“You made me look like a fool. A ‘GD’ fool!”
I was watching “Driving Miss Daisy” when that “GD” turned up my dim bulb of recognition to 100 watts. Hey, that’s not Jessica Tandy bawling out driver Morgan Freeman for putting on airs – it’s my Grandma!
Geographically and theologically, Daisy Werthan and Marguerite Murphy couldn’t have been further apart. The former is a Jewish Georgia Peach while the latter was a dyed-in-the-wool Yankee WASP. But socially, they were both on the same old school page. They were ladies and there were some things that ladies simply did not do – wear pants, cross their legs or swear. Well, hardly ever. If my Grandma said the word “damn,” you knew she was furious and on the one or two occasions when she uttered “GD” we ran for cover. She’d flirt with blasphemy, but heaven forbid she’d ever commit to it by saying “goddamn.”
As with most things in our culture, each succeeding generation gets a little looser in the morality department. “Damn,” “goddamn” and “Jesus Christ” were bandied about quite a little bit by my parents. You knew supper wasn’t far from being put on the table when you heard the pots and pans falling out of my Mom’s overstuffed kitchen cabinet followed by an annoyed “shit!” My Dad was fond of a “bastard,” “son of a bitch” and, my favorite variation, “son of a bitch on your mother’s side.” But like their parents before them, they drew their own bad taste boundaries and only under extreme duress would they enter into the land of “fuck.” The one time my Dad thoughtlessly spat out that forbidden invective in front of my brother, the engine in his van had caught fire. When The Old Man realized he’d said it within earshot of his son, he looked, as my brother described it, “like a kid who just pissed his pants” and apologized profusely.
Along with sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll, I’m happy to report that it was my generation who opened up the floodgates of fuck. Or am I?
Don’t get me wrong. Given a bad day, I will think, mutter or bellow “fuck me!” a good half-dozen times. “What the fuck?” is my knee-jerk response to the sublime or ridiculous events I witness on any ordinary day. And if you really want to hear a fuck fest, just put me behind the wheel of a car.
But a few weeks ago, I started wondering if maybe we’ve all gone a little overboard in our overuse of fuck. I was in the company of some friends, being jostled by the cattle run that’s known as Canal Street in New York’s Chinatown on a Saturday afternoon, when I looked up and saw a vendor selling a t-shirt that read, “Don’t fuck with me you fuck I’m from fucking New York.”
Like antibiotics in the face of a drug-resistant virus, it seems to me that our over-dependence on that one, four-letter word has taken some of the power out of the little fucker. It used to be the mother of all swear words, and now it’s just a, well, motherfucker.
So if fuck has lost its shock and awe explosiveness, is there a word today that “dare not speak its name”? You bet. And any woman who considers herself a lady in these here modern times knows which one I mean -- the “c” word (and I don’t mean “cocksucker”). Where “fuck” would have been a Hiroshima-like assault on my grandmother’s ears, the “c” word is Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined to her granddaughter. Say that filthy word in my presence and be prepared for the ugly consequences.
But don’t you fucking dare!