Fear

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I'm afraid of discus, for the money one can throw away on these beauties and then watch them wither and die within a 6 month period. Oh how my bank account and fishroom would be so much nicer today if my 2 year "experiment" with discus never occurred. I learned the hard way that I have to wait until I am retired and the three kids are out of the house to try that again.

Gotta live on the edge man, like I do every day, LIVE without a qt!! ;)
 
I'm apprehensive towards candiru catfish because they inhibit the freedom I feel from peeing randomly in the wild.

This. Though, I do want to keep a school sometime, just not swim with them!
 
Electric eels. Being.shocked onto paralysis and drowning sounds horrid. At least with toothy fish you might be able to fight back

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I don't ever wanted to swim with Goliath African Tiger fish or hand feed them in aquarium :D
Hand feed them ? I probaly du that because i'm crazy :headbang2xD
When u look at this teeth...
 
I think in terms of fear you actually have to look at the scenario of if you were swimming in their native habitat, the likelihood you'd be attacked, and the consequences.

If you're dead and decaying, yes, then you'd have to worry about piranha. However, if you're dead and decaying you don't have much to worry about. I think the only 3 freshwater fish I would fear would be:

1) Candiru catfish. For reasons stated above.
2) FW stingrays. You can very possibly step on one of these and it will to put it lightly, ruin your day (possibly life).
3) Electric eel. These are no electric catfish. However, I believe they're somewhat reclusive. Unless you go poking around for them, I think you're fine.

Your biggest worry in those types of environments are the crocodilians.

You want to talk real "monsters" I'm an offshore fisherman and licensed captain (of over 10 years). We routinely fish the gulfstream off the northeast USA. I've seem 12' tiger sharks that swim up to the boat and bite inanimate objects (floats, motors, gear, rudders, etc.) I've had 15'+ great whites cruise by. Witnessed schools of blue sharks so thick at night you can practically walk on them. Sharks by far and wide are the true aquatic "boogeyman"

If I had to pick a specific shark it would be the Tiger. They're clever and inquisitive. Not something you want a shark to be when you're in the water. After that it's bulls. We don't get them this far north though.
 
I'd rather be stung by a stingray, shocked by an electric eel, shredded by piranhas, and swallowed by a giant red tail a thousand times over than to just imagine an encounter with a candiru, let alone actually experience it. Hell I'd even take my chances with the sharks over having one of those things get stuck up there. Plus, like Oddball, I enjoy peeing where I damn well please out in the wild.
 
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