Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Voices demons recruit special-type sucker demon for night-time blood-drains of victims

For "not listening," the Voices Demons tonight trotted in a rarer breed of sucker demon that slithers upright, and has a pointed, tapered end. This type draws blood from its victim, preferring a site that is easily accessible during sleep and the least sensitive. Usually, that would be the foot, which is the farthest from the sight and hearing of the victim, and has thicker skin than any other site on the body (pictured, below, is a blood wound caused by a sucker demon in October, 2011).

Blood-sucking site of a sucker demon

It casually slithered past me as I sat on my bed tonight, finishing some legal work the Voices Demons don't want done ("We don't care what it is you working on; we just don't want you to work on anything.")

Now, as I prepare for bed, they are promising to hurt me either in my sleep, if I can actually fall asleep.

The demons are no stranger to violence (see photos of hand, below; and, as I write, they are saying—over and over—"You will vomit blood."), but usually prefer injuries that cannot readily be seen by others, or injuries that manifest symptoms much later. For example, the demons have claimed to have injured my pancreas in the past. Sure enough, an ultrasound revealed slight inflammation. They say that they will continue to slightly injure it until it no longer functions correctly, at which point I will suffer from whatever maladies are associated with an malfunctioning pancreas.

Lacerations caused by a sucker demon, as ordered by a voices demon
The lacerations were caused by the serrated blade of a garden tool
They have also recruited others to break bones, and have vowed as recently as today to do so again. They claim that in December 2008, they instructed police officers to break my bones; and, in fact, they did—two of them: a shoulder and rib.

San Jose Police Officer Miguel Flores (#3881) broke my shoulder and rib on December 13th, 2008


Murder, Satan wrote | “They popped a cork on you…”

"Rock him off" and "Cash him in" are both phrases used to describe murder, or at least acts likely to lead to death, in ...