The F-Word Diet

By: Meredith Gordon (View Profile)


I present the idea to him one evening after the baby goes to bed. “So I was thinking … ” I begin. Immediately he knows bad news is coming. Good things never follow, “I was thinking.” In this case I tell him, “you should stop saying fuck.” 

His reaction is classic addict:

First, he denies the problem. “I don’t need any fucking diet. Verbal or otherwise,” he says.

Stage 2: Anger. “Fuck you for thinking I’ve got some sort of problem.” 

And then finally, the apology. “Babe,” he says. “I’m so sorry. I’ll never say it front of the baby again. Whatever you want me to do, I’ll fucking do it.”

And then he pauses, replays the conversation in his head, and realizes that yes, he might be a fuckaholic. And so I tell him that he should go on a fuck binge tonight, because tomorrow, it’s cold turkey.

The next day he’s armed, he’s ready, he’s determined to be curse free. He’s even got a thesaurus downloaded to his Blackberry should he be jonesing for a fuck and need a stand in. It’s all going so well. He’s made it past a fender bender in the morning, bad directions on the way to a meeting, and a leaky roof discovered that afternoon.

As the day comes to close I tell Justin how proud I am of him. But then, the phone rings. It’s family; his family. A pushy bunch who thinks opinions and criticism are meant to be given not asked for. I suggest he let the call go to voicemail, knowing he might be vulnerable, but Justin assures me he can handle speaking to someone he’s related to without cursing. I’m suspect but encouraging.

Justin silently listens while his Mother speaks. He says a few things, then hangs up the phone. His face is flush and clammy. “For my Dad’s birthday, he wants to take the whole family away. He’s renting a house in the mountains. Two weeks” he says matter of factly. He waits for my response. 

I ask for clarification, just to make sure I’ve heard correctly, “Two weeks with your parents?” He nods.

“Well then we’re fucked” I tell him. He pauses. Smiles. And then replies, “No, we’re not … we’re totally fucked.” 

And then a light bulb goes off in my head. No matter how hard we try as parents we’ll never be perfect. We can only try our best to be good role models for our children. So if my son gets his sleep, eats healthy, plays gentle, and cursing is the worst thing he learns from us, I can live with that. And if our son’s first words at his pre-school interview are, “Mommy, I’m fucked” then at least he’ll be in good fucking company.

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posted: 09.12.2008
Cassie6857
I don't believe in telling your child not to do something you do, so with my older son, I had the rule that he could cuss, but only inside my home... from the first full sentence out of his mouth ( he saw snow and said "what the fuck?") he was allowed to curse in my home as long as he was not being disrespectful to me (i.e. the first time he called me a bitch he got smacked) then he was good. He is now 7 and except for one time at my mothers house when he dropped a carton of milk and said "shit" he has never slipped up... I know he is going to hear and learn the words whether its from me or some kid at school, so instead I took the temptation away and taught him that there is an appropriate time and place... since he has gotten older (about 4) he has also learned that if we have company it is not an appropriate time for such language... it works for us with him... but we haven't decide whether it will work with my now 14 month old.... he is much more stubborn... i guess we'll find out!
posted: 08.27.2008
Gillian Kratzer
I swear around my kid all the fucking time. He's just turned one about two months ago now. And previously my husband and I lived with another couple (a horrible experience...I should write about it...anyway) and they had kids who we swore in front of almost constantly. The only bad thing their daughter ever said was dildo...and just the one time.
posted: 07.03.2008
Mark Roddey
You're fuckin' hilarious!
posted: 07.01.2008
Flyshopgirl
I have friends who had their first baby about a year or so ago. While Deb was pregnant, we started betting on what the baby's first word would be. My vote was for "fuck." I was positive that'd be the first thing out of the kid's mouth since both Deb and her husband (a police officer) had a horrible time not saying it at least once per sentence! Luckily, little Justin's first word was "Da" so there's hope for him yet! :)
posted: 06.29.2008
Lynn
I love this!!! My youngest ( now 9 yrs old) swapped his t's and f's at 3yrs old and I had a friend who thought it was funny to have him yell out " fired truck" whenever a neighbor she didn't like walked by...needless to say I'm very glad we moved away from both of them!! Now my children only use that word in the house..LOL all the time....LM(fucking)AO!!!!
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