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If your girlfriend is really afraid of spiders, and she sees one near her desk, and tells you, it is NOT a good idea to laugh at her and keep playing a stupid game!!
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[ April 23, 2004, 09:39 AM: Message edited by: Kama ]
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Instead of laughing is it ok to fling it towards said girlfriend with a book or something. Then after the flinging, would it be approprite to laugh?
Posts: 1294 | Registered: Oct 2003
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This reminds me of when my wife and I had first movd into our first apartment.
It was the middle of the night and she woke me up saying she heard some kind of buzzing noise. I did the typical guy thing and told her it was nothing and to go back to sleep. She of course made me get up and turn on the lights and check. Grudgingly I toured the room until I heard a buzz coming from the bed. I hrew back the covers and one of those huge Yellow Jackets came flying right at my head. I about crapped my self.
Another time I woke up to Jennifer screaming in the bathromm at like 1:30 AM. I ran down stairs and she was standing on the toilet with her pants around her ankles. I think a gave a little chuckle at the sight and then she told me there was a mouse in the room. Our bathroom is small and I didn't see anything so I thought she was just dreaming it up until I moved our kid's step stool and the little brown fuzzy guy zipped across my foot. I threw a towl on it and took it out to the garage to, um ,dispose of it with a shovel.
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Kama, you ever hear of the Florida Barking Spider? Now that I think of it, I think there are Polish varieties, too.
Posts: 13123 | Registered: Feb 2002
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My house has an absolute infestation of barking spiders. From the loud and intimidating Daddy Spiders down to the tiny little Spider offspring. It is a very scary place to be, and it seems to be really bad on taco nights. I think something in the sause seems to bring them out of hiding.
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No, I understand but you ladies need to understand. maturity is a thing that tends to skip over most of us fellas. In these situations we tend to respond in much the same way we would have done in grade school, by pointing, laughing and them chasing you with the spider in question. Now, is this right, absolutely not. I know its mean spirited and cruel but there is something inside us that overrides our sense of control and that little boy come out in us. It's a disease and we are infected.
Posts: 1294 | Registered: Oct 2003
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Poor Kamila. You could always threaten him with removal of make-out privileges. Funny what guys will quit doing for that.
~*~
and for the record, girls are not the only gender terrified of the many-legged evils. And if your guy happens not to be, just find out what he IS afraid of, and mock him mercilessly for it. Unless, you know, you're a nice person.
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I once ignited a barking spider...pretty blue flame!
Kama, in the States it is considered inappropriate to have a girlfriend in the same office. However, my wife once called from her office to tell me there was a cockroach in her computer.
The boys in my office have spider wars. We have been infested lately by a particular type of large, hairy jumping spider. The trick in spider wars is to coax the spider onto the top of your opponent’s cubicle partition and then blow the spider off the partition into the opponent’s hair. The spider will often release a dragline as it becomes airborne. If the spider was blown correctly, the dragline will wrap itself around the opponent’s ear at least twice.
Let the games begin!
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Ok, I might have laughed, but at the same time, I would have gotten it and placed it outside. Unless poisonous, in which case, I'd squash it. I'm a big bad spider squasher sometimes.
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My friend Anthonie tells the story of his parents. For their honeymoon, they went camping. During the night, his dad thought he heard a bear, and went to sleep in the car. Without waking his bride. She found him there the next morning. *shakes head*
Posts: 26077 | Registered: Mar 2000
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quote:The boys in my office have spider wars. We have been infested lately by a particular type of large, hairy jumping spider. The trick in spider wars is to coax the spider onto the top of your opponent’s cubicle partition and then blow the spider off the partition into the opponent’s hair. The spider will often release a dragline as it becomes airborne. If the spider was blown correctly, the dragline will wrap itself around the opponent’s ear at least twice.
See, there's not a jury in the world that would convict me for what I would do to you in response...
Dagonee *Not the spider-killer in the family.
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quote: My friend Anthonie tells the story of his parents. For their honeymoon, they went camping. During the night, his dad thought he heard a bear, and went to sleep in the car. Without waking his bride. She found him there the next morning.
that's so funny. My parents tell the story of their honeymoon all the time. My mom woke up and had to pee but looked out the tent and saw a bear. She woke dad up and told him and soon he had to pee too but they were too scared to leave the tent. They sat awake all night in agony just to realize that their bear was really a stump. Big dummies!
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(((Kama))) Because even if I'm going better, I don't feel exactly friendly with spiders either.
Posts: 3526 | Registered: Oct 2001
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And then there are the tiny baby spiders that live on top of the driver's-side visor in your automobile. They wait until you're on the motorway to start dangling in your face.
My wife's car tends to have more baby spiders than my truck because my truck's interior gets too hot. Once we went to Olive Garden in my wife's car, and halfway through the meal I noticed a car spider dangling from the corner of my spectacles into my pasta.
Does reading spider stories make you itch?
Posts: 2655 | Registered: Feb 2004
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I'm the Great Spider Hunter in our house. Chris can't stand the idea of one being anywhere near him. (And by "near" I mean anywhere in the house or car). I have to catch it and either squoosh it or put it outside. He has the same reaction to any other bug, too, and doesn't seem to appreciate the logic that if we leave the spider alone it might take care of any of the other bugs in the house.
Posts: 6394 | Registered: Dec 1999
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When a spider has my wife cornered, I tell her to keep an eye on it while I get the fly swatter. Inevitably she takes her eye off the spider, and it disappears. Then I have to worry about spiders when I put my shoes on. Why can't women just kill the spider when it's in plain sight? Why do women feel safer once the spider scurries out of sight?
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Are you saying that you don't feel safer after you let the spider scurry out of sight?
Or are you one of those folks who live in Brown Recluse territory, where even women have to actively squash spiders or risk being bitten. Those suckers are aggressive!
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No way am I using my hands! There was an LDS missionary in Japan who liked to squash cockroaches with his bare hands. He would cup his hand and pop it over the roach, using air pressure to explode the bug. He would get cockroach guts all over his hand. The dude later contracted spinal meningitis and had to be hospitalized.
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So what exactly is she supposed to do about the spider? Head it off at the pass? Use her hands?
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Just be able to tell me exactly where the spider went.
Here's an ookey for ya. Cowboy boots have got them pointey toes, so you can squash bugs in tight corners, right? Suppose the bug is wise to your plan and runs up your boot, over the top, and drops down inside?
Posts: 2655 | Registered: Feb 2004
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Yes, I live in the heart of Brown Recluse territory, and I smash them daily.
However, I know how to identify a good spider from a bad one (like a recluse) and have taught my children the difference since they were very young. Recluses and Widows are the only ones we kill.
The other spiders are our friends. They help keep out ants, roaches or any other pests that might try to invade our domain. Garden spiders outside are very good. (We believe in the importance of most species in the ecological chain). Of course, living on a farm, you have many of these types of things around, and you really lose the "it's us or them" mentality in favor of co-habitation with most all creatures. (except mosquitoes -- I draw the line there --- they are the devil)
We've also had snakes as pets before -- but that's a whole 'nother thread...
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I can't believe the resident bug expert, Jenny Gardner, hasn't posted in this thread yet.
For the record, I do whatever my wife asks in this dept. She washes lots more dishes than me, so I'm in her constant debt. Oh, and she married me, that means I'm in even greater debt.
Posts: 995 | Registered: May 2003
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Before Jenny gets here, I thought I ought to mention that I encountered a bug the other day that sent chills down my spine. It turned out to be a "masked hunter," a kind of assassin bug that supposedly has a painful bite. I found this one while cleaning out my shed, and it had dust stuck to its body for camouflage. What made this bug so scary was how fast it moved…in my direction. I feel sorry for those who live in the eastern and central U.S., where these things are common.
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I try to not kill spiders. I find them squicky, but I can deal with them long enough to move them outside, usually.
I had to learn to deal with bugs at camp, where it was a policy not to kill things if there was any way of getting rid of it somehow else. Especially in front of the kids.
I don't care how great they are. I dont care how many other bugs they kill. If they cross into my territory (the house, or outside where I will see them like making a web on my front porch) they have just committed suicide.
Dag, you made me laugh out loud, while at the same time I completely understood and agreed with you.
Posts: 14428 | Registered: Aug 2001
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Anyone ever seen a Banana Spider? They're all over North Florida, especially Gainesville. Web-spinners about the size of my hand (and I'm 6'3"). I should upload some pictures....
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