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Why We’re Fine with Cartoons Swearing but Not Talking About Real Trauma

  • Posted on February 24, 2026

Funny thing—I’ve noticed a pattern. Parents, churches, even society at large: people are okay with a cartoon character dropping a bleeped word here and there, teaching a lesson in between laughs. Remember that episode of Arthur? Sure, there’s a swear, but it’s “educational,” safe, and digestible.

Now…say you try to talk honestly about your own trauma. Real, raw, lived experience? Suddenly, it’s uncomfortable. Inappropriate. “Too much.”

Think about it: we normalize bleeped profanity on a screen for kids, but silence conversations that could actually save lives, inspire healing, and spark awareness. We’re more comfortable with fiction than reality.

Here’s the takeaway: there’s power in speaking the truth. Your story—your trauma—cannot be sanitized without losing its impact. It resonates because it’s real. It shakes people out of comfort zones, exposes double standards, and teaches lessons that cartoons never could.

So if anyone tells you to “be careful what you share” or “don’t talk about it,” just remember: the bleeped-out word in a cartoon is easier to handle than the truth. And that? That truth is exactly what makes your voice worth hearing.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: Facts, Listen, Rape, Trauma, Truth, Wow
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Young Faith: My Story, My Struggles, My Triumph, My Faith by Shalonda Falconer with Lorian Tompkins