One way I did stop cussing was I made a quick rule I will not cuss at the workplace I think it actually broke my habit of cussing except in like an extreme situation
That's good. It's having control. I'm happy swearing when I put on a given voice, like acting, and if the character swears I swear. I do it on my podcasts. Us British though have a multitude of swear words, and some can be used in an endearing way, as well as offensive. Americans tend to be horrified at the British art of swearing, mostly because they can't figure out whether we are being nice or not. Plus there's the blasphemous elements, what with Britain being mostly secular and not religious.
It is kind of funny how upset people get about it that’s why I had to stop but the town I grew up in like their completely against anything remotely they can be considered an existential conversation and they just get really upset so as a kid to fit in was just kinda have like a pretend party persona because literally like I feel like just growing up in that town being cool was like considered the most important thing along with doing really good. In sports.
So like I kinda have this whole just act like Joe cool type deal A lot of people were always drunk at barbecues so I like think I kind of copied just a whole like moving talking sounding drunk deal it just stuck. It’s kind of weird.
In a sense there is the need to be a spy, an agent looking on, melding in so as not to stand out. Or as I do to speak but not saying anything, with people not realising that I have not given a thing away. One can see that with the good Count too, looking over what historical records we have. One has to hide otherwise the "mob", as the masses were described in the 1700s in Britain, will turn on you.
I'll try to stop cussing when upset
One way I did stop cussing was I made a quick rule I will not cuss at the workplace I think it actually broke my habit of cussing except in like an extreme situation
That's good. It's having control. I'm happy swearing when I put on a given voice, like acting, and if the character swears I swear. I do it on my podcasts. Us British though have a multitude of swear words, and some can be used in an endearing way, as well as offensive. Americans tend to be horrified at the British art of swearing, mostly because they can't figure out whether we are being nice or not. Plus there's the blasphemous elements, what with Britain being mostly secular and not religious.
It is kind of funny how upset people get about it that’s why I had to stop but the town I grew up in like their completely against anything remotely they can be considered an existential conversation and they just get really upset so as a kid to fit in was just kinda have like a pretend party persona because literally like I feel like just growing up in that town being cool was like considered the most important thing along with doing really good. In sports.
So like I kinda have this whole just act like Joe cool type deal A lot of people were always drunk at barbecues so I like think I kind of copied just a whole like moving talking sounding drunk deal it just stuck. It’s kind of weird.
In a sense there is the need to be a spy, an agent looking on, melding in so as not to stand out. Or as I do to speak but not saying anything, with people not realising that I have not given a thing away. One can see that with the good Count too, looking over what historical records we have. One has to hide otherwise the "mob", as the masses were described in the 1700s in Britain, will turn on you.