Actress Megan Fox casually acknowledged in an interview Tuesday that she and fiancé Machine Gun Kelly drink each other’s blood for ritualistic purposes. The 35-year old reportedly first revealed the couple’s vampiric activities in January, following their engagement.
She attempted to downplay that disturbing revelation by telling Glamour UK that they only sip small amounts of each other’s blood at a time.
“I guess to drink each other’s blood might mislead people or people are imagining us with goblets and we’re like Game of Thrones, drinking each other’s blood. It’s just a few drops, but yes, we do consume each other’s blood on occasion for ritual purposes only,” she explained.
Machine Gun Kelly is an American rapper, singer, musician, and actor. Fox is best known for her roles in action films, most notably the Transformers and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movies.
During the interview, Fox went into blood-curdling detail about Machine Gun Kelly’s enthusiasm for the Satanic practice.
“I’m much more controlled,” she explained. “I read tarot cards and I’m into astrology and I’m doing all these metaphysical practices and meditations. And I do rituals on new moons and full moons, and all these things. And so, when I do it, it’s a passage or it is used for a reason. And it is controlled where it’s like, ‘Let’s shed a few drops of blood and each drink it.’ He’s much more haphazard and hectic and chaotic, where he’s willing to just cut his chest open with broken glass and be like, ‘Take my soul!’”
https://twitter.com/GlamourMagUK/status/1518968280979021831?s=20&t=nrJLx5QOuqAhP6iljHO53A
People involved in the occult believe that consuming blood adds power to their spells or rituals.
Medical experts caution against it because drinking someone else’s blood can spread disease, and if you drink too much, you’re at risk of reaching a level of toxicity called hemochromatosis (iron overload).
This condition “can increase your risk of developing other life-threatening disorders, including heart disease, liver disease, and diabetes. That’s because the excess iron is stored in your liver, heart, and pancreas, leading to all kinds of health problems,” according to Healthline .