If you are a spider, and you think you're going to live rent-free in my house, you may have to rethink your last thought. I am not as spider-friendly as some. In fact, there are times when I would just as soon smash one that is crawling around on my floor as quickly as possible. I may end up throwing an article of clothing over it first before doing the wild and crazy necessary dance, but I don't just allow these things full access. I say that, then I remember the three years I lived with a Daddy-Longlegs in my bathroom. To be honest, it wasn't my bathroom, but my parents' bathroom.
I can't remember the exact dates, but I was living off and on with my mom and dad for weeks or even months at a time between going back and forth somewhere. I would hesitate to take a bath, knowing that the little creepy dear was watching me. He'd been given a name. You can't just sweep down a menace if he's been given a name. I have no idea to this day whether or not it was a boy spider, but since it was a Daddy-Longlegs and not a Momma-Longlegs, it went without saying that Henry was in fact a boy! He can get back at me later if I was misgendering him or her; someday, when we're all in Heaven, and he finds me again.
Henry unceremoniously lived in the bathroom because it was quiet, and it was warm and sometimes steamy. He'd hang out on the ceiling, edging his way over to the shower. If I saw him anywhere near the shower head or any of the faucets, I would simply postpone my bath or shower until he decided to move again. It wasn't often that he forced me to change my mind. He was, in that regard, a very likable and amicable roommate. I did learn a bit about the species from talking to others. Every now and again, I'd see a fly or something caught up in a web in the corner, and I knew Daddy-Longlegs aren't actually spiders in the first place. They can't make webs. There must have been something else in the bathroom bringing Henry food.
I'd exit the bathroom, and my mom would call out, "Say hi to Henry for me!" I'm not sure if she was mocking me, or if she was as sick as I was for not just killing the damn thing. The spider I saw in my house today is just lucky I didn't have a blow torch handy! I just really don't do spiders. I'm not jumpy when I see them, but I don't want them hanging out where I can see them. I know the old adage that we're only 10 feet away from a spider at any moment of our lives. I get that, but I don't have to see them, do I? I don't have to interact. I can still hate quietly and either walk away, or find something to pick it up and assist it going outdoors where I think they belong.
Of course, we could try to see if from the multiple-eyes view of the hairy little monsters, and say maybe I'm invading their space. Maybe they were here first, but they're not paying the mortgage, I am. They will either stay out of sight or face the bug-bomb if I see them too often. Then there's Laura. She defends every one of them unless it's a Recluse or Black Widow. She'll go to bat for every Wolf spider on the planet, explaining why they are so needed. Fine, he can feel needed in her room, not mine! He needs to understand that.
I didn't have anything handy to squish him with before he (again, me assuming the spider's gender) under the baseboard and found safety. I did fumigate his fuzzy little butt with 1/4 a can of spray disinfectant. My room smells good now, and it will be germ-free for weeks. The dog can't go into the space for another hour or so, but the spider, you know, will survive! He will likely scurry his little self over to another place, another space, and just hang out again -- until he attacks me in my sleep or something. He may have to be found.
I was a little rattled by it, so I did what I thought was a good thing to do. I ate a Hostess Ding Dong, gulped down a 20-oz bottle of water, took in a few deep breaths, and told Laura she needs to try and find him because if I do, he may not survive it. She's still sitting at her computer, laughing at me. If she keeps it up, I'll grab the entire box of Ding Dongs and not share. I am not above that. I know how to punish that woman. I gave birth to her! You'd think she could at least save me from the grips of a harmless insect now and again.
Photo Credit: Thrive Pest Control (this isn't really Henry, but this is what he looked like)

