Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 Sign of a limited vocabulary.Anonymous wrote:It’s low class.
*sigh*
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/is-swearing-a-sign-of-a-limited-vocabulary/
https://bpb-us-w2.wpmucdn.com/campuspress.yale.edu/dist/a/1215/files/2016/05/Giordano-rg5y5r.pdf
Anonymous wrote:I told my kids exactly what it means and that it’s demeaning in that it presents sex, and particularly women as merely an object to be used. I can’t see how any woman would be okay with it, but I guess I’m wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gave up. I rarely swear but in elementary all the kids swear and my kids started swearing at me too, despite me telling them not to. Over the summer, they seemed to forget about swearing. It will be interesting to see if it starts back up again when school starts.
Don't give up, you owe your kids more.
You owe yourself more. There are plenty of more meaningful battles to be fought.
Demanding teens (who curse amongst themselves) not curse around you just teaches them that they can't be genuine with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has nothing to do with class, income or how you raise them. It’s innate personality. I have two teens. One never swears, ever, and is vocal about being the grammar police sometimes.
One uses it quite a bit in casual conversation with friends or even us at home. He never does in front of grandparents, at work or school, at us or in situations where strangers or the general public may hear.
We always hear from others how polite and mature our kids are. Knowing your audience is most important, not if you occasionally swear with friends in a private setting.
Swearing is low SES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gave up. I rarely swear but in elementary all the kids swear and my kids started swearing at me too, despite me telling them not to. Over the summer, they seemed to forget about swearing. It will be interesting to see if it starts back up again when school starts.
Don't give up, you owe your kids more.
Anonymous wrote:It’s low class.
Anonymous wrote:I told my kids exactly what it means and that it’s demeaning in that it presents sex, and particularly women as merely an object to be used. I can’t see how any woman would be okay with it, but I guess I’m wrong.
Anonymous wrote:I gave up. I rarely swear but in elementary all the kids swear and my kids started swearing at me too, despite me telling them not to. Over the summer, they seemed to forget about swearing. It will be interesting to see if it starts back up again when school starts.
Anonymous wrote:I gave up. I rarely swear but in elementary all the kids swear and my kids started swearing at me too, despite me telling them not to. Over the summer, they seemed to forget about swearing. It will be interesting to see if it starts back up again when school starts.