgina began to cut herself as a way to get her blood fix.

“Initially it was my own blood,” she said.

“But that changed when I was 17. I took to hanging around in the local cemetery with a few other goths the same age as me. One night were having a few drinks and somehow we got onto the subject.

Before she turns 40, Georgina hopes to get some "permanent" fangs
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Before she turns 40, Georgina hopes to get some "permanent" fangsCredit: News.com.au

“There was a girl in the group and she offered for me to be able to taste her blood...I didn’t feel bad about it because she was so willing, also she was well-known for being a virgin, so I knew it was a safe option — disease wise, I mean.”

She added: “When I tasted it, I knew straight away that I liked it. My own blood just didn’t compare to the high I got. I was hooked!”

As Georgina got older she would frequent gothic underground clubs to find a willing partner to satisfy her cravings.

However, in 2013, she met her current boyfriend Zameal at the annual ‘Bloodlust Ball’ – an event she says is the “vampire version of Christmas”.

Georgina covers herself in talcum powder to look pale and wears dark eye shadow
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Georgina covers herself in talcum powder to look pale and wears dark eye shadowCredit: News.com.au

“When I told him after a few months of being together he was taken aback a bit,” she said.

“Even though I met him at a ‘vampire’ ball, hardly anyone there is actually a vampire, so it was a hard conversation to have.

“Because if he really wasn’t open to the idea of letting me drink from him, then it wouldn’t have worked. It’s just part of who I am and what I need.”

Georgina, who needs blood for her medical heredity disorder, thalassemia, sucks Zameal’s blood at least once a week – even though he “doesn’t like it really”.

Georgina met partner Zameal at the Bloodlust Ball - the vampire equivalent of Christmas
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Georgina met partner Zameal at the Bloodlust Ball - the vampire equivalent of ChristmasCredit: Facebook

She said: “He knows that I need it to stay satisfied. It’s like not getting sex — if I stopped having sex with him, he’d feel exactly the same way.

"In fact, we often use it as an introduction to sex, it’s part and parcel of lovemaking for us, kind of like foreplay.”

She told that drinking blood is as good as sex: “I would put them on a par. It’s mainly arousal and joy.”

Georgina cuts Zameal’s skin with a sterile razor blade to get the blood and drinks from it “every two weeks” – although she’d “happily have it every day”.

Georgina, pictured with her mum and sister as a youngster, says her family have supported her lifestyle
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Georgina, pictured with her mum and sister as a youngster, says her family have supported her lifestyleCredit: News.com.au

She would not feed off someone else and considers that to be “cheating”.

Just as she’s found a loving and accepting partner, Georgina’s family – even her vegetarian sister - have also embraced her alternative lifestyle.

“My family love me — they don’t think I’m mad!” she said.

“Often when you’re different and you put yourself out there, people can react negatively.

Georgina is allergic to the sun because of a condition called solar dermatitis
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Georgina is allergic to the sun because of a condition called solar dermatitisCredit: News.com.au

"My family have actually encouraged me, they’ve said: ‘good on you, good on you for speaking out about it.”

But her dress sense and enthusiasm for drinking blood that are Georgina’s only vampire traits.

“I suffer from a condition called solar dermatitis, which is an allergy to intense sunlight,” she said.

“I get a really itchy rash if I’m in strong sunlight.

Georgina only feeds off Zameals blood because drinking off anybody elses would be "cheating"
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Georgina only feeds off Zameal's blood because drinking off anybody else's would be "cheating"Credit: News.com.au

“It’s a shame as I really love to swim at the beach, I love it — even as a kid I was in the swim squad. So now I just have to do it indoors!”

Before she turns 40, Georgina plans to get some “permanent” fangs and to pen a vampire novel.

While she enjoys the popular television shows True Blood and The Vampire Diaries, she said the literature and fictional nature can mask the true essence to being a vampire.

“I want to express it well, I don't want it to end up you sounding silly as people often get strange when I talk about it,” she said.

“It's not like in a movie - I don't hide in the shadows and jump out at people.”

Georgina plans to pen a vampire novel about her lifestyle
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Georgina plans to pen a vampire novel about her lifestyleCredit: News.com.au

WHAT IS THALASSEMIA?

*Thalassaemia is the name for a group of inherited conditions that affect a substance in the blood called haemoglobin
*People with the condition produce either no or too little haemoglobin, which is used by red blood cells to carry oxygen around the body. This can make them very anaemic (tired, short of breath and pale)
*It mainly affects people of Mediterranean, South Asian, Southeast Asian and Middle Eastern origin
*There are a number of types of thalassaemia, which can be divided into alpha and beta thalassaemias. Beta thalassaemia major is the most severe type. Other types include beta thalassaemia intermedia, alpha thalassaemia major and haemoglobin H disease
*It's also possible to be a "carrier" of thalassaemia, also known as having the thalassaemia trait. Thalassaemia carriers don't have any serious health problems themselves, but are at risk of having children with the condition
Source: NHS Choices

 

 

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