A Tangent About Swearing
Mar. 25th, 2022 09:45 amWhich as someone who was raised not to swear, I have noticed! Swearing is much less horrifying than my mother implied, and people generally don't get upset about. Yet I still don't do it that much-- for more or less this reason. You see, my philosophy of swearing comes from a Royal Diaries book. If you're not familiar with Royal Diaries, it's a children's series done as the teenage diaries of various female historical figures. The one I was reading is Elizabeth I.
In it, swearing is present as "round oaths" which Elizabeth is very clearly not supposed to say, or even know, and she comments that one cannot use them too often or they wear out and lose their power, which I took to heart and thus swear only very rarely.
Now, this doesn't mean anything if I happen to do it in front of people who don't know me that well. But I managed to utterly shock
So there's an interesting sort of coda to English-and-profanities, which is that if you, personally, don't do it often you can kind of get the shock factor back among people who know you well enough to be paying attention.