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Over the past year I've been trying to be cognizant of trying to keep in check my use of these phrases. I think "holy crap" was recently brought up about how filthy and (((degen))) it is. When I saw that I was happy to see that I wasn't the only one seeing and trying to change things.

For me "god damn it" has been a bit of a hard one. I'll say or think it and find myself correcting it but more so I'm catching myself before. If anything, when facing a hurdle, taking a breath and moment of thought and asking for "god bless it" makes much more sense.

The prevalence of all three sayings is extremely common in movies/media. For me, it's been one of those things that once I was aware of then it's heard everywhere.

Over the past year I've been trying to be cognizant of trying to keep in check my use of these phrases. I think "holy crap" was recently brought up about how filthy and (((degen))) it is. When I saw that I was happy to see that I wasn't the only one seeing and trying to change things. For me "god damn it" has been a bit of a hard one. I'll say or think it and find myself correcting it but more so I'm catching myself before. If anything, when facing a hurdle, taking a breath and moment of thought and asking for "god bless it" makes much more sense. The prevalence of all three sayings is extremely common in movies/media. For me, it's been one of those things that once I was aware of then it's heard everywhere.

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[–] 1 pt

I'm a fan of "flagg-nabbit" "cheese and rice" and "holy moly"

If I'm in the mood for vulgarity though, two of my favorite phrases are "Don't look at me like I just shit on a kid in a wheelchair" and "I hope you're still in the closet when your fucking house burns down"