A woman raised a huge python at home. One day, the snake started acting strange, stopped eating, and wrapped itself around her waist. Then, the girl learned something terrible about it 

The woman raised a python named Saffron at home. The yellow python had been with her for three years and quickly became a pet.
Her family winced: âBe careful, itâs a predator.â But the girl only smiled: âItâs tame. It loves me and would never harm me.â
However, after some time, the snake began to behave strangely.
The first alarming oddities began unnoticed.
Saffron stopped eating. At night, it would crawl out of its cage and stretch out alongside the woman â its head at its shoulder, its tail at its ankles. Sometimes, it would wrap itself loosely around her waist and freeze, as if counting its ribs.
During the day, sheâd choose the cool floor near her bed, where she walked barefoot, and lie there for hours, the tip of her tail barely moving, her gaze fixed precisely on the rise and fall of a personâs chest.
There were also muffled âhugsâ: the python would crawl up to her throat and linger under her collarbone, touching her skin with its forked tongue. The woman joked that it was a kiss.
But at night, she woke up more and more often, feeling the weight on her chest.
And when one night she was awakened by the snakeâs sharp hiss, she knew it was time to see a veterinarian.
And thatâs when she learned something terrifying about the python, and finally understood how dangerous it is to keep a wild animal at home.
The doctor leisurely weighed the python, palpated it, and listened to its stories of nocturnal âcuddlingâ and refusal to eat.
âYou see,â he finally said, âthis isnât affection. Large pythons starve and stretch along their ownerâs bodyâa typical complex before attempting to swallow large prey. The python is measuring whether the size is appropriate. Coiling is a strangulation rehearsal. You have a mature, strong female. Sheâs strong enough to cut off your breathing. Itâs rare, but such cases do happen. In short, your python wanted to swallow you. Thereâs only one recommendation: strict isolation, a change in diet, andâpreferablyâtransfer the pet to a specialized facility. Today.â
The words struck a chill. That evening, the girl sat on the edge of the bed and watched Safran slowly slide across the sheets. At some point, the python lay exactly as it had in that photo: coiled around the sleeping woman, only this time the woman was awake.
The woman carefully picked up the snake, returned it to the terrarium, clicked the latch, and sat down on the floor next to it.
In the morning, she called the city reptile center. Safran was taken that afternoonâto a spacious enclosure, with experienced staff and proper food.