Swearing at work can 'cut stress'

by Christopher Byrne | October 17, 2007 at 09:32 am
900 views | 14 Recommendations | 4 comments

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No Profanity at the University of Georgia Baptist Center

No Profanity at the University of Georgia Baptist Center

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In a country such as the United States that has court dockets filled with sexual harrasment and other employee brought lawsuits, one has to wonder how much validity this study would have in a workplace. Has swearing become that much of an accepted use of language in our society that people should have to deal with it in the workplace?

Photo Courtesy of Streuli Silvan and SXC.hu. Used with permission

Swearing at work helps employees cope with stress, academics at a Norfolk university have said.

A study by Norwich's University of East Anglia (UEA) into leadership styles found the use of "taboo language" boosted team spirit.

Professor Yehuda Baruch, professor of management, warned that attempts to prevent workers from swearing could have a negative impact.

But Professor Baruch discouraged swearing in front of customers.

'Maintaining solidarity'

He said: "In most scenarios, in particular in the presence of customers or senior staff, profanity must be seriously discouraged or banned.

"However, our study suggested that, in many cases, taboo language serves the needs of people for developing and maintaining solidarity, and as a mechanism to cope with stress. Banning it could backfire.

"Managers need to understand how their staff feel about swearing.

"The challenge is to master the art of knowing when to turn a blind eye to communication that does not meet with their own standards."

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Jordan Yerman

I don't like swearing in the workplace (it comes across as unprofessional), though I've been to drop all kinds of f-bombs when working from home!

BigT
BigT
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:43 on October 17th, 2007

Christopher Byrne, good !#%*#%$ stuff!

Seriously, though, it matters to a great deal what kind of working environment you are in. If you deal with the public then cursing is probably a no-go. But if you don't see much of the public then by all means - as long as you get the written consent of everyone who could possibly ever enter your office that they won't sue you for your crude behavior.  

juan114
juan114
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 16:43 on October 17th, 2007

Christopher Byrne, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Paul Conneally
Paul Conneally
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 02:20 on October 18th, 2007

Christopher Byrne, I like this story. It's good stuff.


For me the over use of swear words see's them lose their power their raison d'etre - the story highlights how when used sparingly they may act as a release perhaps but for me when they are used every other sentence - sometimes every other word - they lose this ability - banning - hmm - not sure about banning words - there are some that would offensive to me anywhere - but banning words ... not sure

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