Compost Studios

I am a writer, nature lover, budding artist, photography enthusiast, and creative spirit reducing, reusing, and recycling midlife experiences through narrative, art, photos, and poetry. 

I can be reached at:

veronica@v-grrrl.com      

Backdoor
The Producers
Powered by Squarespace
 

Copyright 2005-2013

Veronica McCabe Deschambault, V-Grrrl in the Middle, Compost StudiosTM

Content (text and images) may not be cut, pasted, copied, reproduced, channeled, or broadcast online without written permission. If you like it, link to it! Do not move my content off this site. Thank you!

 

Disclosure

All items reviewed on this site have been purchased and used by the writer. Sale of items via Amazon links generates credits that can be redeemed for online purchases by the site owner. 

 

Advertise on this site

Contact me by e-mail for details. 

« The Politics of Napping | Main | Something to Protest About »
Saturday
Oct292005

By Popular Demand: The Spider Story

In honor of Halloween, I'm sharing my creepy spider story. Apologies to those who have already heard it or seen dramatic re-enactments at parties.

Not too long ago, in a faraway place called Virginia, there lived a Grrrl who did not think she suffered from arachnophobia........

It was a summer morning, and I was getting ready to take a walk with my Favorite Boy to see tadpoles in a deep puddle in the neighborhood. I went out to the garage to put on my sneakers, and as I reached in to pull up the tongue of the shoe, I felt a sharp prick on my hand. Ouch! Thinking there was a burr in the sneaker, I put my hand BACK INTO THE SNEAKER and felt a quick sting on my knuckle. As I was pondering what was in my shoe, out walked the biggest friggin' SPIDER EVER! I could actually see him swivel his head around and gaze at me with his creepy eyes. He walked TOWARD me with a swagger, as if daring me to squish his ENORMOUS body.

Did I unleash my inner Bitch and promptly make that spider two dimensional? No. Instead I screamed like I have never screamed before. This was not a shriek of surprise, this was a primal reaction. I only stopped screaming long enought to take my next breath and scream some more. And if the screaming wasn't bad enough, I actually did the hysterical woman dance, jumping up and down and flapping my hands like a frustrated toddler. And I started to cry. It was not my proudest moment.

The E-Man rushed out to the garage and asked me what was wrong. I pointed to the SPIDER, still defiantly holding its ground in spite of my hysterics. "That son of a bitch bit me--twice!!!!!" And I start sobbing uncontrollably. In my defense, this was not long after my BIG CAR ACCIDENT and before the meds, so let's consider I was a little on EDGE.

The E-Man, seeing me completely out of control, leads me to the bathroom to run cold water over the bites. He asks, "Are they extremely painful?"

I screech--"Nooooo. Noooo. I'm just FREAKED OUT! I AM COMPLETELY FREAKKKKKKKKED OUUUUUT!"

And that's when the E-Man calls 911, afraid I'm having some wild reaction to the spider bites. And then I'm mortified because "THIS IS NOT AN EMERGENCY. THIS A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN!" I'm sure I'm going to be committed.

The EMTs don't take me away. They don't condescendingly tell me to calm down and get a grip. They don't offer me a cozy straitjacket and a little white pill. They admit the spider, now captured in a jar for identification, is HUGE. They make Spiderman jokes and don't make me feel like a jerk, even though, well, I feel like a jerk anyway. They even make me laugh a little. After they tell me to ice the bites down and watch for a reaction, they leave.


I tell E-Man, "I'm going to the chiropractor now [for my post accident therapy], and I want you to bomb the garage while I'm gone. I want every mother f--king spider in that space to wish it had never been born. I want a pesticide residue to kill everything with more than two legs for MONTHS."


And you know, he carried out the HIT for me. And I never loved him more than when I parked the car in the garage hours later and saw NO SIGNS OF INSECT LIFE. He even vacuumed up the webs, egg sacs, and spider poop throughout the garage and stuck the crevice attachment into every shoe in case there were any holdouts.

It was one of the nicest things he ever did for me. And if St. Francis of Assisi, witnessing this vengeful act of insecticide, signed the order sending us straight to hell that day, well, OK. At least I'd be spending eternity with my favorite exterminator. 

Unless, of course, he's  granted amnesty. Afterall,  he took the biggest meanest, sassiest spider of all, the one that BIT HIS WIFE TWICE , and set it free in the backyard to be fruitful and multiply.

 And to think I thought he loved me....

© 2005 by Veronica McCabe Deschambault. All rights reserved.

October 29, 2005

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (2)

Eeeeeuuuwwwww. Ick. I'm itchy now. Here's my spider story: Years ago, as a senior in high school, I came home from a party and quietly got ready for bed. As I sat on the edge of the bed and reached to turn out the table lamp, I glanced down at my pillow where I noticed a teeny piece of fuzz - or so I thought. As I tried to brush it off, it jumped and so, of course, did I.

As I tried to catch the quick little fellow I noticed he had a friend on my blanket, then I saw another, then another and so on and so on. It seemed they were dropping from the sky. So I looked up at my ceiling where - to my horror - I saw the whole extended family. My ceiling was covered with itty, bitty spiders dropping like parachuters. That's when I screamed, fled and woke my sleeping parents.

It was after midnight as we donned hats and strapped vaccum cleaner extension tubes to us like the Ghostbusters. We stripped the linen and fumigated and I slept on the pull out couch still grossed out and itchy.

The next day, we discovered a spider's nest in a tree just outside my bedroom window.

To this day I am always looking at walls and ceilings and I can spot a tiny spider in a corner from across the room. And like E-man, I catch them and release them to the woods in the backyard. I think it must be some sort of hope that I'll be able to undo the karma from the massacre that occured that night some 20+ years ago.
October 29, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterLisa
Ok-- I have to share this, although you'll probably wish I had not. As a disclaimer, I recommend you do this while you're camping, or outside, and not in your house (and never, NEVER as a slumber party game for squealy girls). Some things you're better off not knowing.

It's called Spider Sniffing (and it is nothing like Cow Tipping-- this actually works, I swear). At night, when it is very dark and scary, take a flashlight, turn it on, and hold it on the end of your nose (pointed out, not at your face). As you look around, you'll see little sparkly dots glittering all around. Move toward them, holding the light on the end of your nose (yes, I realize you feel incredibly stupid at this point. Do it where you know no one is watching, or get someone else to do it with you so you can pretend it's perfectly normal), and when you get to the source, you'll find a spider. You can find the teensiest spiders this way, their creepy little spider eyes glittering away in the beam of your flashlight. What you do with the spiders after you find them is strictly your business. For afterlife liability reasons, I do not wish to know.

So there you have it. It really is quite cool, but again, I do NOT recommend doing this inside your home.

Happy Halloween!
October 29, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterGranola-grrrl

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.