When was the last time
you laughed at yourself? How do you use humor in your life? Some people use
humor in everything they do, while others avoid it. Laughing has been shown to
have therapeutic effects on your physical and mental state (Amici, 2019).
Humor helps people
cope with challenging situations. It can lighten the mood among strangers.
Humor connects people as they laugh together. How does laughter help those
living in totalitarian regimes cope with life? Slucki et al. (2020) state that
laughter is a form of resistance and coping. When oppressed people use humor,
it helps them maintain a sense of their humanity and humanness when so much is
taken from them. Giappone et al (2018) show that laughter can be a way to
lighten shame or insecurities about ourselves.
Humor relieves tension
and stress. It can alleviate pain, increase adrenaline and noradrenaline,
reduce blood pressure, slow breathing, and relax muscles. Laughter produces
catecholamines that heighten endorphins and change the mind's focus (Amici,
2019).
The next time you find
yourself in a high-anxiety situation, can you find the humor in it? Can you
laugh at the situation or yourself to relax and connect with others? How can
you use humor to heal? Maybe if we found more to laugh at, we would spend less
time in the clinic.
Here are some fun
quotes on laughter from Laughter Online University (n.d):
1.
[Humanity] has unquestionably one really effective
weapon—laughter. Power, money, persuasion, supplication, persecution—these can
lift at a colossal humbug—push it a little—weaken it a little, century by
century, but only laughter can blow it to rags and atoms at a blast. Against
the assault of laughter nothing can stand. — Mark Twain
2.
A good laugh heals a lot of hurts. — Madeleine L'Engle
3.
A good laugh is a mighty good thing, a rather too scarce a good
thing. — Herman Melville
4.
A good laugh is sunshine in the house. — William Thackeray
5.
A smile is a curve that sets everything straight. — Phyllis
Diller
6.
A smile starts on the lips, a grin spreads to the eyes, a
chuckle comes from the belly; but a good laugh bursts forth from the soul,
overflows, and bubbles all around. — Carolyn Birmingham
7.
A well-balanced person is one who finds both sides of an issue
laughable. — Herbert Procknow
8.
Against the assault of laughter, nothing can stand. — Mark Twain
9.
Always laugh when you can. It is cheap medicine. — Lord Byron
10.
Among those whom I like or admire, I can find no common
denominator, but among those whom I love, I can: all of them make me laugh. —
W. H. Auden
11.
An optimist laughs to forget; a pessimist forgets to laugh. —
Tom Nansbury
References:
Amici, P., (2019). The Humor in Therapy: the
Healing Power of Laughter. Psychiatria Danubina, 31(Suppl 3), 503–508.
Giappone, R., Bonello, K., Francis, F., &
Mackenzie, I. (2018). Comedy and Critical Thought : Laughter as
Resistance, edited by Iain MacKenzie, et al., Rowman & Littlefield
Publishers, 2018. ProQuest Ebook Central,
https://ebookcentral-proquest-com.cham .
Laughter Online University (n.d). Laugh quotes
and laughing quotes. Laughter Online University. Retrieved on
November 02, 2022, from
https://www.laughteronlineuniversity.com/quotes-about-laughter/
Slucki, D., Patt, A., Finder, G. N.,
Shternshis, A., Shneer, D., Schwarz, J., & Caplan, M. (2020). Laughter
After: Humor and the Holocaust. In Laughter After. Wayne State
University Press.
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