By Ox Drover
As an advanced practice nurse, one of the things I did here in the rural area where parasites are common was warn people about the many diseases, several of them potentially fatal, caused by a common parasite, the tick.
Here on LoveFraud we often refer to psychopaths as “parasites” because, like a common blood-sucking tick, they feed off of a host, without giving any benefit to the host, or giving any more thought to the damage they do to the host than a common tick does as he burrows into your flesh.
In the warmer months of the year, the tick searches for anything that is warm and moves and can actually leap small distances to latch on to the host. They like to burrow into the skin in a “tight spot,” like under your waistband or some other hidden area. Frequently, too, they will actually group up in one spot on the host, and when you detach the biggest tick on top, you will find several other smaller ones hidden beneath who are also sucking blood from the same spot.
Parasites, just like the psychopath, take without giving. Sometimes the parasites actually do give you something, but it is usually in the form of some noxious, toxic and potentially fatal or debilitating disease. In the case of ticks, one of the more common diseases they pass on is Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, which is a disease caused not by their bite, but by an infectious agent in their feces which can actually pass through intact skin. A few days after the tick has either dropped off voluntarily, sated with the host’s blood, or been pulled off, frequently leaving behind both feces and mouth parts imbedded in the skin, the host will start to feel ill and run a fever. People with RMSF usually break out in a rash that resembles measles. Frequently the host doesn’t even realize what has happened, and may not actually remember being bitten by a tick. With prompt treatment, 93 percent of the victims will live, but without treatment, as many as 20 percent of the victims will die of either the disease itself or complications induced by the illness.
My bout with Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
A couple of summers ago, I noticed that I wasn’t feeling well. It was during the worst of the fear and chaos of my experience with a multitude of psychopaths all at once, so I wasn’t thinking really clearly in any case. I attributed my “feeling bad” to the stress I was under for a couple of months until I became so weak I could not even climb a flight of stairs or stand up long enough to wash a small sink full of dishes by hand. I had noticed a tick bite, one that had been on me for at least 24, and probably 36 hours, before I noticed it and removed it.
When I became so ill that I literally was as “weak as a kitten” I finally decided to put a thermometer in my mouth and found I had a fever of 101 degrees, so I called my physician. He drew blood after I had reported to him the tick bite a couple of months before, and sure enough, I had Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, though I had not broken out in the usual rash. I was so ill however, that my physician scheduled a battery of other tests and an appointment is a blood specialist and an infectious disease specialist. It took me almost a year to regain my strength and to start to feel better, but fortunately I ended up not having any lasting effects from the disease.
Remove the parasite promptly
Like ticks, psychopaths usually take a little time to not only suck your blood, but to transmit disease. If ticks are removed promptly, even if they have bitten you, there is little likelihood that they will infect you with something fatal. If they have time to deeply burrow into your skin, the longer they are there, the greater the likelihood that they will leave something behind that will cause problems for you. It may only be a painful, red, itching lesion that seems to drive you crazy with wanting to scratch to the bone, or it may be a disease that will land you in the ICU or the morgue, or cripple you with arthritis later on, like Lymes.
Not all diseases passed on to humans or other mammals by ticks and other parasites are as easily identifiable as RMSF. Some diseases that are potentially fatal have no reliable blood test to indicate that they are present. The person feels bad, but there is no objective symptom that can be identified either by the victim or the medical practitioner until great damage has occurred. These occult (unidentified) diseases may go undetected for months or years, doing their damage to the victim that is irreversible.
The psychopath and the tick
There is so much similarity between the psychopath and the tick, as well as other parasites. They burrow into our flesh and almost, in some cases, become part of us, while they suck our blood, and infect us with their toxic waste. They may not even appear to be so evil. “It’s just a bug bite, get over it,” our friends and family may say. Though we may become very ill from our even short association with these creatures, the illness may not be apparent to the naked eye like, say, a broken leg would be. We may struggle with the itch, the fever, the weakness, and the general debility left behind and not even realize that we have been infected with pathogens that can ruin or end our lives.
In addition to ticks attaching to us as we walk through grass or brush, ticks may also latch on to our pets or other family members, and thus gain entrance into our homes and lives by hitching a ride on our friends and pets. The tick may not even attack the pet or family member, but instead jump off on to our skin for his blood meal, using the intermediary only for transportation to get to us.
Look out for parasites
As I told the patients in my clinic, you need to be on the look out for ticks. If you or any member of your family, or pets, go anywhere in the summer time where there is grass, you should do a complete daily check for ticks, and carefully remove any that you find. Immediately wash the area and mark the date on the calendar, so that you can be on the look out for any sign of disease from even a short association with these creatures. If the symptoms of any kind of disease show up, seek medical attention immediately.
I think that same advice is useful for people who don’t live on a desert island alone, but live in the real world in which they may encounter psychopaths. I suggest that we all do a daily check of our lives to see if anyone we are dealing with even looks or acts at all like a parasite. If we see a parasite, quickly remove that parasite from our life. Wash all traces of them off of us. Then keep our eyes open for any covert damage that they have done to our life so that we can seek proper treatment as soon as possible.
Read two articles of LoveFraud, and call me in the morning!
Flatbrokenow:
CLASSIC POST!!!!
Welcome to LF!
Dear Flatbrokenow,
I liked your mental list of what you miss about him!!!! I think your sense of humor will make you very much a part of LF, sometimes all we have left is our gallows humor! But that’s enough to start with as we recover the rest.
Glad you are here and welcome!!!! As far as a similar story, they are ALL similar because when you’ve seen one s-pathole you’ve seen them all, just different faces! They all act like parasites and predators! Again, welcome! Glad you’re here!
Ahemmm…. it’s not a him, and it’s really not even a she either, it’s an IT. Nothing but a damn tick. Predators in the animal kingdom are masters of blending to their environment.
Maybe to make it well known they come in all shapes, and forms it really is better to refer to them as IT. It tried various ways to disguise itself, as being something other than what it really is. Hardly male, or female, and that’s for sure, it can’t, or doesn’t really have a need for sex, for instance… at least not the kind a normal human would want. The tick wants to direct, to complain, to resist, to make every move as uncomfortable, unnatural, and un-comforting as possible. Never thought I would be describing sex with a tick.
Thanks for all the welcomes you bestowed on me, but you already did that a while back…
I thank you for your welcome back… in advance.
as BROKE as ever
FBN:
We have CRS here…..(can’t remember shiat)…..
SO ….WELCOME BACK!!!!!
Funny girl!
🙂
Dear 0$,
EB is right we do have CRS!!! Boy do we ever, never have been any good with names anyway and with all the new people here lately if I don’t check back, I have no memory of who is who! Crap, some days I can’t remember my own name! LOL
Yes, you are right about the “not male or female” and Donna did a thread on they are neither straight nor gay, just sexual predators. Sexual opportunists.
Yes, we need to learn to listen to our guts about a predator being in the area, and to listen to the environment as well. It will usually tell us if there is something dangerous in the area. I have told myself and my gut to shut up a few too many times. Thank goodness I listend when it COUNTED and realized my life was in danger.
BTW…
I love the ad that’s running in the header on this page…
COULD YOU HAVE PARASITES?
VAXA.com/Parasite-Cleanse !!!
Perfect!
Yea, I’ve always been a little wormy! LOL ROTFLMAO that is great! I hadn’t noticed it up there! Choke, snort, LOL, hack, snoot, whewwwww, that one was a belly buster! HOW APPROPRIATE! Couldn’t have been any funnier if I had tried hard that than one!
THANKS! 0$!!!! I needed the laugh!@.......
A couple of weeks ago while out photographing and what I thought was too early for tick season, I ended up being covered by ticks (they were literally crawling up my pants and shirt)!! ewww! I had spotted a gorgeous hawk right on the edge of a marsh eating/tearing apart a bird it caught. I couldn’t leave this excellent photographic moment so I just clicked and flicked! Now being wiser I will leave the house in full chemical assault garb, meaning clothes washed/treated in permethrin and skin covered in deet. Ironic photographing prey and predator while being attacked by blood sucking ticks”I got to view and be a part of a double feature”not too much different than the life sucking, predator sociopath I was involved with”oh life is funny sometimes if not mostly tragic”alas.
Pilgrim:
That is quite a story!
Thanks for sharing that!!!!
Deet up……we all should huh?!
Yes Erin deet up…I wish protection from sociopaths was as easy.