This. If i was being mean i wouldn't have said anything about it being a spider video.Theikkru wrote: Sun Sep 20, 2020 5:59 pmJudging from the comments, arachnophobes either find it hilarious, terrifying, or both. The idea is that the hilarity would help defuse the fear. Apparently, jumping spider videos also help (because they look cute and behave intelligently).Impatient wrote: Sun Sep 20, 2020 3:26 pm That's mean. I imagine an arachnophobist literally throwing their smartphone away from them at certain points in the video.
It is a reality, but it wasn't my point.Impatient wrote: Sun Sep 20, 2020 3:26 pm So what does the new land story tell us? that there are millions or billions of spiders sailing around in the atmosphere at any given time, waiting to touch down on uninhabited land by chance?
Dozens. I find it funny how little people pay attention to their surroundings. Quite often too busy to notice them, but people probably pass by about a hundred spiders on an average day, and depending on where you live probably only a very small fraction of them are dangerous. Places with higher populations of black widows and other dangerous spiders obviously would be an exception, but even those don't bother people most days.kirazy wrote: Sun Sep 20, 2020 7:28 pm Absurdity? That's the nature of a phobia, an irrational, overpowering fear. You have to see the spider to have the response. Yes, there are spiders all around you, but how many do you actually see in a given day? I can do days, weeks without seeing a spider myself.
Spiders usually run away from people. I mean, seriously, unless you live in Australia, when's the last time you've seen a spider run towards you? For me, only Wolf Spiders have ever done that, and thankfully they're not dangerous at all (even though they're a bit on the big side). In all honesty, no matter how much you're afraid of spiders, odds are the spiders are having the exact same reaction towards you. That is the part i find absurd.