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experiencelifemag.com
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Ha Ha!, Ah! and Ahh!
Enjoying humor and engaging in laughter have serious - and positive - consequences for our health, happiness and chances for success. Here’s the
lowdown on laughter and how you can trigger its practical benefits in your own
life.
By Michael J. Gelb |
July-August 2009 |
How Humor and Creativity Are Linked
Laugh Your Way to Wellness
Levity Rx: Bring More Laughter to Your Life
Laughing is a feel-good activity, one we’ll go out of our way to experience.
We seek out friends and romantic partners who make us laugh, we pay to see
comedy troupes perform and we set our TiVos for the sitcoms that make us guffaw.
We look for opportunities to laugh because — gosh darn it — laughing feels
good. But laughing has practical benefits as well. Studies show that humor
stimulates the parts of the brain involved in problem solving and information
synthesis; activating these brain regions makes us more creative as well as more
effective at work. What’s more, the physical act of laughing — what actually
happens in our bodies when we laugh — has a powerful and positive effect on our
physiology, helping our bodies suppress stress hormones and relieve tension, and
sending a cascade of feel-good reward chemicals through our systems. We also
know that humor, laughter, and a sense of play and playfulness are distinctive
traits of many of history’s most creative people. Leonardo da Vinci filled his
notebooks with puns, jokes and humorous stories. Biographers of Thomas Edison
describe his “hearty, boyish laugh” and outstanding sense of humor. Albert
Einstein loved to crack jokes in the midst of serious scientific meetings.
Humor and laughter are key ingredients for an enjoyable life and valuable
tools in becoming a more creative and effective thinker. And those are some
powerful reasons to start taking humor seriously.
How Humor and Creativity Are Linked
Why do creative people love to laugh?
And how, specifically, are humor and creativity related? One hypothesis is based
on what researchers call incongruity theory, which suggests that we laugh at
things that defy our expectations, like surprising juxtapositions, elements that
seem out of place and double meanings. Here are two examples of humorous
incongruity: Did you hear about the woman who drowned in a bowl of granola? She
was pulled under by a powerful currant. Or: I asked my trainer if he could teach
me some new yoga asanas. He said, “How flexible are you?” I replied, “I can’t
make Wednesdays or Fridays.” The set-up of these jokes leads us down a path
of expectation — that the woman drowned as the result of a current, not a
currant, and that “flexibility” refers to the physical kind instead of the
scheduling kind — and then we are surprised by the punchline. “Getting” the
jokes requires our minds to go in unexpected directions. The incongruity makes
us laugh. When we have a creative insight, something very similar takes
place: We are pursuing a familiar train of thought, but then we leap to an
unexpected idea and make a surprising connection. The same area of the brain is
active as when we find something funny. In 2004, a research team led by
Dartmouth psychologist William Kelley, PhD, asked participants to watch episodes
of the sitcoms Seinfeld and The Simpsons while fMRI technology imaged their
brain activity. Later, when researchers compared the brain scans with
participants’ laugh tracks, they found that two seconds before participants
laughed at a joke (when their brains were presumably working to “get” the joke),
their posterior temporal lobes lit up — the same area of the brain that helps
resolve incongruities and solve problems. Those findings give neurological
support to what psychologists have known for several decades: Exposure to
comedy bolsters creativity and enhances problem-solving and workplace
effectiveness. In a classic study published in The Journal of Educational
Psychology in 1976, Israeli psychologist Avner Ziv, PhD, arranged for high
school students to listen to a recording of a comedian before taking a
standardized creativity test. The test asked students to do things such as write
down as many uses as they could think of for a paper clip. Answers were scored
based on the following criteria: fluency, or the number of ideas generated;
flexibility, the number of different categories of the ideas; and originality,
the extent to which the ideas were unique. The students who listened to the
comedian scored significantly higher than the control group on all dimensions of
the test. In his book Health, Healing and the Amuse System (Kendall Hunt,
1999), developmental psychologist and humor researcher Paul McGhee, PhD, reports
on a survey of vice presidents and human resource directors from a hundred large
corporations. Eighty-four percent of those surveyed agreed that “employees with
a sense of humor do a better job.” McGhee explains: “People with a sense of
humor tend to be more creative, less rigid, and more willing to consider and
embrace new ideas and methods.”
Laugh Your Way to Wellness
After the posterior temporal lobe kicks in and
we “get” the joke, a different area of the brain lights up as we enjoy (laugh
at) the joke. The fMRI scans from the sitcom study show that participants
who were shown cartoons or told jokes that they later rated as funny had
increased activity in key parts of the brain’s reward system. The
nucleus accumbens, which helps produce and modulate the feel-good hormone
dopamine, lights up when we laugh and sends a wave of pleasurable feelings
through our systems. Laughter also triggers the amygdala, the part of our neural
reward circuitry that helps decode emotions. In his book, Anatomy of an
Illness: As Perceived By the Patient (Norton, 1979), Norman Cousins shares the
story of his recovery from ankylosing spondylitis, a form of severe degenerative
arthritis. His most successful therapy was laughter. He watched silly movies and
surrounded himself with mirth. “I made the joyous discovery that 10 minutes of
genuine belly laughter had an anesthetic effect,” he wrote. Many subsequent
studies have proven Cousins right, showing that laughter has an analgesic effect
(most likely because it releases endorphins into the bloodstream), especially
for chronic pain from arthritis or neurological diseases. Laughter also eases
muscle tension and has been shown to suppress the release of the stress hormone
cortisol. A 2001 study reported in the Journal of the American Medical
Association showed that symptoms improved in allergy patients who viewed movie
comedies, but not in those in the control group who watched weather reports.
And research by University of Hertfordshire psychology professor Richard
Wiseman, PhD, has shown that laughter not only boosts immunity, but also
“increases our heart rate, helps us breathe more deeply, and stretches many
different muscles in our face and upper body. In fact, it is like a mini
workout.” So, making a little more room for laughter in our lives should be a
no-brainer. We enhance our creativity and problem-solving power, bolster our
health, and get a rush of good feelings. In other words, the more you “ha ha,”
the more you’ll “aha!” and “ahh.” Michael J. Gelb is a leading authority on
the application of genius thinking to personal and organizational development.
He is the author of 12 books, including How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci
(Dell, 2000).
Levity Rx: Bring More Laughter to Your Life
Here are a few simple things
you can do to add a dose of humor to your day: - Post a funny photo of
yourself on your bathroom mirror as a reminder to avoid taking yourself too
seriously.
- Keep a humor diary. Record your favorite jokes and funny
stories and share them with your friends.
- Surround yourself with
laughter: Invite friends over for an evening of joke-telling (give a prize for
the funniest), post your favorite cartoons in your office, or have a comedy
movie evening. Spend time with children and with family and friends who make you
chuckle.
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Ha Ha!, Ah! and Ahh!
Enjoying humor and engaging in laughter have serious - and positive - consequences for our health, happiness and chances for success. Here’s the
lowdown on laughter and how you can trigger its practical benefits in your own
life.
By Michael J. Gelb | Insight Department, July-August 2009 |
How Humor and Creativity Are Linked
Laugh Your Way to Wellness
Levity Rx: Bring More Laughter to Your Life
Laughing is a feel-good activity, one we’ll go out of our way to experience.
We seek out friends and romantic partners who make us laugh, we pay to see
comedy troupes perform and we set our TiVos for the sitcoms that make us guffaw.
We look for opportunities to laugh because — gosh darn it — laughing feels
good. But laughing has practical benefits as well. Studies show that humor
stimulates the parts of the brain involved in problem solving and information
synthesis; activating these brain regions makes us more creative as well as more
effective at work. What’s more, the physical act of laughing — what actually
happens in our bodies when we laugh — has a powerful and positive effect on our
physiology, helping our bodies suppress stress hormones and relieve tension, and
sending a cascade of feel-good reward chemicals through our systems. We also
know that humor, laughter, and a sense of play and playfulness are distinctive
traits of many of history’s most creative people. Leonardo da Vinci filled his
notebooks with puns, jokes and humorous stories. Biographers of Thomas Edison
describe his “hearty, boyish laugh” and outstanding sense of humor. Albert
Einstein loved to crack jokes in the midst of serious scientific meetings.
Humor and laughter are key ingredients for an enjoyable life and valuable
tools in becoming a more creative and effective thinker. And those are some
powerful reasons to start taking humor seriously.
How Humor and Creativity Are Linked (Back to Top)
Why do creative people love to laugh?
And how, specifically, are humor and creativity related? One hypothesis is based
on what researchers call incongruity theory, which suggests that we laugh at
things that defy our expectations, like surprising juxtapositions, elements that
seem out of place and double meanings. Here are two examples of humorous
incongruity: Did you hear about the woman who drowned in a bowl of granola? She
was pulled under by a powerful currant. Or: I asked my trainer if he could teach
me some new yoga asanas. He said, “How flexible are you?” I replied, “I can’t
make Wednesdays or Fridays.” The set-up of these jokes leads us down a path
of expectation — that the woman drowned as the result of a current, not a
currant, and that “flexibility” refers to the physical kind instead of the
scheduling kind — and then we are surprised by the punchline. “Getting” the
jokes requires our minds to go in unexpected directions. The incongruity makes
us laugh. When we have a creative insight, something very similar takes
place: We are pursuing a familiar train of thought, but then we leap to an
unexpected idea and make a surprising connection. The same area of the brain is
active as when we find something funny. In 2004, a research team led by
Dartmouth psychologist William Kelley, PhD, asked participants to watch episodes
of the sitcoms Seinfeld and The Simpsons while fMRI technology imaged their
brain activity. Later, when researchers compared the brain scans with
participants’ laugh tracks, they found that two seconds before participants
laughed at a joke (when their brains were presumably working to “get” the joke),
their posterior temporal lobes lit up — the same area of the brain that helps
resolve incongruities and solve problems. Those findings give neurological
support to what psychologists have known for several decades: Exposure to
comedy bolsters creativity and enhances problem-solving and workplace
effectiveness. In a classic study published in The Journal of Educational
Psychology in 1976, Israeli psychologist Avner Ziv, PhD, arranged for high
school students to listen to a recording of a comedian before taking a
standardized creativity test. The test asked students to do things such as write
down as many uses as they could think of for a paper clip. Answers were scored
based on the following criteria: fluency, or the number of ideas generated;
flexibility, the number of different categories of the ideas; and originality,
the extent to which the ideas were unique. The students who listened to the
comedian scored significantly higher than the control group on all dimensions of
the test. In his book Health, Healing and the Amuse System (Kendall Hunt,
1999), developmental psychologist and humor researcher Paul McGhee, PhD, reports
on a survey of vice presidents and human resource directors from a hundred large
corporations. Eighty-four percent of those surveyed agreed that “employees with
a sense of humor do a better job.” McGhee explains: “People with a sense of
humor tend to be more creative, less rigid, and more willing to consider and
embrace new ideas and methods.”
Laugh Your Way to Wellness (Back to Top)
After the posterior temporal lobe kicks in and
we “get” the joke, a different area of the brain lights up as we enjoy (laugh
at) the joke. The fMRI scans from the sitcom study show that participants
who were shown cartoons or told jokes that they later rated as funny had
increased activity in key parts of the brain’s reward system. The
nucleus accumbens, which helps produce and modulate the feel-good hormone
dopamine, lights up when we laugh and sends a wave of pleasurable feelings
through our systems. Laughter also triggers the amygdala, the part of our neural
reward circuitry that helps decode emotions. In his book, Anatomy of an
Illness: As Perceived By the Patient (Norton, 1979), Norman Cousins shares the
story of his recovery from ankylosing spondylitis, a form of severe degenerative
arthritis. His most successful therapy was laughter. He watched silly movies and
surrounded himself with mirth. “I made the joyous discovery that 10 minutes of
genuine belly laughter had an anesthetic effect,” he wrote. Many subsequent
studies have proven Cousins right, showing that laughter has an analgesic effect
(most likely because it releases endorphins into the bloodstream), especially
for chronic pain from arthritis or neurological diseases. Laughter also eases
muscle tension and has been shown to suppress the release of the stress hormone
cortisol. A 2001 study reported in the Journal of the American Medical
Association showed that symptoms improved in allergy patients who viewed movie
comedies, but not in those in the control group who watched weather reports.
And research by University of Hertfordshire psychology professor Richard
Wiseman, PhD, has shown that laughter not only boosts immunity, but also
“increases our heart rate, helps us breathe more deeply, and stretches many
different muscles in our face and upper body. In fact, it is like a mini
workout.” So, making a little more room for laughter in our lives should be a
no-brainer. We enhance our creativity and problem-solving power, bolster our
health, and get a rush of good feelings. In other words, the more you “ha ha,”
the more you’ll “aha!” and “ahh.” Michael J. Gelb is a leading authority on
the application of genius thinking to personal and organizational development.
He is the author of 12 books, including How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci
(Dell, 2000).
Levity Rx: Bring More Laughter to Your Life (Back to Top)
Here are a few simple things
you can do to add a dose of humor to your day: - Post a funny photo of
yourself on your bathroom mirror as a reminder to avoid taking yourself too
seriously.
- Keep a humor diary. Record your favorite jokes and funny
stories and share them with your friends.
- Surround yourself with
laughter: Invite friends over for an evening of joke-telling (give a prize for
the funniest), post your favorite cartoons in your office, or have a comedy
movie evening. Spend time with children and with family and friends who make you
chuckle.
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July 25, 2009
Cindy Lou says:
Thank You for this article on laughter & humor I believe it is the hidden gift that strengthens the body in several ways from the outside to the inside.Even the saddest moment we experience in life is touched by a thought of laughter.It truely brings out the best in someone.It seems to renew life and help bond to contribute more good feelings....