According to a recent poll, "one in 10 American adults and 1 in 5 teenagers will deal with a specific phobia disorder at some point in their lives." According to me, 100% of everyone from Dallas, TX to Dalhart, are overwhelmingly afraid of snakes. Show me where I am wrong.

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In fact, according to a YouGov poll, "the most common fear – one shared by nearly one in three U.S. adult citizens – is of snakes." That's more people than who are afraid of heights, spiders, and public speaking.

It would appear, as a human race, our worst nightmare would be having to instruct, influence, engage, educate, or entertain a snake den intermingling with spiders whilst standing on the edge of the JPMorgan Building in Houston.

Big yikes!

And good luck getting away from them, our reptile friends are found nearly everywhere on the planet. If you must have them gone from your life there are five places you can move: Antarctica, Iceland, Ireland, Greenland, or New Zealand

Snakes aren't the loudest of animals, and can, thus, quietly ninja their way into our homes and lives. There are many ways they do this, one certainly seems like urban legend, but they do it, find their way into homes

Here's a list of five potential ways snakes can enter your house this summer, hopefully it can give you a leg up on a potential legless reptile nemesis, who is likely visiting your attic, or up your toilet, in pursuit of prey or on the lookout for a safe place to lay some of their snake eggs indoors.

Five ways snakes could end up in your home this summer:

WARNING: Five Preventable Ways That Snakes Enter Texas Homes

More people are afraid of snakes than heights, spiders, and public speaking, according to a YouGov poll"The most common fear, one shared by nearly one in three U.S. adult citizens, is of snakes." Here are five common ways they get into your home:

Henderson County Sheriff Looking for Top 10 Fugitive with $5,000 Reward

There is a new update of the Texas 10 Most Wanted and 10 Most Wanted Sex Offenders list with Henderson County authorities still looking for a fugitive with a $5,000 reward.

Gallery Credit: Texas Department of Public Safety

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