- Joined
- Dec 26, 2006
- Messages
- 593
This question has bothered me for years, and I figured what better time to make a thread about it than now, when I should be studying for the big bad AP American Government exam that's tomorrow? 
That question is: how come some people love tarantulas but are afraid of true spiders? (I fall in this category, and I'm sure many of you all do too.) I've been wanting to know the psychology of this selective arachnophobia for quite a while and have never really gotten a good answer.
This question was brought up again yesterday when a friend was over at my house. I was drooling over tarantula pictures on the internet when a jumping spider decided to make its presence known in my room. I immediately jumped up, backed away, and shivered uncontrollably - of course, my friend thought I was just completely insane! How can someone who loves these gigantic, hairy beasts be so terrified of those tiny house spiders?
So I've tried asking myself why I like tarantulas and why I don't like true spiders. Here's some rough ideas:
Tarantulas:
-Their fuzziness is adorable and their general anatomy is beautiful
-I love their tiny little beady eyes - I think they look cute
-I just find them so fascinating in everything they do
True spiders:
-They look "sharp"; it's a silly statement, but their thin, crisp, sharp-looking legs are frightening to me
-Other parts of their anatomy just freak me out (particularly some species' gigantic peering eyes, the shape of the fangs, etc.)
-They creep up on us when we least expect it
-Certain species can be potentially harmful (I'm always afraid to go into our storage shed because we sometimes find black widows in there)
-They just don't capture my fascination the way Ts do
Whenever I see a true spider, I either try to ignore it and hope it leaves, or I get someone else to kill it. I can't take them outside myself, and I can't kill them by any means other than by sucking it up with the vacuum cleaner.
It just seems that the bigger they are the more I should be frightened of them, because when I see a large true spider I go ballistic (much more so than if I'd seen a smaller true spider). Maybe tarantulas don't bother me because I just never grew up around them, so they've never "sneaked up" on me before and startled me. They just seem like entirely different groups of animals to me, not related in any way to true spiders.
I really need a psychology expert to explain this to me, because this is so embarrassing! :8o
That question is: how come some people love tarantulas but are afraid of true spiders? (I fall in this category, and I'm sure many of you all do too.) I've been wanting to know the psychology of this selective arachnophobia for quite a while and have never really gotten a good answer.
This question was brought up again yesterday when a friend was over at my house. I was drooling over tarantula pictures on the internet when a jumping spider decided to make its presence known in my room. I immediately jumped up, backed away, and shivered uncontrollably - of course, my friend thought I was just completely insane! How can someone who loves these gigantic, hairy beasts be so terrified of those tiny house spiders?
So I've tried asking myself why I like tarantulas and why I don't like true spiders. Here's some rough ideas:
Tarantulas:
-Their fuzziness is adorable and their general anatomy is beautiful
-I love their tiny little beady eyes - I think they look cute
-I just find them so fascinating in everything they do
True spiders:
-They look "sharp"; it's a silly statement, but their thin, crisp, sharp-looking legs are frightening to me
-Other parts of their anatomy just freak me out (particularly some species' gigantic peering eyes, the shape of the fangs, etc.)
-They creep up on us when we least expect it
-Certain species can be potentially harmful (I'm always afraid to go into our storage shed because we sometimes find black widows in there)
-They just don't capture my fascination the way Ts do
Whenever I see a true spider, I either try to ignore it and hope it leaves, or I get someone else to kill it. I can't take them outside myself, and I can't kill them by any means other than by sucking it up with the vacuum cleaner.
It just seems that the bigger they are the more I should be frightened of them, because when I see a large true spider I go ballistic (much more so than if I'd seen a smaller true spider). Maybe tarantulas don't bother me because I just never grew up around them, so they've never "sneaked up" on me before and startled me. They just seem like entirely different groups of animals to me, not related in any way to true spiders.
I really need a psychology expert to explain this to me, because this is so embarrassing! :8o