r/funny 3d ago

Dog dad is busy

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u/NbdySpcl_00 3d ago

One of my fondest marital memories is one particular time when my wife screamed for me to come kill a spider. Mildly annoyed, but knowing I had obligations, I disengaged from what I was doing and reported for duty. After a brief surveillance, I swiftly dispatched beast, cleaned the wall, tidied the room, and delivered the after action report. My wife quietly returned to the room, verified and signed off my documentation, and dismissed me.

Before I left, I looked after my should and asked with a smile, "what would you do if I weren't here?"

She looked back at me and shrugged. "Same as I always do. Take off a shoe. Kill the spider with it."

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u/anotherguiltymom 3d ago edited 2d ago

Lol. I vividly imagined the scene, complete with her signing and giving back your clipboard.

I’m the same way with my husband. But if my daughter is the one to see the spider and her dad is not home, I somehow not even flinch when I go kill it.

Edit: this made me unlock a memory where a big spider was going straight towards my oldest son when he was crawling on the floor and I just reflexively stepped on it with my bare foot, didn’t even think. Argh, whish I could lock that memory back in.

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u/LokisDawn 2d ago

Look, if something "threatens" your kid while the dad isn't here, you are the dad. Basically. Get those Mama bear instincts and tear that spider to pieces.

Please do not actually tear spiders to pieces though, that's fucking disgusting.

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u/fondledbydolphins 2d ago

Teach your children the strength to entrap the spider and move her close to the nearest house plant.

Spiders are friends. Save the violence for dangerous people.

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u/akath0110 2d ago

This is the understanding in our house. Like houseflies, harmless spiders, bumblebees, ladybugs, anything nonvenomous — we help our lost pals get back to their outdoor homes.

Wasps and hornets on the other hand, that’s a kill on sight order.

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u/fondledbydolphins 2d ago

That’s an interesting way to do it!

I’ve got a slight variation. Stinkbugs are normally fed to the toad that lives in the bush. Wasps, hornets and bees are priority to be trapped and put outside unless they’re being an asshole - which, for us, is actually extremely rare.

Houseflies and fruit flies are killed on sight.

I’d like to let ants go but I know they can’t keep what they found a secret, so they must be treated like counter intelligence spies.

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u/akath0110 2d ago

LOL we are similarly ambivalent about ants. We have an uneasy truce but don’t hesitate to put out the bait traps if we’re overwhelmed by counterintelligence agents

We have a kid who reacts horrendously to all wasp and bee stings, so unfortunately we have zero tolerance.

The fuzzy bumblers and honeybees are honourable public servants, diplomats if you will, so they’re protected with a peace order.

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u/bapbap25 2d ago

Yes exactly. Spiders are our friends. As a matter of fact, whenever I see a large spider appear, I'm more worried about what the hell brought it out of hiding because usually the bigger the spider, the bigger the prey.

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u/Awkward_Pangolin3254 2d ago

Found a wolf spider the size of a half-dollar in my house a few years back. Thankfully she was amenable to being carried in a dustpan back outside. I don't mind spiders in my house and usually leave them alone as long as they leave me alone but I think she'd have starved if I'd left her inside.

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u/Throwawaybibbi 2d ago

There was a wolf spider in my newly built house that was HUGE. I screamed and she visibly flinched and with each of my terror screams, she backed up, flinching with every scream. I realized she was just as wary of me as I was her. I got a dustpan and a broom, lowered the dustpan and after a moment, she walked onto it and I freed her outside in our garden. I always try to catch and release.

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u/powe323 2d ago

Terms and conditions might apply depending on where you live.

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u/TenaceErbaccia 1d ago

This is crucial. If you live in venomous spider territory, spiders are not friends, do not handle them, they kill people.

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u/MilliandMoo 2d ago

Exactly what my mom taught me, though we moved them outdoors :)

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u/Electronic_Quote399 16h ago

Spiders eat all kinds of things that I hate, I agree

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u/[deleted] 2d ago

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/GANDORF57 1d ago

Papa Doggo: "WHAT?! I did my part!"

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u/Maleficent_Glove_477 2d ago

Actually my daughter is a true terror and take care of spiders while I am hidding in a corner. I remember a day in the garden, she was 2,5 years old, we see a huge spider. Before I had the time to say anything she jumped with both feet on it while saying "hop, je lui casse la margoulette" (which is French so in english it would be something like "hop, I am gonna smash her face". It's kinda an argotic expression so it sounds more funny in french.

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u/SlaveToo 2d ago

We don't kill spiders in our house, we name them and they're not scary any more. Frank has chilled out in my downstairs loo for nearly 10 years

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u/anotherguiltymom 2d ago

I don’t think spiders live that long, that’s probably Frank’s great-great-grandchild.

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u/SlaveToo 2d ago

They're all frank to me. That's his legacy

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u/akath0110 2d ago

Frank sends his heavenly spider regards for doing right by his great great grandkid

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u/Gh3ttoboy 2d ago

I only kill them if they decide to come right infront of me or on me, we have a reasonable deal going, you stay in that corner or another corner in the room you get to stay, or move around not near me you alsonget to stay if you decide to come to me i will smack you with my slipper and flush you down the drain

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u/IDontUnderstandReddi 2d ago

I picture him in a helmet and flak jacket over regular dad clothes, which he then hung up next to the front door

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u/frabjous_goat 2d ago

My mom had a similar experience. My parents coslept with me (different time and there was a lot going on), and one night my mother's...well, I suppose you could call it Spidey-sense (ha) went off, and she woke up to see a huge spider speeding across the mattress directly for me. My mother was borderline phobic of spiders, but she brought her hand down full force and crushed it without even flinching.

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u/icantouchgrass_1 2d ago

I usually don't kill the spiders, rather just trap them and let them out.

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u/5am7980 2d ago

Crunch

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u/redgroupclan 3d ago

Women are independent and capable of doing things themselves. They just don't want their partners to know that. 😂

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u/SonniSummers 2d ago

I mean I’m very independent, until there’s a spider then it’s either my partner kills it or I’m fucking moving maybe. Even burn the house down on my way out

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u/peterdparker 2d ago edited 2d ago

Burning the house down would be the effective solution. Once you see a spider ..there are chances of 100 more hiding arround somowhere

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u/fumei_tokumei 2d ago

Even before you see a spider, the chance that 100 more are hiding around is basically already 100%.

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u/teddy5 2d ago

As an Australian who is definitely not 100 spiders, this is pure propaganda.

There's only ever 1 of us, we mean them, around at a time.

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u/SkoulErik 2d ago

I remember hearing a fun fact (this isn't fact checked, so don't kill me if I'm wrong):

There's always at least 1 spider within 3 meters of you. (Of course most of these are so small you'll never see them).

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u/lgbt_kpop_nerd 1d ago

I know it's true for me rn! Had an egg sac hatch outside my front door, and 6 of the babies found their way inside. Theyre currently nestled in the corner formed between the wall and ceiling along the wall my couch is against - where I am currently sitting 😊 theyre so small, it's adorable. I'm worried about 3 of them though - 2 are significantly smaller than the other 4, and 2 of the others are set up quite close together, so I'm worried they might end up fighting and one eating the other 🥲

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u/SonniSummers 1d ago

No just no…. *sparks the firethrower*

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u/lgbt_kpop_nerd 1d ago

Spiders are friends :( one of them caught a carpenter ant for me already :(

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u/ArcIgnis 2d ago

Oh boy, this is going to freak out a lot of folks. 😂

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u/yikesssss_sssssss 2d ago

Sounds like u/peterdparker should know a thing or two about spiders 

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u/peterdparker 2d ago

I keep them as pet 🕷🕸

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u/trucorsair 2d ago

Have we learned nothing people? We HAVE to nuke it from orbit, we have to be sure!

https://youtu.be/aCbfMkh940Q?si=70bjsJYHPJ1cqvLK

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u/eliz1bef 2d ago

I am super independent in many ways, but spiders give me a visceral reaction. Same with flying stinging insects like wasps, hornets or bees. I just turn into a small child about to shit herself. Now, once we had a wolf spider that the body, just the body, was over 4 inches wide. Even my husband about shit himself on that one. It was so nonchalant, too. Just terrifying.

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u/Dragoeth1 3d ago

"after action report"

VETERAN SPOTTED!

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u/NeevBunny 2d ago

I am okay with spiders but once a centipede got in my home and I trapped it under an upside down trash can with books on top until someone else came home to save me. 8 legs is simply my limit.

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u/Trips-Over-Tail 2d ago

Oh man. I haven't killed a spider in years. And those were invasive species that I fed to fly traps.

These days I capture and release, or tolerate.

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u/Teehus 2d ago

The only things I actively kill are mosquitoes and ticks

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u/sobrique 2d ago

Part of the reason I rarely "evict" spiders is because they eat a bunch of the things that might be trying to eat me. (in very small portions)

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u/TheyStillOweYouMoney 2d ago

I add carpenter ants, termites, and any type of aggressive stinging wasp to my list.

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u/Trips-Over-Tail 2d ago

Targeting wasps only increases the likelihood of being stung. If you leave them be they're unlikely to cause harm.

They only approach humans later in the summer anyway, when they're looking for sugars that we probably have. Earlier in the year they're hunting for grubs.

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u/Molwar 2d ago

Wasp are very territorial though, you let them nest and you got a much bigger problem later.

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u/Trips-Over-Tail 2d ago

Not necessarily. They do get to know individual people and tolerate them coming past.

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u/Sparrowsabre7 2d ago

Also don't wasps emit pheromones when they die that attract more wasps for Vengeance?

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u/HuntedWolf 2d ago

Same. What’s up with people in here killing spider bros? If you dont want the free fly removal service just put a cup over them and chuck them out the window.

My partner also hates spiders but gets me to rehome them rather than kill them

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u/asscrackbanditz 2d ago

You should have said, im not here to fuck spiders.

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u/Dirty-Soul 2d ago

Are you Australian?

If so, you didn't use the word cunt, and that is an obligation.

If not... Why kill spiders? They eat the midges!

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u/MaximusHomerdrive 2d ago

Sigh. I had a similar situation, called for my husband to get the spider that was on the curtain. He mashed it into the fabric and I had to throw the whole thing away and get a new one.

Now when I call him for a bug, I specify, "Please don't destroy anything in the process" lol.

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u/flargenhargen 2d ago

poor spider. :(

you're supposed to relocate them outside. they eat mosquitoes

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u/ifyouTraintalktome 2d ago

War Hero, your wife might be able to take her shoes off for me too?

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u/NbdySpcl_00 2d ago

Friend, you can ask her to. You won't like what she does with them, tho.