69
There is a word "Si-Pal" in Korean swear words. Coincidentally, the pronunciation is the same as the number 18, and the meaning is "Fuck" in English.
These things don't only happen in the East.
In the West, this happens sometimes in our daily lives to look at a couple sitting at table 69 with a sneaky gaze just because they think of a genre of sex that we think of.
Ironically, we are living in a frame, underestimating the only holy act that creatures can create another creature.
The act of locking yourself in a frame naturally continues from generation to generation without our knowledge.
Young children say whatever comes to mind because they have no prejudice against all words, but adults say good and bad words separately through thoughts, so misunderstandings and fights occur depending on the words.
There were no good words or bad words in the first place, but we were caught in the laws we had set, making ourselves locked up.
Number 18 is only number 18, and 69 is just number 69. "Fuck" is also a language that refers to an action, and is sometimes a broad term used to express exclamation or good or bad.
The swear word I use in the dharma talk is a sound that happens directly from the heart without any meaning.
But swearing is like a double-edged sword, so if someone puts the meaning of the word and says it, it becomes a dirty word that bothers others, including yourself.
Even with the same knife, the doctor's knife saves people, and the crazy knife kills people.
I use it as a way to break stereotypes about words and show my mind right away, so don't misunderstand it just by the listener's thoughts and feelings.