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More Things Jamaicans are Afraid of

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croaker

After our first “Things Jamaicans Fear Most” article was posted a couple months ago, many of our readers were kind enough to take the time to give us the details of several other things that terrify them. We had no idea unnu so coward! But anyway, many thanks to all the fraidy-fraidy readers who took the time give their feedback and suggestions. Your input has inspired us to write another article about the things that scare the bravest people in the world…

Croaking lizards: If you want to see something funny and also see how fast you can empty a room full of Jamaican women, just put your hand up in the air to stop the conversation, cock your head to one side as if listening keenly, and say something like: “Shhh! Marva, you didn’t hear something a while ago? I could’ve sworn it sounded like one ah dem big croaking lizard!” My advice, however, would be to first make sure your back is against a wall so you don’t get trampled by the stampede of screaming, hysterical women as they flee the room. What would be even funnier, however, is to make a similar comment in a room full of Jamaican men and watch the crowd of hard-core Jamaican men disappear like a cloud of smoke. All of a sudden, large numbers of fully-grown, “hard-back” men will desperately need to go to the bathroom, while others, faces sweating and hands shaking, will mutter things like “Mi need ah cigarette break right now!” as they briskly exit the room.

Getting “Bun”: Want to reduce a Jamaican man to a quivering mass of spineless jelly? Advise him that you have a strong, but unconfirmed, suspicion that his woman has been cheating on him. (Some men will fly into an incoherent rage but that’s for another article) It doesn’t matter how loudly he has proclaimed in the past that “Nuh gyal cyan give me bun!” and “If she waan leave, mek she leave den! Rrrr!”, news of his woman’s infidelity will cause his nerve to shatter like Red Stripe bottles thrown on stage at Sting. Jamaican men are secretly terrified of being cuckolded and it’s not hard to understand why. A huge part of our self esteem rests on our supposed mastery of the fairer sex. When the fairer sex asserts its will by choosing another man over us it amounts to a nullification of our “mastery” which generally destroys our confidence and leaves us a snivelling mess.

Credit Bureaus: This one should properly be filed under “Things Jamaicans will soon be afraid of”. The Jamaican Parliament has been discussing the passage of laws that will allow for the creation of credit bureaus in Jamaica. These credit bureaus will collect data on your credit history (yes, you) and will facilitate the sharing of that data between qualified institutions who will use this data to decide whether or not to extend credit to you and, if so, on what terms. The money you still owe Courts for the sofa you bought in 97? It will be on a file down at the credit bureau. The JPS bill you haven’t paid in 6 months? On file. The flat-screen tv that Singer repossessed last year? Also on file. In fact, it’s just a matter of time before they make a record of the $3,700 you still owe Fatty for 3 lap dances and a massage down at the Pink Bunny Go-Go Club. Every overdue bill, missed payment and unpaid expense will be permanently recorded, stored on a computer and readily available for sharing amongst your creditors. Be afraid. Be very afraid.

Rain: Maybe the fear of rain is not that perplexing. In Jamaica, what starts out as a light drizzle no heavier than morning dew can turn into three days of landslide-causing, crop-destroying, car-washing-away downpours. That said, I still think our fear of rain is a little overdone. Let the sky look even slightly overcast and Jamaicans will postpone their own weddings, much less a bar-b-q, football match or trip to the movies. The real truth of the matter is that we are a “dry-wedda” people. The English are completely different. Short of a category 5 hurricane, an Englishman will pull on his galoshes and raincoat, grab his brolly, calmly step out into the downpour and get on with his life. Not us. At the first sight of rain, traffic will grind to a halt and parents will consider whether to keep their kids out of school for the rest of the week. Others will call in sick an’ lock up inside the house for the whole day wid a cup of Milo and yesterday’s Gleaner.

Being Unable to Perform Sexually: How else do you explain the thousands of performance enhancers, stamina boosters and pleasure arousers available in the Jamaican marketplace? From home-made creations like Irish Moss, Stone and Raw Moon sold on street-corners to modern mass-produced concoctions like Jagra, Mandingo and Power Wine to doctor-prescribed Cialis and Viagra Jamaicans have almost unlimited options when it comes to ensuring sexual satisfaction. Jamaican men love to brag about being bedroom bullies and what not, but I think we realise a fundamental and very sobering truth: If you talk the talk you sure as hell better be able to walk the walk!

Soap: When was the last time you took a crowded NTCS bus from Downtown Kinston to Three Miles on a hot Friday afternoon in the middle of August? The smell is enough to make your eyes water. I don’t want to generalise but obviously there are some (ok, a lot of) folks who are terrified by soap.

Having Your United States Visa Revoked: Let’s be honest, the only reason some of us continue to live in Jamaica is because we have the option of running away at any minute. At the first sign of the revolution we’ll be jumping on a flight to Fort Lauderdale where our second home, our US$ bank accounts and Grandma Iris are already waiting for us. So can you imagine the terror that must have gripped the hearts of many Jamaicans in upper St. Andrew when it was reported recently in the media that the United States Government was revoking the visas of a number of prominent Jamaicans? Perish the thought!

Look out for our next article: “Things Jamaicans are Not Afraid Of”. The list will, of course, include: Being extradited, being brought to justice for criminal deeds generally, unplanned parenthood and speed limits.

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written by datlizardhater, May 31, 2011
I totally agree wid everybady who seh di pikcha nuh necessary. It mek mi blood boil. @YardEdge I heard that from a tourist who was showin me a lizard playing on his finger and that fact still nuh mek me get used to then. I've just become more keen in noticing where they are so I can avoid them.
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written by Ainsworth, May 20, 2011
Most Jamaicans are scrupulous about bathing, but the country is hot, the buses are usually crowded, and perhaps the company does not clean them out regularly enough.
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written by Dianne, November 02, 2010
Funny how we are screaming "Lizard!" at the sight of one & the poor lizard must be screaming "Man!" as he tries to scramble away. Fortunately we don't have any of the fearsome harmful ones in Jamaica except maybe the green lizards who will stand his ground & eyeball you with defiant cynicism even after a few stones have been shied at him.
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written by daughter of jamaica, October 09, 2010
I'm very shocked by your comment about jamaicans not using soap. It's very disrepectful and so so so untrue. I am a Jamaican Londoner born and bred, who have visted family and friends in the motherland many times. One comment I and my siblings all say is" how so so so clean the people are(and by the way, a very clean country"). OH! and we should know, any child in London of a Jamaican family who dears to step out of their house unclean in any way, would surly get it; and my parents were born and bred in JAMAICA.
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written by JennyT, August 23, 2010
As an Englishwoman with a Jamaican for 3 decades I have to say I love lizards - they keep the creepy crawlies away!!! And he already knows our daughter and I didn't tell him one night in a nice, ground-level, hotel room in Negril once a big lizard walking on the wall behind the bed..........we had to keep quiet or suffer trying to move rooms in the middle of the night!!!
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written by ProblemChyle, August 18, 2010
That lizard thing is the real deal .... those little critters are evil.

I don't care who thinks my fear is off the wall ...all lizards must die...dun talk.
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written by Vilma Mc Clenan (please use 'villiemac'), July 07, 2010
All my life I have lived in houses with shingle roof which croaking lizards LOVE!
I developed an unreasoning but very real fear of them and soon learned how to automatically rotate my eyes very quickly around any room that I enter ... just checking for the tell-tale signs of craoking lizards, i.e., "'droppings" high up on a wall. I have a large one ... really more like a crocodile! (at least in my mind) that lives in my dogs' kennel, so I never go in there anymore. Recently, I was trapped on my patio for a good while and could not mobilise myself to open the door to go into the house becaue of the large, catawompous croaker reclining recumbently above my door. So, because of that incident, as I approach my seventieth year of life, I am finally trying to "empower myself by not being afraid of croaking lizards anymore" . Don't ask me if its working ... oonoo jus pray fi me, yu ear!
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written by Ingrid, June 10, 2010
Yep, The lizard picture was not really neccessary.
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written by Phazer, May 27, 2010
Until yu have a green lizard drap pon yu hed fram outa de breadfruit tree you really no kno wha fraid is, me caan tell yu wha happen after dat, only seh mi drawers tek foot and lef me....
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written by Marlene Taylor, May 18, 2010
This site is hilarious. Gees when you are overseas it definately makes you feel absolutely good to be a Jamaican.

By the way, the lizard picture is GREAT. Did you know they are a natural insecticide? I had to learn to live with one in each and every room in my house because my husband would give a lecture each time I scream at the site of one. So, my children and I are now lizard lovers.!!!!!!!
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written by Donna, May 18, 2010
love the site - absolutely hate that helluva lizard yuh ave up a di top part. Mi jus hurry up and scroll pass it before next ting is a animated picture yuh ave deh and it start to move - mi woulda haffi run lef di computer.
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written by natz, May 17, 2010
listen even that picture at the begining of the article freaks me out...i had to scroll very fast so i am not seeing it anymore.....what can i say lizards are my biggest fear...plz dont use that picture again
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written by Melrose Edwards, May 17, 2010
Love the sight. Looks graet and feels like yaad. I can relate. On the lizard business. I live in the hope and I ove bush bush and so my house is full of croakas. baby to great grandfather, seriously. The good thing is they let me know when we are going to get rain. Trus thing. So in this drought situation, the three time we get good good rain so far they had a party and the croaking was deafening. So they give a graet rain forcast. Gotta love them. Respect.
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written by Sheryl, May 17, 2010
Croaking Lizard & forty legs (centepedes) yes I am sooo afraid of them. The aforementiond article forgot to mention our "duppies". Oh yes, you won't ketch a Jamaican going to spend a night at a haunted house waiting for any ghosts! No sah we lef dat fi di eediot dem who want duppy fi bax dem dung!
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written by Billy, May 13, 2010
Me is a animal lover so di pikcha awright wid me. (All life are connected and inter-dependent). Me is also a Portlander so me nuh fraid a rain.(3rd rainiest place in the world). Me fraid a hell doe. So me try fe walk wid me best fren Jesus hevry day.
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written by Jeremy, April 19, 2010
Blue Drawers, Chammie, Drapps, Greater cake, Bammy an fryfish
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written by YardEdge, April 11, 2010
Personally I don't know how Jamaicans can be fraid of lizards...the whole country is crawlin' wid dem...
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written by Ray, March 23, 2010
ok... the picture of the lizard is really unnecessarysmilies/angry.gif
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written by Stacey, March 22, 2010
Jesam scrime unnu out fi gi mi heat failure at work, tek down da picture deh, lawks man!!!
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written by Ali, March 19, 2010
Would you mind using a cartoon picture of the creature instead so I can read the article on full screen please? Thx smilies/smiley.gif
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written by blackpassenger, March 19, 2010
me mus bi di atypical jumaican. fuss af hawl, mi fraid a unplanned parenthood like puss. mi woulda radda terminate. An mi nu fraid fi get bun. mi tell my wife seh, fi mek sure seh shi tek some pickcha an video, suh mi cya watch. An as to visa revokation? dats why mi one ave 3 passpote; one fram jumaica, one fram hinglan an one from merca.

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