The power of humour and laughter
Humour is one of the most effective tools for keeping communication exciting, fresh, and healthy. It enriches your interactions and gives your relationships that extra zing that keeps them interesting, light, and enjoyable. This shared pleasure creates a sense of intimacy and connection—qualities that define solid, successful relationships.People are often attracted to happy, funny individuals. When you enter a room laughing, it automatically draws others to you, and when you laugh with one another, a positive bond is created. This bond acts as a strong buffer against stress, disagreements, and disappointment. And laughter really is contagious—just hearing laughter primes your brain to smile and join in on the fun.
Humour helps you:
- Connect to others. Your health and happiness depend, to a large degree, on the quality of your relationships—and laughter binds people together.
- Smooth over differences. Using gentle humour often helps you broach sensitive subjects, resolve disagreements, and reframe problems.
- Feel relaxed and energized at the same time. Laughter relieves fatigue and relaxes your body, while also recharging your batteries and helping you accomplish more.
- Overcome problems and setbacks. A sense of humour is the key to resilience. It helps you take hardships in stride, weather disappointment, and bounce back from adversity and loss.
- Put things into perspective. Most situations are not as bleak as they appear to be when looked at from a playful and humourous point of view.
- Be more creative. Humour and playfulness loosen you up, energizing thinking and inspiring creative problem solving.
The health benefits of laughter
Laughter comes with numerous physical and mental health benefits, triggering a host of healthy changes in your brain and body.Laughter helps you stay healthy by:
- Boosting your mood
- Decreasing stress hormones
- Improving oxygen flow to the brain
- Reducing physical pain
- Lowering blood pressure
- Strengthening the immune system
- Protecting the heart
- Relaxing your body
The health benefits of laughter
Laughter comes with numerous physical and mental health benefits, triggering a host of healthy changes in your brain and body.Laughter helps you stay healthy by:
- Boosting your mood
- Decreasing stress hormones
- Improving oxygen flow to the brain
- Reducing physical pain
- Lowering blood pressure
- Strengthening the immune system
- Protecting the heart
- Relaxing your body
Mental health benefits of humour and laughter
When your body is relaxed and energized, you are better able to think and communicate clearly. This helps you keep your own emotions in check, relate in a positive way to others, and resolve conflict.Laughter is a particularly powerful antidote to depression and anxiety. Having a sense of humour offsets depression and anxiety by:
- Releasing endorphins. When you laugh, your brain releases endorphins, powerful chemicals that boost mood and override sadness and negative thoughts.
- Putting things into perspective. Most situations are not as bleak as they appear to be when looked at from a playful and humourous point of view.
- Connecting us to others. Our mental health depends, to a large degree, on the quality of our relationships—and laughter binds people together.
Successful relationship tip #1: Make sure both partners are in on the joke
Humour can strengthen relationships—but only when both people are in on the joke. It’s important to be sensitive to the other person. If your partner, friend, or colleague isn’t likely to appreciate the joke, don’t say or do it, even if it’s "all in good fun.” When the joking is one-sided rather than mutual, it undermines trust and goodwill and can damage the relationship. Consider the following example:
Michelle’s feet are always cold
when she gets into bed, but she has what she thinks is a playful
solution. She heats up her icy feet by placing them on her husband
Kevin’s warm body. Kevin hates this game, and has repeatedly told
Michelle that he doesn’t appreciate being used as a foot warmer, but
she just laughs at his complaints. Lately, Kevin has taken to sleeping
at the far edge of the bed, a solution that distances them as a couple.
Humour in relationships should be equally fun and
enjoyable for both people. If your friend or partner doesn’t think your
joking or teasing is funny—stop immediately. Before you start
playing around, take a moment to consider your motives, as well as your
partner or friend’s state of mind and sense of humour.Ask yourself the following questions:
- Do you feel calm, clear-headed, and connected to the other person?
- Is your true intent to communicate positive feelings—or are you taking a dig, expressing anger, or laughing at the other person’s expense?
- Are you sure that the joke will be understood and appreciated?
- Are you aware of the emotional tone of the nonverbal messages you are sending? Are you giving off positive, warm signals or a negative or hostile tone?
- Are you sensitive to the nonverbal signals the other person is sending? Do they seem open and receptive to your humour, or closed-off and offended?
- Are you willing and able to back off if the other person responds negatively to the joke?
- If you say or do something that offends, is it easy for you to immediately apologize?
Successful relationship tip #2: Use humour to defuse conflict
When conflict and disagreement throw a wrench in your relationships, humour and playfulness can help lighten things up and restore a sense of connection. Used skillfully and respectfully, a little lighthearted humour can quickly turn conflict into an opportunity for shared fun and intimacy. It allows you to get your point across without getting the other person’s defenses up or hurting his or her feelings. For example:
Lori’s husband, a contractor,
often comes home sweaty and dirty from his job. This is a major turn off
for Lori, and when her husband tries to give her a romantic hello, she
turns away and asks him to take a bath. This makes her husband angry,
and he accuses her of not appreciating what he does for a living. To
resolve this conflict, Lori has started turning on the tub water before
he gets home, and then she playfully peels off his clothes when he walks
through the door, and sometimes joins him in the tub.
Alex is retired, but he still goes up on the roof to clean the gutters. His wife, Angie, has told him numerous times that it scares her when he uses the ladder. Today, instead of her usual complaints, she yells up to him, "You know, it's husbands like you who turn wives into nags." Alex laughs and carefully comes down from the roof.
Humour—free or hurtful sarcasm or ridicule—neutralizes conflict by helping you:Alex is retired, but he still goes up on the roof to clean the gutters. His wife, Angie, has told him numerous times that it scares her when he uses the ladder. Today, instead of her usual complaints, she yells up to him, "You know, it's husbands like you who turn wives into nags." Alex laughs and carefully comes down from the roof.
- Interrupt the power struggle, instantly easing tension and allowing you to reconnect and regain perspective.
- Be more spontaneous. Shared laughter and play helps you break free from rigid ways of thinking and behaving, allowing you to see the problem in a new way and find a creative solution.
- Be less defensive. In playful settings, we hear things differently and can tolerate learning things about ourselves that we otherwise might find unpleasant or even painful.
- Let go of inhibitions. Laughter opens us up, freeing us to express what we truly feel and allowing our deep, genuine emotions to rise to the surface.
Successful relationship tip #3: Don’t use humour to cover up other emotions
Humour helps you stay resilient in the face of life’s challenges. But there are times when humour is not healthy—and that's when it is used as a cover for avoiding, rather than coping with, painful emotions. Laughter can be a disguise for feelings of hurt, fear, anger, and disappointment that you don’t want to feel or don’t know how to express.You can be funny about the truth, but covering up the truth isn’t funny. When you use humour and playfulness as a cover for other emotions, you create confusion and mistrust in your relationships. The following are examples of misplaced humour:
Mike is a constant joker.
Nothing ever seems to get him down and he never takes anything
seriously. No matter what happens to him or to anyone else, he makes a
joke out of the situation. In reality, Mike is terrified of death and
intimacy, and uses humour to avoid uncomfortable feelings and to keep
others at arm’s length.
Sharon is often jealous and possessive with her boyfriend Kevin, but she has never learned to openly discuss her insecurities and fears. Instead, she uses what she thinks is humour to express her feelings. Her jokes, however, usually having a biting, almost hostile edge to them, and Kevin doesn't find them funny at all. Instead of laughing, he often responds with a quiet coldness or withdrawal.
For cues as to whether or not humour is being used to conceal other emotions, ask yourself the following questions:Sharon is often jealous and possessive with her boyfriend Kevin, but she has never learned to openly discuss her insecurities and fears. Instead, she uses what she thinks is humour to express her feelings. Her jokes, however, usually having a biting, almost hostile edge to them, and Kevin doesn't find them funny at all. Instead of laughing, he often responds with a quiet coldness or withdrawal.
- Do nonverbal communication signals— such as tone of voice, intensity, timing—feel genuinely humourous to you, or do you experience them as forced or "not right” somehow?
- Is humour the only emotion you routinely express, or is there a mixture of other emotions that at least occasionally includes sadness, fear, and anger?
Improving your successful communication skills
It’s never too late to develop and embrace your playful, humourous side. If you find yourself limiting your playfulness, it's possible that you're self-conscious and concerned about how you'll look and sound to others when you attempt to be funny or witty.Fearing rejection or ridicule when attempting to be funny is an understandable fear, but it's important to point out that as a baby, you were naturally playful; you didn't worry about the reactions of other people. You can reclaim your inborn playfulness by setting aside regular, quality playtime. The more you joke, play, and laugh—the easier it becomes.
Cultivating your sense of humour and playfulness
The process of learning to play depends on your preferences. Begin by observing what you already do that borders on fun or playful. For example, do you like:- Telling or listening to jokes
- Watching funny movies or TV shows
- Dancing around to cheesy music when you’re alone
- Singing in the shower
- Daydreaming
- Reading the funny pages
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