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Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
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Everyone has their own opinions on everything regardless what it was. There is nothing we can do about it. I know i love snakes and all critters of this world, but that is one voice out of the 6+ billion people on this earth. Just try and educate, then deal with it, or ignore.
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Win them over with a round of mousecicles.
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Well luckily I come from a long line of Herp lovers. Most of family either own herps right now them selves, or have owned previousley as has most of my friends, so I have not had to deal very much with this issue. There is one person that told me that as long as that snake is in my house that they will not come over to visit. I replied with these words as i walked out of her house "Why do you think I got the snake"? We do still talk, but it's via the phone. :mrgreen:
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A great example of this was tonite. I was drafting a baseball team online & mentioned my new friend. One of the guys said that they could never live in a house with a snake. Almost everyone else agreed. After more talking, one of them said "If your snake escaped & you were in the dark you wouldn't be afraid?" I said absolutely not. The only thing that i would be afraid of was steppin on him on accident or sumthin like that. This same person said, "Did you have your snake de-venomized?" After explaining to him that pythons don't have venom, i realized just how uneducated people can really be on this issue.
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As a keeper of over 40 tarantulas, some scorpions, other spiders, and currently 6 snakes, I have to say that there are two things that are largely responsible for peoples uneasieness with these creatures:
1: Hollywood. They have really done an injustice to them and given them a very bad reputatation. People go to the movies and see these "evil" and "menacing" creatures and are taught that they attack without provacation. That their behavior is premedated and that they "attack" people for the sole purpose of hurting or killing them for no reason. Wrong! These creatures are primarily shy and if one gets bitten, it's ususally because the creature felt threatened and acted out to defend itself. How one approaches and body language sends a lot of information to the spider/scorpion/snake.
2: Lack of education. I too was one that was "afraid" of spiders/scorpions/snakes until I took the time to educate myself. Now I've opened my mind up to learning more about them and have learned that they are not the "evil" creatures that Hollywood and our peers have portrayed and taught us that they are. They are just trying to survive in this world the same as the rest of us. They wouldn't be here if they weren't supposed to be and if they didn't have the right to be. They have and serve their purpose too.
I know that we've all heard this before, but I'm going to say it again. More people are bitten by dogs every day and some seriously injured by our beloved canine friends (I have two) than by snakes, spiders, etc.
Education is the key to enlightenment. Give it to people in little doses. Don't try to overwhelm them or they will close their minds to the subject. Just little bits at a time and before you know it, they will be asking questions and showing a sincere interest in learning. Then little by little, that wall comes down.
Food for thought.
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I've seen it all my life. My mom hated them, yet bought me a corn when I was young. All my friends are afraid of them.
I went to the vets once with one of mine, and had it wrapped around my neck. The lady working there decided to be mean about it and got really lippy. She got mad rather then scared. Then ordered me into a corner chair so I wouldn't scare people. Then some kids and their mom came over to see, and asked questions. I told them it wasn't venomous or mean. Then they wanted to hold it. Gotta start young, adults are hopeless.
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Well, I have said it before, i didn't want the snake in my house. My oldest son is allergic to dogs, horses, and i am to cats. we treid fish, killed them all.....hermit crabs made it over a year. my husband has wanted one since i met him 12 years ago. ofcourse, i thought he was crazy. we got sixx in july after we came home from vacation. i got a tattoo for my 30th (i was feeling old.) birthday, and that was one thing my husband "used" for leverage. we went to the pet store to look, and ofcourse the kids fell in love...
everyone that knows me thinks that i am crazy...i love my snake. i even had a python tag airbrushed for the front of my car. (it didn't turn out the best, i am going to have it redone) Hunter was studying reptiles (1st grade) and i brought him to school. i am the only one that handled him, but the kids loved it.
and, ofcourse i get the cruel feeding issues........but, everyone i know put out mouse traps and decon when they have a house guest....not sure why my snake eating is wrong....
if they don't like him, and can't deal with him in his space, they can stay home. i don't push him on anyone because i don't want him scared or to scare them. it is not required to hold him when you visit......but he is here to stay!!!
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People basically use media outlets as educational tools when it comes to snakes. They watch horribly stupid movies like "anaconda" and figure that every snake is venomous, and out to kill them for no reason other than pure evil. One exaple is a neighbor of mine; last spring there was a harmless 2-foot garter snake out by her garage, having babies, and she would not leave her house out of fear!
I'd say that 90 percent of the people I have encountered that hate snakes (at my work and in my family) have never even touched one. They think it's slimy, stinking, and out to get them. Maybe they picked up a garter snake as a kid, and got musked? No, i think it's more like an uneducated, unthinking knee-jerk response to something that scares them becuz it's different and pictured in some religions to be the essence of evil. In reality, it's just another good member of the food chain, a beautifully evolved and swift moving animal!
Nothing in snakekeeping is more awesome than having a friend come over who is terrified of snakes, and they handle yours for a while and completely changed their mind. :)
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My 16-year-old cousin wanted a snake for her birthday in January, so I took her with me to the show in Birmingham and we picked out a nice cbb ball python for her (he's in my gallery), after setting up an enclosure for him in her bedroom. Her best friend Erica told us all about how slimy and scary snakes were and that she didn't want to ever touch him and would prefer he stay in his enclosure when she was over. Well, the next time I was over, Erica was holding Dante and cooing baby talk at him, and when I checked the new enclosure they'd set up and told Kaite her humidity was too low, Erica was the one who was determined to fix it. I love a good conversion. :)
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