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Cicada mania is coming, leaving some with anxiety over the bug-eyed insects

Cicada mania is coming, leaving some with anxiety over the bug-eyed insects
Cicadas have one of the craziest life cycles of any creature on the planet. They will soon be all around and above us. But they spend most of their lives 17 years buried underground, quietly surviving on plant sap. Until one evening when they emerges nips by the billions, even trillions, they're gonna make a jailbreak. They're going to come up out of the ground, they're gonna climb to vertical structures. It could be a tree, it could be a house. If you stand still it could be you. The Cicadas appearance begins to change as the insect begins its brief adult life. They're going to shed their skins within an hour. They're going to then begin to harden up and by morning they're going to assume that wonderful color, jet black body, bright red eyes orange wings and head up to the relative safety of the treetop. Once on the tree top, male cicadas try to woo the females to mate by performing a courtship song. This is kind of my impression of what that call sounds like. Hello? Hello. Mhm. Uh huh. Mhm. If she likes his performance if he's cool she's gonna flick her wings, make a little clicking noise. They're gonna hook up. She's then gonna move out to the tips of small branches. Make slits in those branches deposit 20 to 30 eggs. She can lay up to 4 to 600 eggs during the span of her life. In a matter of weeks the cicadas died and their bodies rain down onto the ground. But the good news is there going to return and fertilize Bring back nutrients to the very plants from which they were spawned Basically completing the cycle of life and giving back to the very trees from which they took for 17 years. Six weeks later the eggs left behind hatch into tiny nymphs and fall to the ground. They start to burrow in the ground. They find routes to feed on for another 17 years until it's time to come up again.
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Cicada mania is coming, leaving some with anxiety over the bug-eyed insects
Rosalie Lacorazza already has lived through two 17-year cicada events and dreads what's coming.As the periodical cicadas in Brood X begin to emerge by the billions this month across the eastern United States and Washington, D.C., area, Lacorazza said she will be taking no chances."I'll be back to my early pandemic ways where I didn't leave my house, didn't see anyone and ordered everything for delivery," said Lacorazza, an Arlington, Virginia, resident.The last major emergence in 2004 left her traumatized when a cicada flew into her hair as she was walking to lunch with a friend. She jumped out into traffic from the fright."I've lived this way the last 12 to 13 months," Lacorazza said about returning to her self-imposed, cicada-avoidance lockdown. "What's six more weeks?"They are coming — and soonThis spring's mass exodus still hasn't happened, but it's imminent. And reactions to it vary.Some people find the cicadas fascinating and eagerly await their arrival and others might just bemoan them as a nuisance. There are those, however, who get anxious and worried about the flying insects.There already are reports of isolated recent sightings and chorusing in North Carolina and Georgia, according to CicadaMania.com, a website dedicated to what it calls "the most amazing insects in the world."Over the next few weeks, the red-eyed, winged insects that grow roughly 1.5 inches long are expected to emerge across 16 states, including New York, Kentucky, Virginia and Illinois, plus the District of Columbia, during an event that lasts about 40 days.The males usually come out first, said James English, an animal ecologist and adjunct professor at Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland, who did his doctoral work on periodical cicadas and has studied them for decades. Over the course of a week, the insects emerge at night, climb a tree or bush, and shed their exoskeletons, he said."It takes several hours for them to shed and then pump their wings full of blood and harden."The cicadas spend the next three weeks or so singing to attract females, who lay their larvae in slits they scrape into the tender bark of tree limbs. The young hatch from the eggs after six to eight weeks . By late summer or early fall, the next generation heads underground to feed on sap from tree roots and the cycle continues."They won't come after you," English said. "They're not great flyers so they may bump into you on accident, but they aren't strong flyers like a bee or housefly."For some people, however, that's little solace.People in the cicada zone are preppingMichelle Matlack said she is not scared of the cicadas but doesn't like bugs in her face.The Annandale, Virginia, resident bought a $30 beekeeping suit so she can continue to spend time outdoors comfortably with neighbors during their pandemic-inspired weekly happy hour."It's part-gag, but part of it is maintaining this social activity that's become important to me," Matlack said about the suit.During the 2004 cicada event, she "could have filled wheelbarrows" with the carcasses that piled up in her backyard, she said."I can see being out there with the neighbors and someone freaking out and me taking off the bee suit and being like, 'Here put this on,'" Matlack said."It might turn out to be a great investment."Fear and anxiety are very realThere are people who genuinely fear the emergence of Brood X."A fear of bugs is a common phobia," said clinical psychologist Colleen Cira, founder of the Cira Center for Behavioral Health in Chicago. "There are a ton of people that fall somewhere on the spectrum in terms of feeling anxious about insects to people with full-on, diagnosable phobias."For people just mildly dreading the cicadas' emergence, activities like deep breathing, yoga, meditation, journaling and talking to a trusted friend can help, Cira said."Going into nature won't work with this," she said.For people with a genuine phobia, Brood X's arrival will present some particular challenges, said clinical psychologist Karen Cassiday, founder of The Anxiety Treatment Center of Greater Chicago.If you've ever been held under too long in the swimming pool as a kid and feared you were going to die, she said, you can empathize with the fear some people are having right now."For someone who is having a phobic response, it's that painful and frightening," she said.Empathy and exposure therapy can helpTry to understand and empathize with what someone with an insect phobia is going through. "When somebody has a phobia of bugs or insects, the thing they are dreading most is physical contact," Cassiday said."That's what can make it so compelling to stay indoors or cover yourself up completely. When you're having anxiety, it's out of proportion to the situation," she said, and typically the people having anxiety are aware that's true.People who don't have an anxiety disorder and "might otherwise be kind might think it's funny to taunt people who do," Cassiday said. But that's a bad way to respond."The first thing, if you want to be a good supportive friend or colleague, is to understand it's not funny to the other person," she said. "It's extreme, it feels awful."Telling people the bugs are harmless and that they help aerate the soil (both of which are true) and that the natural phenomenon is amazing to witness isn't helpful either, she said."Say things like, 'I wish I could help make it easier for you.' Ask if there's something you can do," she said. "Typically, the response you're going to get is 'Thank you for understanding.'"As much as she wants everyone to get help for their phobias, Cassiday said certain phobias can be episodic. "You can live your life and be just fine with it, except when there's an unusual event."For people with a cicada phobia who want to get a handle on it, she said exposure treatments that involve learning about the insects, getting close to them, and even touching them can help.Cira, too, recommended exposure therapy to people with insect and other phobias."If it's negatively affecting your ability to function and live your life, you can get some professional help," she said. "It doesn't have to be that way."Knowing you're not alone can be a source of support, too."My guess is we're going to have people who are sort of coming out of the closet with their bug phobia because this is really unusual," Cassiday said.

Rosalie Lacorazza already has lived through two 17-year cicada events and dreads what's coming.

As the periodical cicadas in Brood X begin to emerge by the billions this month across the eastern United States and Washington, D.C., area, Lacorazza said she will be taking no chances.

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"I'll be back to my early pandemic ways where I didn't leave my house, didn't see anyone and ordered everything for delivery," said Lacorazza, an Arlington, Virginia, resident.

The last major emergence in 2004 left her traumatized when a cicada flew into her hair as she was walking to lunch with a friend. She jumped out into traffic from the fright.

"I've lived this way the last 12 to 13 months," Lacorazza said about returning to her self-imposed, cicada-avoidance lockdown. "What's six more weeks?"

They are coming — and soon

This spring's mass exodus still hasn't happened, but it's imminent. And reactions to it vary.

Some people find the cicadas fascinating and eagerly await their arrival and others might just bemoan them as a nuisance. There are those, however, who get anxious and worried about the flying insects.

There already are reports of isolated recent sightings and chorusing in North Carolina and Georgia, according to CicadaMania.com, a website dedicated to what it calls "the most amazing insects in the world."

Over the next few weeks, the red-eyed, winged insects that grow roughly 1.5 inches long are expected to emerge across 16 states, including New York, Kentucky, Virginia and Illinois, plus the District of Columbia, during an event that lasts about 40 days.

The males usually come out first, said James English, an animal ecologist and adjunct professor at Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland, who did his doctoral work on periodical cicadas and has studied them for decades. Over the course of a week, the insects emerge at night, climb a tree or bush, and shed their exoskeletons, he said.

"It takes several hours for them to shed and then pump their wings full of blood and harden."

The cicadas spend the next three weeks or so singing to attract females, who lay their larvae in slits they scrape into the tender bark of tree limbs. The young hatch from the eggs after six to eight weeks . By late summer or early fall, the next generation heads underground to feed on sap from tree roots and the cycle continues.

"They won't come after you," English said. "They're not great flyers so they may bump into you on accident, but they aren't strong flyers like a bee or housefly."

For some people, however, that's little solace.

People in the cicada zone are prepping

Michelle Matlack said she is not scared of the cicadas but doesn't like bugs in her face.

The Annandale, Virginia, resident bought a $30 beekeeping suit so she can continue to spend time outdoors comfortably with neighbors during their pandemic-inspired weekly happy hour.

"It's part-gag, but part of it is maintaining this social activity that's become important to me," Matlack said about the suit.

During the 2004 cicada event, she "could have filled wheelbarrows" with the carcasses that piled up in her backyard, she said.

"I can see being out there with the neighbors and someone freaking out and me taking off the bee suit and being like, 'Here put this on,'" Matlack said.

"It might turn out to be a great investment."

Fear and anxiety are very real

There are people who genuinely fear the emergence of Brood X.

"A fear of bugs is a common phobia," said clinical psychologist Colleen Cira, founder of the Cira Center for Behavioral Health in Chicago. "There are a ton of people that fall somewhere on the spectrum in terms of feeling anxious about insects to people with full-on, diagnosable phobias."

For people just mildly dreading the cicadas' emergence, activities like deep breathing, yoga, meditation, journaling and talking to a trusted friend can help, Cira said.

"Going into nature won't work with this," she said.

For people with a genuine phobia, Brood X's arrival will present some particular challenges, said clinical psychologist Karen Cassiday, founder of The Anxiety Treatment Center of Greater Chicago.

If you've ever been held under too long in the swimming pool as a kid and feared you were going to die, she said, you can empathize with the fear some people are having right now.

"For someone who is having a phobic response, it's that painful and frightening," she said.

Empathy and exposure therapy can help

Try to understand and empathize with what someone with an insect phobia is going through. "When somebody has a phobia of bugs or insects, the thing they are dreading most is physical contact," Cassiday said.

"That's what can make it so compelling to stay indoors or cover yourself up completely. When you're having anxiety, it's out of proportion to the situation," she said, and typically the people having anxiety are aware that's true.

People who don't have an anxiety disorder and "might otherwise be kind might think it's funny to taunt people who do," Cassiday said. But that's a bad way to respond.

"The first thing, if you want to be a good supportive friend or colleague, is to understand it's not funny to the other person," she said. "It's extreme, it feels awful."

Telling people the bugs are harmless and that they help aerate the soil (both of which are true) and that the natural phenomenon is amazing to witness isn't helpful either, she said.

"Say things like, 'I wish I could help make it easier for you.' Ask if there's something you can do," she said. "Typically, the response you're going to get is 'Thank you for understanding.'"

As much as she wants everyone to get help for their phobias, Cassiday said certain phobias can be episodic. "You can live your life and be just fine with it, except when there's an unusual event."

For people with a cicada phobia who want to get a handle on it, she said exposure treatments that involve learning about the insects, getting close to them, and even touching them can help.

Cira, too, recommended exposure therapy to people with insect and other phobias.

"If it's negatively affecting your ability to function and live your life, you can get some professional help," she said. "It doesn't have to be that way."

Knowing you're not alone can be a source of support, too.

"My guess is we're going to have people who are sort of coming out of the closet with their bug phobia because this is really unusual," Cassiday said.