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‘Twilight’ Effect: Are Teens Biting One Another Because of On-Screen Vampires?

Friday, July 9, 2010 14:07
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(Before It's News)

JULY 9- ABC NEWS

Love Bites Could Lead to Disease, Doctors Say

The allure of the blockbuster "Twilight" books and movies appears to have spawned a troubling trend: Teen couples are biting one another to show affection, sometimes biting so hard they draw blood.

"Biting is challenging because one of the things we know about sexuality and biting and vampires is that it's passion, it's all-encompassing, it's wanting to consume someone else," New York City sexologist Logan Levkoff told "Good Morning America." "And biting is sort of an extension of the hickey. It's that same thing about marking someone else and showing passion." Michael Kaplor, 16, said he has been biting his girlfriend on and off for about a year. "For me, biting is the way to show affection toward the other person and to just get a crazy adrenaline rush and not so much to mark territory or to show I belong to something, but just to show the other person I care and there's a deeper sense of affection," he said. He bites his girlfriend on or around her shoulder to ensure the marks remain hidden. The teen said he draws no blood but knows of others who do. "I think a lot of people draw blood because they want to feel very powerful, when you bite the other person you get the huge adrenaline rush and it feels like you can't stop and some people just take it too far," he added. Biting Can Lead to Disease, Doctors Say The urge to push the envelope can come with serious consequences. Up to 15 percent of bites from humans can become infected and, in rare cases, biting can spread blood-borne diseases including hepatitis, syphilis and HIV, doctors say. Even so, teens are drawn to the practice, Levkoff said. "It gets to that whole obsessive, compulsive, overwhelming teen sexuality, which is, 'We have all these new feelings, we don't know how to control them, we don't know how to make sense of them.' And for some reason, because it's on the screen, because it seems powerful and sexual, we want to mimic it. It doesn't make it right," she added. But some teens aren't interesting in receiving — or giving — this very literal love bite. Paola Hernandez, 15, said a boyfriend tried to pressure her to allow herself to be bitten. "He said, 'I love you' and that's the way I want to show you," she said. "I didn't give in because it was kind of idiotic." 1 | 2NEXT

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