I had the ambition to build a sailboat and sail the 7 seas (who's counting?). I worked in a marina for almost (maybe) 3 years, working on sailboats. I worked for 3 different companies, in succession (not concurrently). The last one's owner just loved John Wayne. So much, in fact, that his own sailboat was named "John Wayne,"Thalassophobia (from Greek thalassa θάλασσα, "sea", and phobos φόβος, "fear") is the persistent and intense fear of deep bodies of water such as the sea, oceans, or lakes.
This might be my only true irrational phobia. When I think of open ocean and deep, deep water...I get anxiety just thinking about it. I can imagine spacewalking, getting detached and dying as I float through space and run out of oxygen. I'd be happy to have that happen compared to being alone in open water and drowning. Open ocean? Nope. True fear. Mind you, I'm an excellent swimmer.
I can likely trace this fear to my childhood, from one specific instance that is still stuck in my memory, and it's one of the earliest memories I have. I must have been 3 years old. My family and I were using the pool at the townhouse we lived in. My father put me on the diving board and was trying to get me to jump off the board and into the water/his arms. I had water wings on and no fear of drowning...it was a fear that there was some imaginary shark/monster in the depths. This is actually a separate phobia, but it's the thought of deep, open water that gives me such anxiety now, not the fear of Cthulhu in the depths.
The pool was a bit cloudy from the chemicals used, so you couldn't see the bottom, and it scared the shit out of me. I remember being frozen in fear at the end of the board, and I don't think I ever jumped from there. Mind you, I was fine going in the pool NOT from the diving board. Something about the view from a few feet above the deep end just scared the bejeebus out of me.
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Never a fear of heights, though at great heights (more than 100ft, etc.), I have experienced some mild vertigo sensation.
I was a tree-climbing monkey when I was a kid, and was still climbing tall trees at 20yo. At 19 and 20, I also worked as part of an industrial insulation crew, installing the batt type insulation rolls in warehouses and large structures as they were built.
We (daily) had to walk on steel beams, averaging 45-50ft above the foundation. We typically had safety harnesses and tie-off lines around the edges of the roof, but the areas we were "pushing out" as we worked usually did NOT have tie-off lines (they were supposed to by OSHA guidelines), so we were often free-walking those 4-6" wide beams in order to tape down the edges of the insulation rolls to the beam.
Any hesitations were cured the first day on the job. You either learned to deal with it and walk the beams, or you walked off the job. I was 400 miles from home on the first job I got sent to, so I wasn't about to drive back home and not even get the gas reimbursement, lol.
The older I get, the more phobias I have. Heights and confined spaces never bothered me, I was a volunteer firefighter for many years, and lots of time on some tall ladders, both in training and actual fires. Also confined spaces, to enter attics or crawl spaces to get to the fire, with zero visibility. Also did confined space training where we had to push our air bottle ahead of us through a maze, it was so confined.
No more getting on the roof for me, or going into the crawl space.
Spiders kind of creep me out but I'm not afraid of them unless I suspect they are either a Black Widow or a Brown Recluse, the only poisonous spiders around here AFAIK.The hedges bordering my front walk are a spider web jamboree every morning!
Thanks for my new phobia, jerk!The top one is a regular sand worm... I've used them as bait saltwater fishing many times. They look scary but can only lightly pinch not break skin. (to be clear some larger species CAN break skin and have mild venom to boot!)
The bottom however is a giant predatory/carniverous worm and is about to make short work of that fish!
I wasn't aware there were giant centipedes native to the US, I thought they were mostly in jungle regions like southeast Asia or the Amazon.I was taking a piss up near Mormon Lake and one of these came out of the leaf litter at me. Looked like it was about a foot long. No bueno. I'll count that as a phobia: fear of giant centipedes, specifically when my junk is out in the open.
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I tried. You can't really squish a giant centipede. It's basically this blob of rubber. I killed one back in my twenties (it was like 12 to 15 cm in length and wider than I thought it would be). I stomped on it, thinking that would be it. But no. It tried to run away. At which point, I decided to go full donkey kong and jumped on it like crazy, with both feet (was wearing slippers). I'm sure it was dead on the third attempt coz it stopped moving. My roommate picked it up with something and threw it outside. By the way, no blood. Nothing oozing out of it. It was weird.But giant centipedes? Not sure I'd even attempt to squish one, lol. Big cup of hell nah, I'm out.
Undead? LOL.My roommate picked it up with something and threw it outside. By the way, no blood. Nothing oozing out of it. It was weird.
I would not be surprised if it started moving once outside and ran back into a gutter or something. Don't wanna see one ever again.Undead? LOL.
The "Animal Kingdom" is replete with very scary creatures, but the "Plant Kingdom" is very well represented. Check this other thread I started. In some ways plants can be quite a bit more scary. I was blown away after a while...I would not be surprised if it started moving once outside and ran back into a gutter or something. Don't wanna see one ever again.
I tried. You can't really squish a giant centipede. It's basically this blob of rubber. I killed one back in my twenties (it was like 12 to 15 cm in length and wider than I thought it would be). I stomped on it, thinking that would be it. But no. It tried to run away. At which point, I decided to go full donkey kong and jumped on it like crazy, with both feet (was wearing slippers). I'm sure it was dead on the third attempt coz it stopped moving. My roommate picked it up with something and threw it outside. By the way, no blood. Nothing oozing out of it. It was weird.
You just gave me shivers in the middle of hot weather!run right up your leg!)
You just gave me shivers in the middle of hot weather!
Good thing I reacted immediately when it fell from the ceiling right between me and my friend sitting in the middle of the room. Had it done that during the middle of the night with us comfortably snoozing, the consequences would have been grave. Yes, I AM lucky, thank God!
Another friend of mine came to stay with me while my roommate was gone for a few days. He got some sort of insect bite at night and only felt it in the morning. It was something nasty that turned purplish and didn't go away for several days. I bet that was the same centipede!
Yes, that was actually our fault. We kept throwing garbage in the corner near the entrance to our room. It was a dark area and we didn't pay attention to it. Learned the hard way that it was STUPID because after a few days, one of the boxes which had some fruit leftovers was BRIMMING with maggots! We picked it up in panic and threw it away. Guess that's what helped the centipede grow that large :SThe really "scary" thing is that for the large 'pede to be there in the first place there MUST be a "FOOD-SOURCE" present.
Different beast, but the house centipedes...I literally chopped one that was on the wall in half with a katana, and the two halves took off in opposite directions. That's some nightmare fuel for ya! So yeah...don't put anything past something that doesn't bleed, lol.I would not be surprised if it started moving once outside and ran back into a gutter or something. Don't wanna see one ever again.
Different beast, but the house centipedes...I literally chopped one that was on the wall in half with a katana, and the two halves took off in opposite directions. That's some nightmare fuel for ya! So yeah...don't put anything past something that doesn't bleed, lol.
That was in my twenties. Moved on. Someone else's problem nowBad news is that it's far more likely that whatever the "food-source" was, is STILL THERE. (sleep well!)![]()
That was in my twenties. Moved on. Someone else's problem now![]()
Glossophobia refers to a strong fear of public speaking.
I had a bite on my calf around 4 years ago that got pretty inflamed and scary. Was RX-ed a med, an antibiotic IIRC, oral. 95% sure it was a bite, and I figure probably some spider. Probably happened in the house somehow, possibly in bed.You just gave me shivers in the middle of hot weather!
Good thing I reacted immediately when it fell from the ceiling right between me and my friend sitting in the middle of the room. Had it done that during the middle of the night with us comfortably snoozing, the consequences would have been grave. Yes, I AM lucky, thank God!
Another friend of mine came to stay with me while my roommate was gone for a few days. He got some sort of insect bite at night and only felt it in the morning. It was something nasty that turned purplish and didn't go away for several days. I bet that was the same centipede!
I had a bite on my calf around 4 years ago that got pretty inflamed and scary. Was RX-ed a med, an antibiotic IIRC, oral. 95% sure it was a bite, and I figure probably some spider. Probably happened in the house somehow, possibly in bed.
Off the top of my head I figure you might be able to get over this using a technique based on increments. Kind of like putting your toes in the water rather than jumping in the deep end. It would require a plan and increasing exposure by taking 'baby steps.' Get comfortable addressing a very small group of people, say 2 or 3, then 4 or 5, etc. Different circumstances, evaluating logically as the self-directed therapy progresses what the next step(s) is/are. I figure you can get over it, if you really want to. Completely over it. You are all about attitude, I know that because you said so. Whether you do this depends a lot on how much you want to. You may not care enough. Or, you may actually prefer to be the way you are. That might have benefits. Sometimes people have difficulties doing certain things that arise because those "difficulties" serve some other purpose(s) for the individual.I have Public Performance Anxiety: (stage fright)
"Extreme nervousness experienced before or during participation in an activity taking place in front of an audience."
For me, it happens automatically; it's an issue with my overly-sensitive central nervous system (CNS). I had anxiety my whole life, but got treated for histamine intolerance last year & my life-long constant anxiety has gone away (turns out being flooded with adrenaline & being in "flight or fight" mode 24/7 is not so good for your body lol). As it turns out, there are kind of 2 groups of anxiety:
1. Mental (you talk yourself into getting worried about things)
2. Body (it happens TO you, not by choice)
I'm a pretty chill person & always had a hard time understanding why I had anxiety. Once I got the physical anxiety taken care of, I'm pretty much just left with public-performance anxiety. Anytime I have to speak in front of a crowd of people, it just feels terrible. Pulse races, adrenaline releases, I even get reflux. No amount of thinking my way out of it has cured it; it just happens. It's weird because I'm not mentally afraid of public speaking & do it all the time, but if there's a crowd of people, I dunno, it's like touching a hot burner...the burner is hot regardless of how you feel about it, and for me, that painful anxiety exists despite how I think about it.
I speak to groups of between 10 to 500 people, either in person or on services like Zoom, depending on what I'm presenting. Some are lecture-style where it's just me talking and some are Q&A sessions. It's incredibly difficult to deal with because my mind goes 100% blank, I can't think on the fly, I can't remember stuff in the heat of the moment, I feel EXTREMELY stressed out, etc. I get through it because I have to, but I'm not able to enjoy it because I've got a tsunami of effects that are automatically triggered in the time leading up to it & during it, then I feel terrible for hours or days afterwards.
So I guess that's not really a phobia or a fear, but just some type of automatic psychological reaction. I read Elaine Aron's book "The Highly Sensitive Person", which explained that some people just have way more sensitive CNS's than other people & are automatically triggered into a cortisol dump in different ways. Pretty lame! I avoid doing things like discussion panels or debates because my ability to think on my feet magically dissipates under the spotlight lol. It's like an Amygdala Hijack, but my cortisol floods my brain, adrenaline gets released into my body, and fight/flight/freeze/fawn mode kicks in automatically! SUPER frustrating to deal with! I wish it was just as easy as deciding NOT to get stressed out about it, lol!