You can teach your kids made up curse words to use instead, it's what I do myself because let's face it - we all get stressed and burned out and need to let go sometimes. I can yell "Gadoosh!" when my kid breaks another glass instead of "Shit!" and nobody has a problem
Try it, it works, it's fun and switching to made up curse words isn't as hard as you might think 
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I explained that like driving or drinking wine, certain words are reserved for grownups. She can say them when she's a grownup, but if she says them as a kid, she'll get in a lot of trouble. This wouldn't work for everyone, but it's worked for us.
Works for us, too. DS still asks why he cannot say this or that, I have to re-explain, oh well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I both are pretty foul-mouthed, and honestly, we didn't even try to curb our tongues.
What we did do is explain to our child -- starting when she was really little -- that some words are OK when it's just us at home, but we shouldn't say them in public because not everyone is OK with them.
Other parents generally say, "yeah, good luck with that" -- but honestly, it's *worked*.
She's six now, and if it's just us in the car, she will borrow my iPod and look for Pink's "Raise Your Glass" or Bruno Mars' "Treasure" so she can sing along with the profanity; if she's at school or out and about, she would never dream of using that language. I mean, NEVER.
I will say, though, I think there's a difference between using profanity in a neutral way ("Where the f*** did I put my keys?") and directing it at other people ("Hey, a$$hole!").
I don't have a problem with any specific word, but I *do* have a problem with using language abusively. That is something we don't do, and it's something we correct when our daughter does it (even when the language she's using is not offensive).
Nice that YOU don't have a problem with foul language but I guarantee you that if you speak this way at work, around friends/ strangers etc there are people who consider you to be low-class because of the way you talk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I both are pretty foul-mouthed, and honestly, we didn't even try to curb our tongues.
What we did do is explain to our child -- starting when she was really little -- that some words are OK when it's just us at home, but we shouldn't say them in public because not everyone is OK with them.
Other parents generally say, "yeah, good luck with that" -- but honestly, it's *worked*.
She's six now, and if it's just us in the car, she will borrow my iPod and look for Pink's "Raise Your Glass" or Bruno Mars' "Treasure" so she can sing along with the profanity; if she's at school or out and about, she would never dream of using that language. I mean, NEVER.
I will say, though, I think there's a difference between using profanity in a neutral way ("Where the f*** did I put my keys?") and directing it at other people ("Hey, a$$hole!").
I don't have a problem with any specific word, but I *do* have a problem with using language abusively. That is something we don't do, and it's something we correct when our daughter does it (even when the language she's using is not offensive).
Nice that YOU don't have a problem with foul language but I guarantee you that if you speak this way at work, around friends/ strangers etc there are people who consider you to be low-class because of the way you talk.
Anonymous wrote:
I explained that like driving or drinking wine, certain words are reserved for grownups. She can say them when she's a grownup, but if she says them as a kid, she'll get in a lot of trouble. This wouldn't work for everyone, but it's worked for us.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I both are pretty foul-mouthed, and honestly, we didn't even try to curb our tongues.
What we did do is explain to our child -- starting when she was really little -- that some words are OK when it's just us at home, but we shouldn't say them in public because not everyone is OK with them.
Other parents generally say, "yeah, good luck with that" -- but honestly, it's *worked*.
She's six now, and if it's just us in the car, she will borrow my iPod and look for Pink's "Raise Your Glass" or Bruno Mars' "Treasure" so she can sing along with the profanity; if she's at school or out and about, she would never dream of using that language. I mean, NEVER.
I will say, though, I think there's a difference between using profanity in a neutral way ("Where the f*** did I put my keys?") and directing it at other people ("Hey, a$$hole!").
I don't have a problem with any specific word, but I *do* have a problem with using language abusively. That is something we don't do, and it's something we correct when our daughter does it (even when the language she's using is not offensive).