Swearing is human right

“Wedeeeeeercool,” my mom would yell when something went wrong. In the morning, my father howled, “Laossssssssss… the peace of the night,” as the faucet he had just repaired exploded, flooding the bathroom. On the third day of the week or when the terrible gloom of the night fell from our parents’ lips, we brothers tried to escape. “Pillows,” said the marquise, “they thought I was mute”, the explosion that best suited childish ears. When I was a kid, I used to imagine an aristocrat lying on his bed, asking for more pillows to shock those who thought he couldn’t speak, nothing to do with disallowed goals, broken glass, or Fraga appearing in the news they provoked. its call. As soon as we were old enough to say our first curses, two paradoxical things happened. On the one hand, our parents blamed us for our disappointing rudeness in their efforts not to swear in our presence. On the other hand, they felt free to utter all those long-repressed terms without saying anything, like a family that swore together. They were finally able to dismantle the pressure valve, forgo the use of ‘jopetas’ forever and relax. Another effort has been added to all that parenting entails, with gratitude for all the bad milk kept because it was thrown out in euphemism, not a good curse. Now I know from experience how inexhaustible is the time you spend without getting caught up in everything that moves. Wednesday.

And if there are no children in front of him, there is a demanding audience. Or both. A reporter from OkDiario, who was broadcast live during the news about Elizabeth II’s funeral, muttered “O p*girl” into an open microphone because a little English woman insisted on spoiling the footage. When he expressed disappointment by reining in the urge to throw something at the intruder, they brutally crucified him. Last week, journalist Sonsoles Ónega asked all her listeners: “What am I going to do with the damn book?” This explosion caused a minor scandal, especially since it came out of the delicate lips of Queen Letizia’s best friend. Fortunately, science comes to the rescue, comrades. I’ve read that a recent study published in the specialty journal Lingua glosses over the benefits of swearing, considering it “an extremely powerful way of emotional expression and building interpersonal relationships, both positive and negative.” Curses add believability to the message, maybe then it should be uttered more often in the news and used to reinforce political narratives rather than such nonsense. Cursing and swearing also have a laxative effect and are an excellent exercise for the brain and memory. Saying a good string of swear words and profanity increases tolerance and pain threshold and creates a greater sense of physical strength, neurolinguistics experts say. And on top of that, a cheap tool of mental resistance in these times of rising laosssss inflation… night care.

Source: Informacion

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