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    Thursday, June 25, 2009

SO, WHAT ARE YOU AFRAID OF?


It was a dark and stormy night.

Actually the moon was out and there was only a 20 percent chance of rain, but come on, folks, I’m trying to create a mood here.

I was at my computer, dog at my feet, late night TV keeping me company, when I heard it.

The flap, flap, flap of a pair of predatory wings.

The bat signal.

And then I saw it. Flying between my bedroom and my office. I know what is running through its little bat brain. How the hell did I get here, how do I get out, and should I sink my fangs into that old white guy’s neck before I go?

And there stand I, the old white guy, heart racing, chest tightening, sphincter loosening.

My office is separated from my bedroom by a glass door. I shut it. Then I did what any red-blooded man of action would do. I called the cops. As you read this, understand that I live in a small town.

DISPATCHER: Hello, what is your emergency?
ME: There’s a bat in my bedroom.
DISPATCHER: Marshall, is that you?
ME: Oh hi, Carol. There’s a bat in my bedroom. Can you come over and get rid of it. I’m freaked out, and I’m not too embarrassed to ask a woman.
DISPATCHER: I’m just going off duty. I’ll send someone else.
ME: I don’t care if you send your grandmother. Just make sure she has a gun.

Ten minutes of terror later, I see the flashing lights in my driveway. I yell out the window that the front door isn’t locked.

The cop comes upstairs. If he tries to give me a lecture on how dumb it is to leave the door unlocked, I’m ready for him. How else would the cops get in if there were a bat attack. Thankfully, it doesn’t come up.

He searches the house. I call my wife who is in the city. She laughs. Her main contributions to the conversation are, “glad I’m not there,” and “make sure it’s gone before I get back.”

The dog was no help either.

The cop comes back upstairs.

COP: I opened the front door, then I searched the house. I didn’t see it. He must have flown out.
ME: He didn’t. They never do. He’s waiting for you to leave. Please shut the door before you let his whole damn family in.

He shuts the door, then offers to walk through the house with me to prove that it’s safe. I grab a hat and a blanket and we go from room to room.

ME: Sorry to call you. I can deal with snakes, spiders, mice, bears, anything. But bats creep me out.
COP: Me too.

And then I see it. A dark brown wood beam over an upstairs window has a dark brown fuzzy lump on it.

ME: Do your duty, officer.
COP: Do you have a newspaper or a magazine?
ME: No, do you have a gun?

We opt for the classic solution. A broom.

With Ninja like precision, I get the weapon from my arsenal in the broom closet, and the cop brings down the intruder.

ME: Why don’t you put him under the wheel of your squad car and back over him to make sure the little bloodsucker is really dead?
COP: I think he’s really dead.
ME: Have you ever read Bram Stoker? Brooms only stun them. Do you have a wooden stake?
COP: No.
ME: How about a pencil?
COP: Don’t worry about it. I’ll take him with me. Get some sleep.
ME: Not here. Not tonight. Bats travel in packs. I’m calling a friend and sleeping at his house.

Which I did. And the next day I called the local animal damage control guy and had the house bat-proofed.

Fear of bats is called chiroptophobia. And I am not alone.

In Batman Begins we learn that as a boy, Bruce Wayne fell into an abandoned well and stirred up thousands of bats. The trauma left him chiroptophobic. When he decided to fight crime, he became Batman, using his own fear to strike fear in the hearts of Gotham City’s most notorious evildoers.

So what’s your biggest phobia?

For me, the only thing scarier than having a bat in my house is having the in-laws fly in for a three-day weekend.

Marshall posted on June 25, 2009 9:49 AM
Comments

The eventual discovery that I'm not my own worst critic.

harmzie posted on June 25, 2009 10:19 PM

3 day weekend, it is time to play the swine flue card

John posted on June 25, 2009 10:38 PM

I used to be afraid of spiders, now I just hate them. I just decided one day it was ridiculous to be afraid of something so much smaller than me and have been happily killing them (in the house; I leave them alone outside) ever since. I still think they are hideous things that move in a freakishly unnatural way, but I'm not 'afraid' of them anymore.

Elizabeth White posted on June 26, 2009 10:19 AM

I have to admit, I used to be so scared of spiders,a paralyzing panic-inducing fear, I called a neighbor to kill a wolf spider in my sink. All she did was wash it down and turn on the disposal. Somehow, in the ten years since I have been able to learn to defend myself.

These days, I continue to be afraid of the dark.

Afraid, of simple things, like the safety and well-being of my kids, parents, etc.

However, the panic attack inducing, anxiety filled fear is going places. Yep, that's right if it is not part of my daily routine, work, store, church, etc. I freak. A family get-together, meeting new people, work event, party, you name....

I don't really understand the fear, but it is there and real. Once I get where I am going, I am fine. Really fine. I am usually the life of the party, I make everyone feel at ease, I nurture, I draw shy people out.

It's the getting there that does me in. Sometimes, I don't get there the fear is so bad.

debb posted on June 26, 2009 3:43 PM

Who doesn't have a fear of something? Me? snakes (I even hate seeing the word) Ok, now that my heart has stopped racing, I'll tell you a true Bat story.

My son & his wifey moved to San Francisco to make it big in the bigger city. On Halloween night they dress for the event & sat on their front stoop of their little duplex with a large bowl of candy. A few tricksters came, it got late and they called it a night. In the middle of the night, said son woke his sleeping wife to a strange rustling sound coming from the kitchen counter. (manly son's fear is spiders - hero wife fears nothing living).

Their little duplex is so small that you can see the kitchen counter from the bed - actually, you can touch the kitchen counter from the bed. Anyway, wifey gets up to investigate and finds a "live" bat in the candy bowl. A bat in the Halloween candy bowl on Halloween night! They quickly dressed for attack, got a broom, an umbrella, and called animal control - who started laughing at their story, but sent someone out right away. Anyway, the bat was captured by the pros & tested, the candy thrown out and they had a story to tell about the bat that showed up for some Halloween candy.

Sam posted on June 27, 2009 9:32 AM