Hemorrhoids that bleed all the time but are not painful are usually the clinical symptoms of internal hemorrhoids. Internal hemorrhoids are located above the dentate line, which is a mass of varicose veins, and generally tend to rupture when abdominal pressure increases or when constipation occurs, thus causing bleeding. Hemorrhoids, especially internal hemorrhoids, if they are not combined with blood clots and do not form inflammatory hemorrhoids without infection, manifest as painless, progressive blood dripping, bright red blood in the stool, usually not mixed with feces, sometimes in the form of dripping blood. Most hemorrhoids can be aggravated by heavy alcohol consumption or eating irritating foods such as chili peppers, prolonged squatting and sitting, and other triggers, so the hemorrhoids can manifest themselves as bleeding all the time but without pain. You can take conservative treatment and medication for this condition, pay attention to your diet, eat more vegetables and fruits to reduce constipation, thus reducing the swelling of the hemorrhoidal vein stasis, and you can insert tylenol suppositories in the anus to play an anti-inflammatory role in stopping the bleeding. If the hemorrhoids keep bleeding in large amounts, surgical removal should also be actively performed, such as external and internal ligation of mixed hemorrhoids.