The Power of a Good Swear Word
“Ben is not even three and his brain will soon reset much of the information he has already learned. But impressions are being made. Confidence and life experiences are being formed. His personality is developing before my eyes and every time I place a truly nasty word in his vocabulary, I run the risk of it becoming an ingrained part of his dialect and him.”—Annie Carroll Maffeo
Working Through Motherhood
By Annie Carroll Maffeo
BATAVIA Illinois—(Weekly Hubris)—January 2020—I love to swear. There. I said it.
I had a young man, at the tender age of 12 or 13, not want to “go out” with me anymore because I cursed too much.
I grew up with an incredibly smart mother and father who, despite their extensive vocabularies, never discounted the importance of a well-placed swear word. This is not to say that they walked around dropping F bombs regularly, but they appreciated a good Fuck yelled out at a stubbed toe or a dropped Bears pass.
My father spent several years in the Navy, which meant that we spent several years hearing songs of misspent youth while on the high seas, and other such shanties. All of which included a swear every third word or so.
When I was pregnant, my husband, a rather mild mannered curser, joked repeatedly that he was going to start a swear jar for me and we would fund our son’s college before he was three.
I just knew he was correct. That I would be the one to teach our son his first swear word at some comically young age and it would be a story for the ages in our family lore. But, 2.5 years in and I have found not only some very interesting alternatives to swear words, but an awareness of language in general that I had never really understood until I had a child.
We are very lucky that our son speaks all the time. He loves to talk. He loves to repeat everything and has recently taken up singing. By the way, he thinks its everyone’s birthday and will happily sing you happy birthday at the drop of a hat. Stop by if you’re having a bad day. This, however, makes me acutely aware of what I say and how I say it. What I have discovered is that I have developed a fear of words, none of which are part of a George Carlin skit.
The other day, my husband picked our son up from daycare and whispered to me that on the way home Ben had said he hated someone in school. We understood this was coming out of a two-year-old who has no idea what that meant, but it still threw us for such a loop. More so than if he had yelled shit at the top of his lungs. My brain began to pace. Had I said I hated someone? I didn’t think so. I am sure my husband had not, as he is far kinder and far more forgiving of humans than I am. I am sure this was simply a two-year-old hearing something somewhere and picking up on it as enticing and interesting and powerful.
What had not occurred to me before this was how much I had edited my speech. How careful I had become of what my son ingested in music, on TV, and through speech, even through the visuals on a magazine. If I am in the company of adults with a few glasses of wine I can swear enough that the sailors my father used to keep time with would blush. But in the company of my son I am painfully aware of how much he absorbs. Words I am careless with; stupid, hate, ugly, fat, dumb, sound like nails on a chalkboard coming out of his mouth.
That is the power of language. Something we undervalue as a society and tend to throw away (although you, Dear Reader, probably do not).
Ben is not even three and his brain will soon reset much of the information he has already learned. But impressions are being made. Confidence and life experiences are being formed. His personality is developing before my eyes and every time I place a truly nasty word in his vocabulary, I run the risk of it becoming an ingrained part of his dialect and him.
As his mother, I have to find a way to teach him the power of not only his physical actions (no hitting, kicking), but also the power of his words and how they impact the lives of those around him. In a world of quick-to-anger political leaders who have been given platforms to tweet whatever words come to mind, I have to give my son the ability to think about his words and what implications they have. How powerful they can be, whether written, spoken or sung.
Recently, Nancy Pelosi gave a very quick synopsis of why she does not hate our current president. Because hate is a very strong word. It carries with it so much. If you carry hate with you, that is a burden for not only the person you may “hate,” but also for yourself. It takes work to hate. And I want my son to stay light. I want him to carry with him happiness and joy. I want him to feel love deep in his soul. If I had my way, he would say the word fuck before he ever understood the word hate.
2 Comments
Jean
This is hilarious, thoughtful, accurate and intensely lovable. Nice work, Annie.
Vicki Kitts
Annie-
I enjoyed reading your comment and applaud your willingness to share. While my children, as adults, sprinkle various curse words depending on the occasion or the day, I understood well my influence on their vocabulary while they were growing up. Now I have grandchildren and various nieces and nephews, so I try to watch what I say. We do not censor our speech, or anything else for that matter, and a curse word or two mostly fit any event for emphasis or venting. And, since I am older, I find that I mostly say what I want and the hell with anyone who doesn’t like it.