Laughter. The simple pleasure of a belly laugh! What a physical experience it can be.
What brings on that kind of laughter for you, dear reader? Does it happen often?
It takes a lot for me to laugh out loud. I’m more of a quiet smiler. Sometimes the smile is so quiet, you could think I was unaffected. I often ‘feel’ the smile in my head and know that it isn’t showing on the outside.
Watching movies often brings out a noisy laugh. Usually over slapstick comedy. I consider slapstick as physical comedy; somebody has fallen, for example. I laugh and laugh like a sicko! There is nothing very subtle about my sense of humour 😀 I’ll find myself laughing so hard that I can’t catch my breath. Sometimes, it is scary because it seems I’ll never get it back. I think this is because I struggle to let myself be loud and my natural inclination is to stuff it back in.
Graham Norton makes me laugh. I love his show. I chuckle my way through it, up to and including the red chair! Graham is very clever at bringing his guests right along, sharing with us their unusual stories and cracking us up.
I laugh with my husband, unexpectedly. Not because I don’t expect to laugh with him, but perhaps because a moment ago life was staid. Nothing particularly outstanding was happening. And then, something is said – we’re on the same wavelength and something clicks – then we’re both bent over in raptures of laughter. Take a peek at each other and again we’re falling around. If you’re lucky enough to have that kind of bond with somebody, then you’ll understand where I’m coming from.
Naturally, I’m a very serious person. I laugh with people I can relax with. That includes my children and my sisters. There are only a few friends that I’ll find myself laughing with.
I didn’t grow up with a wider network of family. It was always Mum and Dad and my siblings. All aunties and cousins lived in another country. And so, I didn’t develop strong bonds there.
My husband and I just spent a day with a cousin and his wife. We’ve been developing friendship over the last few years, mainly via Facebook; and we visited with them in 2013. But we laughed and laughed this weekend. It was very natural and friendly; non-judgmental laughing at each other and ourselves. A lightening of spirit experience.
The endorphins released from laughing are real. You can feel the release and relaxation after a good bout of laughter. It must be why there are laughter therapy classes, why comedians are so popular and why everyone loves the Simpsons! 😀
If you’ve read this, hopefully you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about and you enjoy loud and proud laughter regularly. If you don’t get enough laughs – search it out! What makes you laugh?
I’m including a link here to something that still makes me laugh. I hope you’ll get a good chuckle out of it too.
dave barry makes me laugh. he’s the best. 🙂
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I don’t know him. I googled, an American icon then 🙂
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i suggest that you borrow one of his books from the library then, 🙂
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I laugh at anything, sometimes inappropriately which can be a tad embarrassing! My grannie used to say, ‘you’d laugh to see a pudding crawl’, an idiom often used but rarely understood!
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I find lately that there are less reasons to out-an-out belly laugh and it makes me a bit sad. I enjoy laughing at the unexpected, the endearing and the familiar. I only laugh with good friends and my husband (occasionally). I was thinking the other day how when I was younger, I would laugh more freely. Laughing does the soul good and I cherish those moments when laughter is natural and easy. Thanks for your post. I found you through the IWSG blog hop.
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How are you going today. Finding more to laugh at, I hope!
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For me it was Callahan’s Cross Time Saloon by spider robinson and Discworld by Sir Terry Pratchett, I read them in America, I used to travel home to Queens on the subway after being to Barnes and Nobles in the city and laugh while reading, getting the odd glare, I didn’t mind, and I still laugh with those books, as I brought them back to Ireland with me.
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I was friends with a Martina Molloy in Dublin in the 80s 🙂
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Laughter is indeed the best medicine. And, you can get it without a prescription. Side effects include snorting coffee out your nose and/or wetting your pants.
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LOL
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Just saw the link has broken. Search out Eddie Izzard, Star Wars Cantina 🙃
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Loved the clip. I’ve been told I’m a comedian’s dream because I laugh loud and often. I was once severely reprimanded on a long haul flight for laughing too loud and often at a Danny Bhoy routine while others were trying to sleep. You can see Danny’s experience with a gecko in a motel in Karratha here, from about 2:30 in. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UX2bnODw7ps&t=5s
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I’m a very quiet person, but I LOVE slapstick and really laugh out loud. I’m the loudest laugher at movies. Where are you in Oz?
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Down on the Fleurieu Peninsula in SA.
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