Unbelievable! Meet the Couple Who are Raising a 3.7 Meter Python as their Child (Photos)
In  what will come across as a really shocking development, a man and his  wife have been found out to have raised a snake as their child.  
Shi Jimin with the snake 
An elderly couple in Haikou, China’s Hainan Province, have been  sharing their home with a 60 kilogram, 3.7-meter-long python for seven  years, raising it as their child and even taking it for walks around  their neighborhood.
According to Oddity Central, 68-year-old Shi Jimin, a retired meat  processing worker, adopted the python in 2009, to save it from certain  death. A fish and snake vendor had come by his workplace, and managed to  sell his entire supply, except for a small 30-cm long snake that no one  had wanted.
The man had said that if no one was interested, he was just going  to get rid of it, which is when he stepped in and asked the vendor how  much he wanted for the reptile.
Shi says that he eventually got it for free, as the man was just  going to kill it or throw it away somewhere anyway. So he took the young  snake home to his wife, not knowing that it would grow up into a  cattle-eating behemoth.
But even after realizing that they had adopted a python, the  elderly couple had no problem sharing their home with their pet, which  they consider more as a child. In the last seven years it has grown to  an impressive 3.7 meters and weighs around 120 pounds.
But experts say it’s still young and bound to get even bigger.  Still Shi and his wife are not concerned for their safety, and allow the  snake to freely slither around their home during the day.
It often sits on their laps as they watch TV together, or just  finds a comfortable spot and sits there like a good boy. In the evening,  the couple give the snake a warm bath, and before going to bed, they  take the python to his very own bedroom.
Apart from barring the windows to make sure their son, which they  named Shi Nanwang, doesn’t run off somewhere, Shi and his wife say  they’ve taken no precautions to protect themselves from the snake, and  swear that it has never once bitten them.
They did have a steel cage made for Nanwang, but only to serve as a  private enclosure during his six months hibernation period. When he  enters his long slumber at the beginning of winter, Shi fills the cage  with blankets and places the snake inside so they don’t disturb him by  mistake.
When asked if taking care of such a large snake is expensive, Shi  Jiming said that he spends half his monthly pension on it. Nanwang  currently eats about 8 live medium-sized chickens, or 5 large ones,  every 20 to 30 days.
The Chinese couple often take their snake son on outdoor walks  around their neighborhood, and say that even though their neighbors were  originally terrified of Nanwang, they soon realized it is  very docile  and friendly. Many of the kids stop to pet it or have their pictures  taken with it.
“The python is very tame and listens to Shi Jimin,” one of Shi’s neighbors told China News Service. “Everyone has watched it grow — just like watching a child grow up.”
The elderly couple have two daughters, but they moved out of the  house a long time ago and have their own families now, so they won’t be  able to take care of Shi Nanwang if something happens to them.
Shi Jimin told reporters that he plans to give the snake to a zoo  when he becomes too old to take care of it, at which point the python  allegedly stopped moving and stayed in his lap quietly.
“Don’t worry, that would be some ten years away,” Shi said.
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