If you know me personally, you may know of my severe arachnophobia. An encounter with a spider = shaking, nausea, inability to concentrate on anything else, and likely nightmares for days. Especially the ginormous ones in the somewhat southern state in which I live. Upon moving into our house, I had signed up for pest control and pledged hundreds of dollars per year via my credit card before the 3rd box was unpacked.
Today while playing with the kids, I happened to glance into a vent in the floor and saw my worst fear. A huge hairy wolf spider just sitting there waiting to terrorize me. Fortunately, my 6-year old son is not afraid of any bugs and usually takes care of them for me. However, I did not want this thing in my kitchen so I would not let him take out the vent. I thought (prayed) it might be dead but to verify, I had him throw baseballs at the vent to see if it moved. This was exciting for him on multiple levels — not only was he mommy’s hero but he was allowed to throw a baseball! In the house?!
It did not move. Okay, must be dead. Now how to dispose of the carcass…
Pest control was already scheduled to come today to deal with the bees outside. (This would have been a much better story if they came out SOLELY to deal with the spider… You’ll see why in a minute.) So after the technicican knocked down our nests and sprayed outside, I asked him to come inside, take out our vent, and dispose of the terrifying arachnid giving me an ulcer. So he put his paper shoe covers on and entered my living room. He lifted the vent while I stood 20 feet away in horror.
To my surprise, he said, “The spider must have gone back down the air duct.”
What?! It was ALIVE?! I tiptoed closer to peer over his shoulder and saw it! It was right there in front of him!
“That right there! You don’t see it?!”
He then proceeded to pick up the “spider”, show it to me, and say, “Ma’am, this is a piece of lint.”
image credit: pixabay.com