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BS: Okay, what spooks you???

Bobert 14 May 12 - 07:50 PM
wysiwyg 14 May 12 - 07:56 PM
SINSULL 14 May 12 - 07:57 PM
Little Hawk 14 May 12 - 08:02 PM
Wesley S 14 May 12 - 08:08 PM
Rapparee 14 May 12 - 10:57 PM
Ebbie 14 May 12 - 11:17 PM
Bert 14 May 12 - 11:39 PM
JohnInKansas 14 May 12 - 11:39 PM
GUEST 14 May 12 - 11:40 PM
Crowhugger 14 May 12 - 11:43 PM
JohnInKansas 15 May 12 - 03:28 AM
GUEST,Eliza 15 May 12 - 04:14 AM
GUEST,kendall 15 May 12 - 07:01 AM
JohnInKansas 15 May 12 - 07:50 AM
Ebbie 15 May 12 - 11:51 AM
Zhenya 15 May 12 - 02:48 PM
GUEST,sniffy 15 May 12 - 04:16 PM
Ed T 15 May 12 - 04:27 PM
Ed T 15 May 12 - 04:31 PM
Elmore 15 May 12 - 04:41 PM
GUEST,Eliza 15 May 12 - 05:20 PM
GUEST,Shimrod 15 May 12 - 05:47 PM
Don(Wyziwyg)T 15 May 12 - 05:50 PM
Little Hawk 15 May 12 - 06:12 PM
gnu 15 May 12 - 06:37 PM
gnu 15 May 12 - 06:48 PM
Don Firth 15 May 12 - 09:02 PM
ChanteyLass 15 May 12 - 09:03 PM
JohnInKansas 15 May 12 - 09:38 PM
Bert 16 May 12 - 01:05 AM
Ebbie 16 May 12 - 01:46 AM
scouse 16 May 12 - 05:05 AM
GUEST,Eliza 16 May 12 - 11:22 AM
frogprince 16 May 12 - 12:22 PM
gnu 16 May 12 - 03:58 PM
Bert 16 May 12 - 04:10 PM
VirginiaTam 16 May 12 - 04:39 PM
GUEST,Eliza 16 May 12 - 04:39 PM
Bat Goddess 16 May 12 - 06:53 PM
gnu 16 May 12 - 07:18 PM
Jeri 16 May 12 - 07:33 PM
Bill D 16 May 12 - 08:13 PM
frogprince 16 May 12 - 09:29 PM
Bill D 16 May 12 - 10:29 PM
GUEST,Eliza 17 May 12 - 05:30 AM
Green Man 17 May 12 - 07:09 AM
Little Hawk 17 May 12 - 10:16 AM
Uncle_DaveO 17 May 12 - 10:51 AM
JohnInKansas 17 May 12 - 11:11 AM

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Subject: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Bobert
Date: 14 May 12 - 07:50 PM

Let's get real here... Everyone gets spooked by something... Black cats... Dark alleys... Creepy old farm houses...

So here's your opportunity to let it loose... It's okay... I promise...

Just let it out...

B~


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: wysiwyg
Date: 14 May 12 - 07:56 PM

Luminol. On TV, luridly splashed. Old memory/PTSD gets going, before I can stop it.

ONE year the kids had inadvertently tracked/ground some glow-in-the-dark PlayDoh into the stairway carpet, on their shoes' soles... as I found out after finally asking someone hesitantly if they were seeing it too. Well, we finally figgered it out.

NOW it's funny, but THEN.... faint spots before the eyes.... when I 'd go up to bed in this big ole house with all the scary hallways and doors where people can hide so easily... Back then I did not know that a black light is required with Luminol, so I thought our house had an old investigation deeply embedded in the carpet, still glowing at night. Or maybe..... and SAD plus PTSD spells Terror.

Great book title, that-- I claim copyright.

~S~


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: SINSULL
Date: 14 May 12 - 07:57 PM

A jewelry box in my bedroom which plays Lara's Theme when the bottom drawer is opened.
Last week it started playing in the middle of the night. I got up and found the bottom drawer open.
Okay, maybe the cats, maybe a vibration from the street.
So I put it back, drawer closed and against the TV so it couldn't open again.
Next day I came home from work to hear the box playing again. It hadn't been moved and the drawer was shut - but it was playing.
A bit creepy.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Little Hawk
Date: 14 May 12 - 08:02 PM

The thought of Spaw in the shower.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Wesley S
Date: 14 May 12 - 08:08 PM

Heights. And President Mitt Romney.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Rapparee
Date: 14 May 12 - 10:57 PM

Bobert ol' pal, I can't talk about it. Okay?


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Ebbie
Date: 14 May 12 - 11:17 PM

Heights. One of the most frightening memories I have is of 20 years or so ago when I pulled a stunt that I would never have done had I known it would haunt me.

I had gone with my sis and brother in law to central Oregon to the Crooked River Ranch. While they went to the chapel for a Sunday service I went walking.

On the way back, not wanting to come back the same way I had gone, I looked around to see what my options were. In front of me was a horse pasture ringed with electric/barbed wire fence. It had rained lightly and I didn't want to slide on my belly under the bottom rung so I eyed the only other option: Stepping across a 500-foot chasm (WAY below was the Crooked River which over the last thousand years had cut its way).

Now this was Central Oregon- high desert country- so there were no fence-post holes- Fences are attached to a creche made of boards and filled with large rocks. This creche was situated absolutely, positively on the edge of the chasm to keep horses from attempting to cross.

I reached out and checked the board on this side. Firm. I reached across and checked the board on the far side. Firm.

If I put one foot here with one hand there and then the other foot there and the other hand there, then with one final step I'd be across the fence and inside the horse pasture...

I did that. And to this day I shudder at the thought that for some seconds I was hanging above the chasm. Makes the hair rise on my neck.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Bert
Date: 14 May 12 - 11:39 PM

'Twas years ago, I was cycling with me skinnan' and we were going to Bradwell(sur la mer) Youth Hostel one Friday night in early autumn. It was dark and misty as we rode along the deserted country lanes.

We would hit an occasional patch of fog and the air turned suddenly warm. It was the most spooky feeling. We looked very carefully into the empty fields around us, expecting to see Old Shuck jump out at any moment.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: JohnInKansas
Date: 14 May 12 - 11:39 PM

It's been a l-o-o-o-n-g time ago, but I do recall one night, lying in bed (in Army housing) in Arizona and gazing upward in the dark, when I suddenly perceived that I saw "stars."

After verifying that the wife hadn't suddenly discovered some unknown offense and taken unforseen action, having confirmed that she was sound asleep, I began to "study the stars" and found several recognizable constellations, but they seemed to be all in the wrong places.

It then crept into my consciousness (what there was functioning at the time to receive any thoughts at all) that - - - there's supposed to be a ceiling up there!!!!

Starlight ain't supposed to shine through a ceiling - - - and a roof - - - under the big tree that's outside.

The situation, for a while, got downright creepy.

For a while, some of the "stars" even seemed to be moving.

As it turned out the ceiling really was still there (and the roof and the tree) . There really were little bitty "lights" embeded in the ceiling that had the appearance of stars when the room was sufficiently dark. And there was a very ordinary (if you're in the Army in Yuma AZ) explanation for it all.

I've also learned that, if you "stay aware," the accumulated experience of age allows many more of such things to appear far less "mysterious" than when observed by the young (at least by those few youngsters observant enough to even see the mysteries).

John


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST
Date: 14 May 12 - 11:40 PM

Facebook.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Crowhugger
Date: 14 May 12 - 11:43 PM

Oops that was me. Found my cookie now.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: JohnInKansas
Date: 15 May 12 - 03:28 AM

I can certainly see Crowhugger's point, after reading the news yesterday:

Forgot to log out


Rosa Golijan/msnbc.com

Two men robbed an Internet cafe at gunpoint and proceeded to make a clean getaway on a motorcycle recently. One of them got caught anyway though — because he forgot to log out of his Facebook account ... which he'd checked before committing the crime.

Basically, two fellas walked into an Internet cafe in Calima — a place north of the city of Cali, Colombia — and used two computers for a while. Eventually they got up, went to the register and proceeded to whip out guns and demand money. They got all the money and proceeded to escape on a motorcycle.

After the two men left, an employee in the Internet cafe called the police, who discovered that one of the suspects left his Facebook account logged in on the computer he'd used. They used the information discovered thanks to that to track down his home address, paid him a visit and took him to jail.

._._._.



Sure hope it don't scare 'im off from the 'cat too!

- or maybe he saw that news bit too, - - - and that's why he had to log back in here????????????

John


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST,Eliza
Date: 15 May 12 - 04:14 AM

Aaaaaaagh! SPIDERS!!! (And AAAAAAGGGGHHH! AFRICAN SPIDERS!!!!!)


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST,kendall
Date: 15 May 12 - 07:01 AM

Watching videos of men walking around on steel beams building sky scrapers.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: JohnInKansas
Date: 15 May 12 - 07:50 AM

One of the things that probably should spook us all a little more than it does is the construction cranes on and around skyscrapers (or at least those skyscrapers more than 3 or 4 stories tall). They fall down and squash innocent and uninvolved people - surprisingly, surreptitiously, and with little or no warning - with disgusting regularity.

(Official rankings put them very near the top of the list of hazardous construction equipment.)

I try to avoid being remotely close to one, but I'd call that awareness rather than spookiness.

John


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Ebbie
Date: 15 May 12 - 11:51 AM

"They fall down and squash innocent and uninvolved people - surprisingly, surreptitiously, and with little or no warning - with disgusting regularity."

JiK, I agree that their existence - and their positioning- is scary but I've never heard of them falling (OFF the building?) and squashing anybody, much less with 'regularity'. Do you have a story on that?


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Zhenya
Date: 15 May 12 - 02:48 PM

"They fall down and squash innocent and uninvolved people - surprisingly, surreptitiously, and with little or no warning - with disgusting regularity."

JiK, I agree that their existence - and their positioning- is scary but I've never heard of them falling (OFF the building?) and squashing anybody, much less with 'regularity'. Do you have a story on that?"

I'm in NYC and there have been several incidents of cranes falling in recent years, with a number of fatalities. And the last two days, the NY Times has also had articles about people killed or severely injured by falling tree limbs (or even entire trees). Apparently, it costs less to settle the resulting lawsuits than to hire and properly train enough people to check the trees and take preventative action before this happens. Another thing to be spooked about.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST,sniffy
Date: 15 May 12 - 04:16 PM

I was somewhere in the midst of Andalucia and went out for a stroll. Without realizing where I was walking I suddenly found myself on the very edge of a viaduct looking down a thousand feet at the valley below. Very carefully, I inched away from the edge (which hadn't been fenced) and thanked my lucky stars that I've always been able to walk in a straight line. The thought of what might have been still spooks me.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Ed T
Date: 15 May 12 - 04:27 PM

Thanks to the fear instilled in me by my siblings, snakes.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Ed T
Date: 15 May 12 - 04:31 PM

I like spiders and would never kill one-like with most animals I encounter (save being "afeared" of snakes).


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Elmore
Date: 15 May 12 - 04:41 PM

Fire


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST,Eliza
Date: 15 May 12 - 05:20 PM

Despite being irrationally terrified of spiders, I too would never kill one, or any living thing for that matter (unless we're talking about eating meat!) I'm a great wildlife supporter. But it's a full-blown automatic phobia, and kicks in before I've even had time to gather my common sense. I despise people like me who scream and get hysterical at the sight of an innocent creature, but there it is. Snakes, rats, scorpions, I've met the lot in my travels and not turned a hair. But....spiders....even the word makes me shake. Silly woman!


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST,Shimrod
Date: 15 May 12 - 05:47 PM

The warning about cranes reminds me of an incident that I witnessed about 20 years ago. I was working in an office in central Manchester (UK). The office was on the sixth floor of business premises - probably dating from the opening years of the 20th century. Across the street were some equally tall buildings (so the street was rather 'canyon-like'). The buildings opposite were in the process of being refurbished and were covered in scaffolding.

One day, just before lunchtime, I was working at my desk when I heard a sort of rumbling roar from outside. At first I thought that it was a lorry going over a pothole - but it went on and on. When I looked out of the window the scaffolding opposite had collapsed and the whole street was full of twisted steel poles.

If this collapse had happened 10 or 15 minutes later, I and my colleagues would have been in that street on our way to lunch!

Remarkably it turned out that only one person was injured in this event - but the outcome could have been far, far worse.

Nowadays I try to avoid buildings clad in scaffolding!


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 15 May 12 - 05:50 PM

Heights in a very specific way.

I used to go rock climbing as a young man and never felt the least worry three or four hundred feet up a sheer face.

One step out on to an expanded metal fire escape above second floor level and I'm a gibbering wreck, and the expanding metal mezzanine floor above the dynamos at our local power station........well, I almost had to get down on hands and knees.

Yes, I know it's perfectly safe! Will somebody tell my legs please?

Don T.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Little Hawk
Date: 15 May 12 - 06:12 PM

Nude photos of the Queen. The more recent ones, that is. I simply can't abide them.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: gnu
Date: 15 May 12 - 06:37 PM

Which queen? There's millions.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: gnu
Date: 15 May 12 - 06:48 PM

16 years old. Cleaning pigeon nests out of eaves on scaffloding three stories up. The cheap bastard had the sections spaced three feet apart to save $ on renting the "staging" as it is known here. Two 2X14s on each piece of staging. We had to swing out and kinda jump to the next section. The 2X14s were NOT anchored and I didn't know that so when I took my second "jump" gravity took over. I hung on... no... CLUNG on and could not let go.

I was paralysed with fear. The bastard climbed up and started smacking me on the arse and legs with a 1X3 until I started to climb down. He climbed down, waited for me to get close to the ground and started at it again, hollering at me to go back up or "You'll lose my nerve." I gave my notice at the end of the shift and I am like Kendall... gives me the willies just to look at pics or videos.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Don Firth
Date: 15 May 12 - 09:02 PM

Nude photos of myself?

Stairs. Particularly long flights of stairs with no handrail.

I had polio at age two, and I've had to walk with a leg brace and a pair of forearm crutches ever since. Perfectly rational fear, actually. As long as there is a solid handrail I can hang onto, no problem. But otherwise…..

Another one related to that are macho guys who are hell-bent on proving how strong they are. Example: my wife and I were visiting her relatives in Nebraska. We had flown to Kansas City, Mo., and had to take a small, twin engine turbo-prop plane (capacity, 20 passengers) to Barbara's home town. For large airliners, you just walk from the terminal down a fairly short, movable, telescoping hallway and step into the plane. This little puddle-jumper was too small to make use of that kind of facility, so it was up a very narrow and steep flight of stairs—that popped out when the plane's door was opened downward. No handrail other than a very floppy rope!

Well, some twenty years ago, I'd had to graduate to a wheelchair, and there was no way I could get up these steps by myself. So the pilot and a member of the terminal's ground crew grabbed my wheelchair with me in it. One backed up the steps and the other hung onto my chair from below to make sure the pilot didn't inadvertently decant me onto the tarmac. About halfway up the half-dozen steps, both of them started to tremble! I'm not that heavy (pretty skinny, in fact, and my wheelchair is a lightweight) and the last couple of steps were downright scary. Not only was I afraid they might drop me, but they were actually afraid they might drop me—although they both would have cut their own throats rather than admit it.

You aren't going to find me doing much of THIS sort of thing these days.

No elevator? No Firth!

Don Firth


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: ChanteyLass
Date: 15 May 12 - 09:03 PM

Heights and enclosed spaces. I have no explanation for either. Been this way ever since I can remember. At shows, I think the best place to watch is the front row of a balcony, but it is only well after intermission that my toes start to uncurl and I stop trying to grip the floor. Even when I watch other people who are up high, my toes curl. Oddly, I have no fear of flying in an airplane. In enclosed spaces, I have to fight the urge to hyperventilate. And don't expect me to step inside a glass elevator. I'll take the stairs, thank you very much. (Usually, though, there is also a regular elevator in the same building.)


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: JohnInKansas
Date: 15 May 12 - 09:38 PM

Zhenya & Ebbie -

Crane accidents aren't really much more common than other kinds of construction events, but when one comes down there's usually little warning and it's very difficult to get clear after the fact. As with any construction site operations, there are a lot of hazards for the workers that must be managed, but the sheer length of the cranes means that they can come down quite a long distance from the site. The likelihood of injury at any specific place in the "fall zone" is small, but it's a big zone.

Casual gawkers not only expose themselves to at least some risk any time they're in or near heavy construction work, especially if they ignore what's going on and don't recognize what's risky; but they also can distract and/or impede workers who are at much greater risk and must pay attention to what they - and everyone else working there - are doing.

You can easily search "crane accidents" to get an idea of how much actual risk is likely. The hazard is not usually limited to things that "fall on the buildings." Since a purpose of most such cranes is to move things onto and off of the building, they nearly always must have a reach that extends beyond the building, and they never "fall straight down." The primary hazard area can be estimated approximately from the height of the crane plus it's "reach" and anything in that zone can be hit by whatever falls.

Chicago and New York, within the past couple of years, have had widely published reports of a half dozen or so tower crane collapses that injured people on the streets below and in a couple of cases "crushed" adjacent buildings.

Crane designs and construction are generally "safe," but with some types the crane must rely on the integrity of the building it's working on and inspection and certification of the structures is frequently left to "municipal code inspection" or omitted altogether.

Erection of the cranes is a very technical job and strict licensing requirements for those who manage it are in place almost everywhere - but "shortcuts" that compromised safety are revealed in nearly every accident investigation.

The "capacity" of a given crane changes over time and most codes specify frequent recalculation of how much it's safe to lift, based on things like cable wear but often omitting allowance for the wear on the pulleys that the cable runs through - and frequent cases are found where the one responsible just "wrote down the result" that he was "pretty sure" would be there, or that was "what it had to be to get the job done."

If you're really concerned a couple of starting points:


Sample 1

Random Photos (including lots of small lifters)

tracking site ( I think there's an archive here.)

One in NYC 2008

Design News Article

For the construction workers, the most common risk is getting fired if (when?) you screw up the numbers or don't do them all. (The numbers aren't really all that simple, although they're "standardized.")

John


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Bert
Date: 16 May 12 - 01:05 AM

Eliza, entomophobia is so common that many authorities now consider it normal behaviour. So don't let it get you down, most people have it, even entomologists.

As for construction cranes. I remember way back in the Fifties I went to a Boilermakers meeting and one of our members was really upset that a local company was using non union, untrained welders to build their cranes. Even with the full might of the Boilermakers' union we never did get it stopped. So if a crane falls on your head don't blame me.

So, erecting the cranes may be controlled, but building them, Nah!


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Ebbie
Date: 16 May 12 - 01:46 AM

I used to go high up the Oregon Cascades camping with my oldest brother. Early on, we were traveling on a narrow dirt road- actually a pushed-through road meant to allow firefighting equipment when needed - higher and higher; at each curve only blue sky blazed ahead of us. If we had met anyone coming the other way we would have had to back up for who knows how far.

I became terrified. It felt like our camper was on a shelf with nothing below, a shelf that might break off any moment.

I finally told Bill. He immediately stopped the truck and told me to get out and look out over the edge.

Cautiously I did- and found that far from being a shelf, the ground sloped gently away from us.

He said that I wasn't as bad off as he had been when he first started; he said that the first time he went to the edge on his hands and knees.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: scouse
Date: 16 May 12 - 05:05 AM

America!!!

As Aye,

Phil.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST,Eliza
Date: 16 May 12 - 11:22 AM

I'm glad it's now considered normal behaviour to have a fear of spiders. I must say, the ones I saw in Senegal and Ghana would make anybody's hair stand on end... absolutely gigantic black furry things, and they could give a nasty bite too, as they had a habit of jumping down onto your head. (UGH!). (I always thought fear of spiders was arachnaphobia?)


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: frogprince
Date: 16 May 12 - 12:22 PM

I could just say "height", but my reaction is unpredictable, with no logical consistency. I can't tolerate standing anywhere near the edge of a cliff or building without a railing, which I realize is fairly common; as long as there is an apparently sturdy railing, I'm not bothered at all. Being in a plane, however small, or a hot air balloon, doesn't bother me in the least. But to change a ceiling light comfortably, I need a good stepladder; if I stand on a stool even a foot off the floor, and extend my reach up for any reason, I'm very shakey. We went to the Grand Canyon a few years ago. We walked a just a little way down the Bright Angel trail. I wasn't really panicky, but it made me edgy. The next day we rode down on mules. I found myself leaning over to look down without the least discomfort.
My nephew has a boat and parasail. I'm really torn about trying the thing; I really don't know whether I would take it in stride, or stress out to the point of potential heart attack.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: gnu
Date: 16 May 12 - 03:58 PM

froggy... "I can't tolerate standing anywhere near the edge of a cliff or building without a railing, which I realize is fairly common;..."

Common? Indeed it is. It's a survival instinct most commonly found in animals with enough intelligence not to do that.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Bert
Date: 16 May 12 - 04:10 PM

(I always thought fear of spiders was arachnaphobia?) Yes if you want to be specific. Entomophobia is kind of an inclusive term and is generally held to include fear of all creepy crawlies.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: VirginiaTam
Date: 16 May 12 - 04:39 PM

Being ill, growing old and more ill in a strange country. Getting to the point in my decline that I cannot travel to see my kids nor can I afford to pay for them to travel to visit me.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST,Eliza
Date: 16 May 12 - 04:39 PM

Ah, that makes it clear Bert, thanks. Have to say, all other creepy-crawlies are fine by me. I've seen all sorts, even poisonous things like scorpions which have a habit of getting into shoes and sandals while you're in bed. (Check before putting on in morning!) But our eight-legged friends....no!


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Bat Goddess
Date: 16 May 12 - 06:53 PM

Heights. (Can't get past the third rung of a ladder.) Some spiders ("daddy longlegs"-types don't bother me). Centipedes (ugh!). Fire. (Thanks to Life Magazine's pictures of a Catholic school fire -- Our Lady of the Angels -- in Chicago in the 1958.)

Once in my kitchen I was accosted by a HUGE brown ugly spider. It was waaaay too big to squish (I don't even want to think about it), so I did what any red-blooded American woman would do -- I grabbed a can of Raid (I usually don't keep this kind of thing around, preferring products less damaging to my health and that of the cats) and sprayed the hell out of it. It fell behind the bookcase...where it is probably (still) mutating into The Spider That Ate Nottingham. I cringe when I think of it. (No way am I moving that bookcase!)

Linn


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: gnu
Date: 16 May 12 - 07:18 PM

"where it is probably (still)..."

Hahahahaa.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Jeri
Date: 16 May 12 - 07:33 PM

There are some things you don't want to squash just because you'd have to call FEMA or throw out a book or something.

I was a bit arachnophobic when I was a kid, but somehow managed to grow out of it.

I can't think of anything that always spooks me now, although fast, unexpected, unpredictable things can probably spook anyone. The fat dive-bombing fly that hits your face or other area on your head when you're trying to sleep, the wasp that's crawling on you that you manage to recognize milliseconds before you whack it.

When I was doing my laundry last week, there was a mouse in a bright corner of the basement, trying to fuse with the architecture. I don't know whether it was lost in the light or had been into the poison, but it was too dazed to try to run away. I had time to get a live trap and nudge the little guy into it. Then I took it to the pond where it probably fed something. It ran from me then, but not with any sort of conviction, so I think it probably didn't last long.

Things can startle me, but I don't usually STAY freaked out, and I'm happy being that way.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Bill D
Date: 16 May 12 - 08:13 PM

Agreeing with Jeri.... I don't 'like' sudden encounters with bugs, but once I know where they are, I can deal with them. Likewise, I am cautious about heights, but I will climb ladders, trees, roofs and/or walk near canyons as long as I feel in control. Snakes? No problem once I know what & where they are. (I once held an 8ft. 40 lb. Burmese Rock Python as it (she) continuously explored me as a climbing post.) No problems with closed spaces (had an MRI once). I like flying....I LOVE looking down at the world.

The only thing I can remember dreading is the idea of being in a traffic accident in cold, rainy or icy weather and lying injured on a street in nasty freezing conditions. I don't dwell on this... it just pops up now & then, and I shudder. I have no idea why.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: frogprince
Date: 16 May 12 - 09:29 PM

Bill D, in all probability it's because you froze to death, or at least died of hypothermia, in a prior incarnation.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Bill D
Date: 16 May 12 - 10:29 PM

Oh, right....a prior incarnation. In Siberia, hunting wooly mammoths, no doubt.

I think it may be more likely that I remember my days delivering newspapers at 5AM in 0°F weather.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: GUEST,Eliza
Date: 17 May 12 - 05:30 AM

My naughty pupils (aged 10) found out my phobia when a spider appeared in the classroom sink. They brought in every kind of rubber spider to leave on my chair, in my drawer, even in the Register. It's a wonder I didn't have a heart attack, the little horrors!


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Green Man
Date: 17 May 12 - 07:09 AM

The fact that they have all the best weaponry and technology and not one whit of sense about when to stop using them.


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Little Hawk
Date: 17 May 12 - 10:16 AM

The very mention of things like reincarnation spooks BillD. ;-) He can't help but react accordingly.

What spooks me is the thought that a few Americans will still be bitching on Mudcat Cafe about their crazy 2-party political system long after I have left this life behind me. But it doesn't spook me very much...


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: Uncle_DaveO
Date: 17 May 12 - 10:51 AM

Eliza:

My naughty pupils (aged 10) found out my phobia when a spider appeared in the classroom sink. They brought in every kind of rubber spider to leave on my chair, in my drawer, even in the Register. It's a wonder I didn't have a heart attack, the little horrors!

Which little horrors! Two- or eight-legged?

Dave Oesterreich


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Subject: RE: BS: Okay, what spooks you???
From: JohnInKansas
Date: 17 May 12 - 11:11 AM

Quite a long time ago, just after some of the nastiest insecticides had been recently banned, the exterminator who made his fourth trip to our house in response to my then-accomplice-living-companion's spider report explained that:

"I can't completely eliminate spiders in your house, because they won't allow use of anything that will kill them. The best I can do is maybe get them drunk enough that they'll follow me out to the truck looking for another shot."

Even the common "Raid" sometimes only puts them to sleep temporarily, unless can "really soak 'em."

For the "inside" kinds most common in our area now, about the only time you see a spider is when one has wiped out all the bugs in one place and is looking for a new place where the food is better. As long as they're happy, they generally stay out of sight - but of course

they're still there somewhere.

(A bit of encouragement for the squeamish(?))

John


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Mudcat time: 19 May 3:23 AM EDT

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