• BlueFootedPetey
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    23 days ago

    Same little guy. Same. Not the eating cockroaches tho, thanks but thats gross.

  • @[email protected]
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    576 days ago

    I said this the last time this was posted and I’m saying it again

    “THEN MAYBE DON’T MOVE SO FUCKING FAST IT ACTIVATES MY FIGHT OR FLIGHT RESPONSE!!!”

    • @[email protected]
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      146 days ago

      Sometimes I try to imagine a giant version running around in a proportionally fast speed. That really activates my fight or flight response

    • @[email protected]
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      166 days ago

      one of these creepy bastards got inside of my soap dispenser brush thing for doing the dishes. just threw the entire brush away D=

      • @[email protected]
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        26 days ago

        I can catch a lot of things if I sprint, but I don’t usually sprint from the couch to the kitchen.

  • Limitless_screaming
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    227 days ago

    I honestly wouldn’t care if it stayed at one or two of them, but I know if I leave these things and treat them as pets I will get an infestation in no time.

    And with each new one the chances of me feeling one of them walk on my arm increases, and I am not letting that happen.

    • socsa
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      67 days ago

      They are also territorial and won’t actually eliminate a roach infestation because they will kill each other long before they reach sufficient density to make a difference.

      • Limitless_screaming
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        56 days ago

        Meh, don’t need them to end an infestation. Just killing the few roaches that might exist somewhere around is enough to pay their rent.

        If I find one close to my face on the other hand, the place it considered territory would be wiped off the map. It would become an endangered species.

        • @[email protected]
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          36 days ago

          The centipedes at my mom’s house def bite, it’s very painful. Sometimes you need to go to the hospital.

          Basically never walk around my mom’s house barefoot.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 days ago

            Have you considered cleaning out the house and closing all the gaps?

            I know a lot of these insect threads tend to disagree, but sealing a house and only letting in air through very fine meshes is 100% possible.

            Every time I bring this up people start taking like spiders and bugs can phase through solid walls of wood and caulk.

            While I have no understanding for that, I do however understand that poverty or mental or physical health issues can make it difficult to get your home to not be a gappy mess. Especially as renters have no authority to do that.

            • @[email protected]
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              15 days ago

              My reluctance isn’t that this isn’t doable, but the amount of effort it would take to inspect every external surface for small gaps. Cracks, for reasons of personal head cannon, seem much easier to identify. Both the attic and crawl space require a fair amount of persistence in tight, dark spaces with not the best of footing and air quality conditions that are tolerable in limit situations without mitigating equipment.

              The roof is also another tricky spot. Definitely worth it for critter sized openings, but I’m not sure I can pull it off for bug sized.

              With that said, I think most people will get a lot of bang for the time if they inspect doors, windows and search for cracks on the sidewalk along the foundation.

        • 🏴Akuji
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          75 days ago

          Nope!
          Ackshually, it stings, its forcipules aren’t a part of its mouth 🤓
          But when it comes to humans, it’s in reaction to a threat (someone mentioned being stung by one that hid inside their slippers: put yourself in the numerous shoes of a centipede, cornered by a giant fleshy thing invading the cozy place you just found…)
          It would rather flee otherwise.

  • @[email protected]
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    87 days ago

    These mother fuckers would sometimes drop on me and my father. Creepy fast little fuckers man

  • @[email protected]
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    66 days ago

    When I first moved to Taiwan, I rented an Airbnb for 3.months to find my footing in the city.

    One night I slipped into bed and felt the most painful bite I have ever felt in my life. My entire leg then proceeds to swell up and puss on the site where the centipede bit.

    I would rather have the cockroach.

  • @[email protected]
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    337 days ago

    In a related story: I met with my new housecleaning service a few days ago and told them I had one very special request: DO NOT DISTURB THE SPIDERS IN OUR BEDROOM!! They are my mosquito-munching pets; just mop the floor under them.

  • @[email protected]
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    197 days ago

    They are fascinating little creatures. They have a bunch of stripes on them, even across their legs. They eat dangerous house pests. They are venomous, but their “bites” are less irritating than a mosquito bite. They also don’t technically bite, they envenomate using two modified legs.

    • @[email protected]
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      117 days ago

      Centipedes are scary because they have so many legs and they scurry very fast with incredible agility. In general I think we feel a revulsion to small critters with that kind of speed and agility. But if they’re too small (fly sized or smaller) then it’s more annoyance than revulsion.

      The many legs thing is a real mystery though! I think it might be some kind of proxy for venomous critters, as spiders and centipedes have more legs than insects and also tend to be more venomous (apart from some Hymenopterans).

      • @[email protected]
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        96 days ago

        I dunno, silverfish are smaller than flies, but they still give me that revulsion response.

          • @[email protected]
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            56 days ago

            I think they move too smoothly. I think it’s maybe a combination of the “ew, tiny things are parasites” and the “ew, smooth-moving things are snakes” responses, even though neither of those is appropriate for the silverfish itself. I think that’s part of what happens with the house millipedes, too.

      • @[email protected]
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        287 days ago

        I have a strong dislike of centipedes as well. One time years ago I had a terrible dream that a large centipede (one of those big jungle ones) was crawling all over my body. As it raced down my arm I slapped at it, with a jolt of pain my arm went instantly numb as it bit me.

        I startled myself awake to realize I was laying on my arm and it had gone completely asleep and was numb. Still one of the scariest dreams I’ve ever had haha.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 days ago

        What? Why would it be? I think humans are scared of anything that surprises them or that they cannot immediately understand what it’ll do. But why centipedes in general? I’ve never had any fear of them, unlike other arthropods that moved more erratically and faster.