The Werewolf Prevention and Victim Support Network is Now a Reality

The Werewolf Prevention and Victim Support Network is the world’s first organization dedicated to the prevention and support of those affected by lycanthropy.

The company was founded in 1999, when a group of concerned parents decided that something needed to be done about the increasing number of werewolf incidents. Since then, thousands of people have been helped by our organization. Our goal is to help prevent anyone else from having to go through what we did.

We provide a safe environment for sufferers and their loved ones to come together and share their stories with one another. We also offer a variety of services such as counseling, support groups, and educational materials.

Werewolves are real.

Werewolves are not human.

Werewolves are dangerous.

Werewolves need help.

The Werewolf Prevention and Victim Support Network (WPVSN) is a non-profit organization dedicated to preventing werewolf attacks and helping victims of werewolf attacks. It was founded in 2007 by Anthony Jenkins, a victim of a 2007 werewolf attack in Sarnia, Ontario. The organization is not affiliated with the Silver Bullet Association (SBA).

The WPVSN maintains a hotline that victims of werewolf attacks can call to receive counselling, legal advice and other forms of support. The hotline is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and all calls are confidential.

He is a werewolf.

It is not a costume, a prank, or a delusion.

He has been a werewolf for three years now, and he is tired of hiding it.

He does not want to be cured. He wants to be normal. He wants to live his life as a werewolf, with all the same rights and responsibilities as anyone else.

And so he creates the Werewolf Prevention and Victim Support Network, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping werewolves like him—people who have been cursed by the full moon. In addition to serving as an advocacy group for werewolves, the Network provides counseling services for those who have been bitten by one of their own kind but have yet to transform into werewolves themselves.

My name is Jacob Black and I am the co-founder of the Werewolf Prevention and Victim Support Network. As I write this, I am sitting in my office at the WPVSN headquarters in San Diego, California. It’s almost noon on a Saturday, and I’m wearing a grey suit with a white button-up shirt and a black tie with silver stripes. There’s one other person in the office right now, Steve Torrance, who plays werewolf football for the San Diego Werewolves. There are no other werewolves here right now, so I can wear my costume without worrying about offending anyone.

I’ve always been interested in werewolf culture. In high school, I was an active member of the Werewolf Student Union. In college, I majored in Wereculture Studies and minored in Werewolf History. After college, I worked as a researcher for several years before going to law school to become a werewolf rights attorney.

In February of this year, as a lawyer for the Werewolf Rights Coalition (WRC), I filed a lawsuit against the city of San Diego for its refusal to allow werewolves to be police officers. The case was settled out of court with an agreement that allows up to five percent of all new police officers to be werewolves

*Originally published on the author’s blog, this article is about the creation of a non-profit organization dedicated to helping werewolf victims.

I was a werewolf victim myself. It all started when I was 17 years old. I came home one day and my parents told me that they weren’t actually my parents and that I was adopted. My real parents died in a car crash when I was 6 months old and I had been bitten by a werewolf, which meant that every full moon I would turn into a werewolf myself.

They said that they had tried to keep me from the truth for as long as possible but it seemed like it was finally time for me to learn about my heritage. They thought it would be easier for me if I found out from them rather than someone else.

I didn’t take the news well at first but after some time I accepted it. My adoptive parents made sure to train me so that I could control my lycanthropic urges whenever the moon was full and after 5 years of training I could control myself almost perfectly. There were still nights when the moon was too strong though and then they would have to lock me up in the basement until sunrise.

For years I lived like this until one day when my adoptive

When I was a little girl, my parents told me I was bitten by a werewolf. But they didn’t want me to worry. They told me that the werewolf was just a dog and that it’s rare to get rabies from dogs in this country.

I believed them. I was an obedient child and I loved my parents. I thought that if they told me the werewolf was a dog then the werewolf was probably a dog.

But I knew better. I knew that there are monsters in this world. They come out of the shadows when you least expect it…

They come for you…

And no one can protect you from them…

Not even your parents…

All human beings are subject to unexpected and significant alterations in their physical and mental state. These alterations may be physical, psychological or spiritual. Most of us are aware of these types of phenomenon. We know about the moon-influenced menstrual cycle, the ‘runner’s high’ that comes from strenuous exercise and the ‘fight or flight’ response to threat. What many people do not know is that some people undergo involuntary transformations into non-human forms. The most common of these is known as lycanthropy.

Lycanthropy has been reported by humans throughout history. It is well documented within anthropological texts, shamanic traditions and scientific literature. Though a relatively small percentage of people have experienced lycanthropy, it is a very real condition that deserves to be recognized as such by our society.

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