The scream usually comes first. In many Philippine barrios, a snake crossing a footpath is enough to send grown men scrambling for sticks, stones, bolo knives, and whatever object can strike fear faster than the reptile can disappear into the grass. The snake is rarely given the benefit of distance, much less mercy. I have always found this hostility both understandable and troubling: understandable because fear has deep roots in our history and landscape, troubling because fear, once inherited blindly, can turn even a useful creature into a condemned outcast.
I grew up noticing how Filipinos speak of snakes the way old people speak of curses. The names alone carry a certain chill. “Ahas” is not just an animal in ordinary conversation; it is an insult, a warning, a personality type. Call someone a snake, and you are not merely saying the person is dangerous. You are accusing them of betrayal, deceit, and poisoning of the soul. Even our language has wrapped the reptile in moral darkness. It did not help that many of us first encountered snakes not in biology books but in whispered stories beside kerosene lamps, where cobras rose like hooded spirits and pythons swallowed goats whole somewhere beyond the rice fields. In a tropical country where venomous species truly exist, imagination does not need much encouragement.
And the fear is not entirely irrational. The Philippines is home to genuinely dangerous snakes, including the Philippine cobra, whose venom is among the deadliest in the world. Farmers, coconut gatherers, and rural children historically faced real danger while working barefoot in fields thick with talahib and mud. One can hardly preach tenderness toward snakes to a farmer who remembers a neighbor dying hours after a bite because the nearest clinic was two towns away. Fear, in that sense, became a form of survival training. Suspicion saved lives. A quick strike with a stick was often faster than identifying whether the snake was harmless or lethal. In a country where poverty has long dictated how close humans live to forests, farms, and waterways, coexistence with wildlife has rarely been romantic.
Still, I sometimes think Filipinos inherited not only caution but a kind of theatrical hatred toward snakes. The reaction often exceeds self-defense and enters the territory of vengeance. One dead snake is not enough; it must be hacked repeatedly, displayed on a road, or burned like an executed criminal. I have seen people laugh nervously after killing one, as though they had defeated not an animal but a supernatural enemy. Perhaps this comes from the way fear humiliates us. Few creatures can reduce a confident man into a jumping, shrieking acrobat faster than a snake suddenly appearing near his feet. We kill what exposes our fragility. The snake becomes a moving reminder that human beings are not always kings of the landscape.
Religion added another layer to this hostility. For many Filipinos raised in Christian households, the snake already entered consciousness wearing the shadow of Eden. Long before science classes explained ecosystems and food chains, many children heard of the serpent as tempter, corrupter, whisperer of ruin. Even without formal theology, the symbolism lingered. The snake slithered through stories carrying suspicion on its scales. Hollywood worsened the reputation. Giant killer anacondas, venomous monsters in jungle films, cobras swaying before hypnotized victims—popular culture practically turned snakes into celebrities of terror. Poor turtles and frogs never received such dramatic publicity.
What fascinates me, though, is the irony that snakes quietly help the very people who despise them. They control rats that destroy rice harvests and spread disease. Without snakes, rodent populations would explode in many agricultural areas. Nature designed them as silent pest-control officers, working unpaid overtime. Yet humans often erase them at sight, then complain about rats chewing through grain sacks and ceilings. There is something tragically comic about this arrangement. We slaughter one of the farmer’s allies while protecting the thief who steals from the harvest at night. Sometimes our fear blinds us to usefulness; we judge by shape and movement rather than ecological purpose.
I also suspect that snakes disturb Filipinos because they move in ways unlike those of creatures we easily domesticate emotionally. Dogs wag their tails, cats purr, carabaos lumber with visible heaviness. Snakes glide. They arrive quietly, without footsteps, without warning, like living streams of muscle. There is something ancient in the human brain that recoils from that motion. Scientists have even suggested that primates evolved a rapid visual response to snakes because identifying them quickly aided survival. Perhaps every startled leap backward carries millions of years of instinct inside it. But instinct, while useful, should not become cruelty. Fear explains behavior; it does not automatically justify excess.
As I grow older, I find myself less interested in glorifying bravery against snakes and more interested in learning restraint. Not every snake is a cobra waiting to strike. Many are harmless and would rather escape than fight. Environmental groups in the Philippines now encourage rescue and relocation instead of immediate killing, especially as habitats shrink and wildlife increasingly wanders into human settlements. That seems wiser to me—not sentimental worship of snakes, but a calmer understanding that they are part of the land long before we poured concrete over it. Perhaps the better measure of civilization is not how fiercely people destroy what they fear, but how intelligently they respond to it.



