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- BLOOD SACRIFICE
- by Althea Whitebirch
-
- We have all moved through periods of crisis in our lives; things
- ranging from the sublime to the rediculous, from the death of someone
- close to us to final exams. Events which are extremely stressful--which
- threaten our lives, home, future or security--would seem to call for
- strong measures of assistance. There have been many times that I have
- felt that the course of events required swift and strong intervention of
- a deity. Blood sacrifice is, to my mind, one of the more powerful magics
- one could perform, and so seemed particularly suitable for this. But
- it's rather ethically sticky.
-
- I may feel that the kind of energy contained in the outpouring of
- blood would be most efficacious in a serious situation, but I'm dead-set
- against the use of an unwilling victim for the purpose. So, in the past
- I've spilled my own blood with an athame, at the same time offering up
- prayers; it just didn't seem to work as well as I thought it would.
- Perhaps, I thought, one needs lots of blood to generate any appreciable
- amount of energy.
-
- Then a friend suggested what seemed the perfect solution--blood
- donation! I'd been giving blood for several years and the thought just
- never had occured to me before. So the next time I went in to donate, I
- approached it as ritual sacrifice for a particular purpose, and both the
- process and results seemed to be much improved. Since then I've gone to
- donate blood many times, each time with a prayer for healing for the
- recipient of my bood, and a request for aid from the deity that seemed
- most appropriate.
-
- For those of you who've never donated blood before, I can provide a
- few details of the process. It's not very frightening, and it can be a
- very spiritually moving experience, I'll tell you! As well, remember
- that you don't sell blood (at least not in Puget Sound), you donates it.
- You can sell plasma--the straw-coloured fluid that makes up the bulk of
- your blood--but not blood itself.
-
- The first time you go in you'll fill out a medical questionnaire:
- the Puget Sound Blood Bank doesn't want your blood if you're ill right
- then (or just getting over something), taking certain medications, ever
- had hepatitis or malaria, or are in a high-risk category for contracting
- AIDS (Haitian, homosexual, needle-using drug user or prostitute). If
- you have any questions, they'll be happy to answer them.
-
- After you fill out the questionnaire, they'll take your blood
- pressure and a blood sample (like sticking your finger with a pin) to
- test your hemocrit (% of hemoglobin) as well as determining what type
- your blood is. If your hemocrit count isn't high enough they'll send
- you home. Nowadays, all blood is sent to a lab to be tested for
- presence of AIDS anti-bodies as well; if you test positive they'll
- notify you by mail. You'll be asked if you've eaten in the last four
- hours, and if not, sent to the canteen for cookies and juice.
-
- Then comes the fun part--you go lie down on a table where a phlebo-
- tomist (who draws the blood) asks you some questions, verifies your
- name, and then sets you up to donate. They tie a rubber hose around your
- arm, so the vein will stand out and be easy to find. They use cold
- liquid ethyl chloride on your arm, to numb it where the needle goes in.
- I won't say that it doesn't hurt when the needle is inserted--it does
- but it's tolerable--when it's in place though, you'll hardly know it's
- there. (You may get the idea from all this that I'm a stoic--hardly!
- I'm a wimp when it comes to pain, but this I can handle.) At this time
- they'll leave you there for up to five minutes while you clench and
- relax your hand (to keep the blood from clotting) and the blood flows
- into a little plastic bag. It's warm and red, and rather reasurring,
- really. At this time you can get into some really serious prayer, or
- hum a little healing chant for the person your blood's going to. (I
- once was doing this and got a flash image of a little boy, a burn
- victim. I always wondered who got my blood that day.) I wouldn't
- recommend getting too spaced-out though; remember you've got to be able
- to return to yourself when you want to, and the physical effects of
- giving blood can make some people light-headed or slightly woozie. When
- they ask you how you're feeling, be honest, not macho. You don't want
- to embarrass yourself by fainting.
-
- Afterwards they'll ask you to have some juice and cookies. By all
- means, do! For one thing, you've earned them; for another it's impor-
- tant to replace the fluid and blood sugar you just gave up. Working
- magic really takes it out of you, too (at least it does me).
-
- In my experience, there are several good reasons to use this parti-
- cular method of blood sacrifice: a) It doesn't require the death of one
- of the Gods' children. b) It is giving of yourself--for the good of
- others as well as your own. c) It is safe--the Blood Bank uses sterile
- instruments and never re-uses needles, so you can't catch anything. d)
- You have the added benefit of being able to see the blood as it's being
- given (somehow that adds to my experience), and a pint is a lot more
- than I've ever been able to get with a knife! Next time you want to get
- the Gods' attention, try it!
-
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