Our Aversion to Snakes and Spiders

It's not total, but nearly so. People show a widespread, unusually fast fear response to snakes.

Anecdotally, it seems that this is somewhat less in people who, like myself, grew up in an area without poisonous snakes, but the fear or aversion to snakes remains strong.

If you believe in evolution as the origin of humanity, it could be because our species, and the primates before us, spent millions of years under threat from venomous snakes.

Because venomous snakes were a major cause of injury and death among early primates and human ancestors, those who quickly detected snakes were more likely to survive and pass on their genes.

Primates evolve specialized visual sensitivity to snakes or even snake shapes, allowing for extremely rapid threat recognition.

From a little bit of research, I've found that people do show stronger autonomic responses (sweating, heart rate spikes) to venomous snakes than to harmless ones, but nearly everyone, including those who do not identify as being afraid of snakes, will demonstrate these responses even to harmless snakes. People show stronger responses to snakes than to modern threats like guns, perhaps because, as a species, we've dealt with threats from snakes longer than we have guns. This would correspond with additional data indicating that people have stronger autonomic responses to knives than to guns. As a species, we have dealt with threats from knives far longer than from guns.

People who grow up without venomous snakes often dislike them and will be startled when suddenly confronted with a harmless snake.

People in regions without venomous snakes often show less intense aversion, but the aversion doesn't disappear because the evolutionary predisposition remains, and the visual cues of snakes still trigger the fear center in our brain, even in people who claim not to be afraid of snakes.

Even among people with little or no experience with snake species, venomous species elicit stronger physiological fear responses than nonvenomous ones, suggesting that our brains can discriminate danger levels automatically. This isn't true in all venomous snake species, but it is in most.

Across cultures, snakes are often portrayed as evil, deceptive, dangerous, aggressive, mysterious, or untrustworthy.

Abrahamic religious traditions portray the serpent as evil and responsible, in part, for mankind's banishment from Eden, but that theme carries through to other parts of Scripture, including Christ stomping on the head of a snake.

Regardless of traditions, snakes are almost never neutral. They are either tempters, tricksters, destroyers, or guardians of forbidden knowledge.

This is seen not only in the Eden story but also in Greek, Mesopotamian, and Hindu myths. Quetzalcoatl, in Mesoamerican traditions, is portrayed as benevolent but still powerful, mysterious, and otherworldly. Even when the snake is portrayed positively, it's never mundane.

Cultures without venomous snakes still develop snake-as-evil stories, while cultures with venomous snakes often develop snake-as-sacred myths.

In Christian traditions, the serpent is the first deceiver, the creature that introduces doubt, temptation, and disobedience. The curse in Genesis (on your belly you shall go) frames the snake as permanently degraded and opposed to humanity. In later Christian interpretation, it became associated with Satan. Christ crushing the serpent's head becomes a symbol of triumph over evil.
Marie grew up in Stone Mtn, GA full of spiders and snakes. She has told a couple stories here about spiders and snakes, like the one about her mother getting bit by a rattle snake and almost losing her leg. She also grew up in Atlanta which seldom had snakes like the woods in Stone Mtn.
 
That's all well and good but I don't think I want to play with them. ☺️
As an animal lover, I'll play with anything that can't kill me. :giggle:
In elementary school. I was so bored with the subjects crammed down my throat like English Literature or History that I hid a book about animals on my lap while I occasionally looked up at the teacher to pretend I was paying attention.
I usually got away with it until one time I saw a shadow slowly covering the book & the teacher said, "Is that what we're doing now, Tony, studying about Black Bears?" I said, "Well, no." He said, "Pay attention" & made me close the book. I thought, "Well, anything is more interesting than Shakespeare." And, "I couldn't care less about the war of 1812."
 
Snake Island off the coast of Brazil was on the Science channel today🤢🤢


Snake Island (officially named Ilha da Queimada Grande) is a 4,921-foot-long island off the coast of São Paulo, Brazil in the Atlantic Ocean. It is famously restricted to the public and infamous for its massive population of the Golden Lancehead (Bothrops insularis), one of the deadliest venomous snakes in the world. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Key Facts About Snake Island
  • Location: Roughly 33 kilometers off the coast of Brazil's mainland.
  • The Snakes: The island is home to an estimated 2,000 to 4,000 Golden Lanceheads. They are highly venomous pit vipers that can melt human flesh, and they exist nowhere else on the planet. [1, 2]”
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Believe this or not, the narrator alleges the snakes are on the endangered list because people are sneaking onto the island and poaching them. They allegedly bring anywhere from $10,000-$30,000 per snake. No thank you.
 
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