Momma brought me up to fear all of those four-letter words. Two times two combinations that stirred my interest and made me wonder. Four-letters that I would string together and spout off louder and prouder than a freshly lit firecracker spinning and spitting on hot July pavement. The same four letters that slapped my fingers, flicked my lips, lathered my mouth with bitter bar soap and coated my tongue with crushed red pepper until there was nothing left to touch to speak to chew to taste but my cautious curiosity surrounding a apprehension of language that I refused to acknowledge.
And when I grew up, like most little girls do, I kept my nose in my books straitlaced, like Momma asked, and I learned about my freedom of speech and his freedom of speech and her freedom of speech and the same freedom of speech that celebrates our right to use all words in any order— four letters or not. In those same books, I learned that freedoms come with their own price. And trust me, I’m no stranger to their single-syllable ugliness. It’s their power to elicit such reactions that makes them such forbidden fruits— such juicy, delectable flesh at that.
In that same vein, I read the bible too, and I know when Eve bit into that apple, homegirl wanted a little more than to just keep the doctor away. She wanted her own mind. She wanted the same freedom that comes with those four-letter words, and she wanted the power to fire them at Adam as she saw fit. After all, her mother didn't give her that mouth— God himself did, and He knew how that story would unfold.
But now I’ve grown up and read a lot of things, I understand those freedoms. I respect them and use them to color my communication as necessary. I weave them into poetry and stories, paint them with lush inks and let them drip down from once naked pages.
The truth though? There may be one four letter word that I’m afraid to speak, and it has no mother-given stigma at all. Anyone can tell you, its four letters have more power than any curse or swear ever conjured by the evercreative tongue of man. I keep it hidden in the thick of my throat; locked away until the L the O the V the E sheds its skin and transforms into something that I won’t refuse to acknowledge— until I find my freedom to scream it without a care for its never-ending consequences.
Yeah, Momma should’ve of warned me about that one.