Here is the first thing that I think is really interesting. I'm only on chapter one, so you might have to put up with more tidbits that I find interesting. Hopefully, it will explain how the eff-word is morphing into a word that we see and hear a lot more than we did 50 years ago.
You know how we have the left brain and the right brain and our language is maintained by the left side - so certain kinds of damage to the left side of the brain can pretty much eliminate the ability to speak. But if that happens, the swearing words reside in the right side - and people who can no longer make sentences to communicate, can swear with ease. Likewise, certain kinds of damage on the right side of the brain will delete the swear words. Maybe everyone already knew this. But, it made me feel better that the swear words are in a place that is somewhat *lizard-like* - in that they bust out on their own and it can be somewhat challenging to bite one's tongue.
Yup, I looked that one up. Goes all the way back to Shakespeare -- so clearly, it's been known for a long time that all words do not live in the same place in our heads. Or perhaps there are aliens residing in our brains. Just kidding. I am through with my alien theories.
Maybe.
*****
Holy cow -- I wrote this before my brain injury and here I am 2.5 weeks past the injury, reviewing things I have written before the incident. I do not recall anything from the book -- maybe I will reread it someday. As I recall, it did have additional information that was very interesting. Maybe I will discover more blog posts - written before the brain injury - that make note of the parts that seemed worth mentioning here.
*****
I'm awake at 4:30 this morning, and my ability to talk is pretty good. Some words get lost. I've requested my medical records and I will be interested to see which side the subdural hematoma is on. I know it was not directly in the back. I know the subarachnoid hematoma was behind the forehead, so it was the ricochet injury. The amount of swearing I do is about the same -- mostly not out loud -- and always the scaled back versions.
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