How to Use Humor to Care For Your Health and Cope with Hard Times
- Decrease levels of stress hormone
- Lower blood pressure
- Strengthen the immune system
- Decrease pain
- Decrease Inflammation
- Curate your personal comedy collection.
- Spend some time on social media following and liking as many pages as possible that make you laugh. This way, humor will show up more often in your feeds.
- Have a "Humor Homie" and share funny things back and forth. Even if you don't have time now to watch that funny video now it's ok, research shows that even just the anticipation of humor can help to decrease stress .
- Prime the pump for positivity.
- Rather than always listening to work related or news related podcasts, listen to funny podcasts while community or doing work around the house. The Laughable app is great for this. The goal is to learn to experience humor not by chance... but by choice.
- Learn how to laugh.
- I know it sounds weird, but consider this: When you're watching something funny or find something humorous, are you actually laughing? Several years ago, I realized I wasn't laughing much and was intellectualizing humor. I would think oh that's hilarious and would maybe smile, but I would not laugh. I began to fake it. Not a crazy amount, but just a bit. If something made me smile, I might let out an audible 'Ha.” If something gave me a light chuckle, I would purposely laugh a little louder and harder. By focusing on letting myself actually laugh, I've developed a real laugh. Now I actually 'lol” far more often than I used to.
- Create a funny things intervention.
- Write down three funny things every day. Researchers have found that people who write down three things they found humorous or amusing on each day for one week, they were able to increase their overall happiness and decrease depressive symptoms for up to six months. The great thing about this exercise is that you can begin to train your brain to find the humor in things in real time, rather than retrospect.
- Play the 'What I Could've Said” game.
- If you're the type of person that always thinks of the funny thing you could have done or said after the moment has passed, that's ok! Go with it. Come up with various humorous ways you could have handled a situation or found humor in it. The more often you do this, the more quickly your brain will start making these connections. This technique is called "Humorous Reappraisal" and is found to be a helpful coping strategy and build resilience, according to a study from Stanford.
- Take a 'Funny 15.”
- Set an alarm to take a break where you watch a funny video. Not only will this keep your brain in 'funny focus” training, it will keep you sharper and more productive for the rest of the day. People who take a break and watch a funny video are twice as productive when returning to work as those who took a break with no humor. Of course, if you're like me, then you may also need to set an alarm to stop watching funny videos and get back to work!
- Keep a 'Humor Jar”
- This can be a small container at the house or office with slips of paper nearby. As funny things happen throughout your day, write them down and put them in the jar. At the end of the month, year, whatever, look through your jar and relive the funniest moments,
- Exaggerate and heighten your situation.
- One of the easiest ways improv and stand-up comics create humor is through exaggeration. In fact, exaggeration is used so often, it's up a million percent this year– ba-dum bum! Well, I tried. Anyway, when experiencing a mildly stressful situation, just heighten it until it becomes ridiculous.
- For example, if you have a flat tire and are waiting for a tow you might text home and say– 'Hi honey, I blew a tire and I've been waiting for a tow for three hours…but I'll be home as soon as I can.” Then, why not decrease your stress and your partner's stress by sending another text and heightening it to a ridiculous level?... 'Please tell the kids I love them, wish them luck in college, and text me pictures if they produce grandchildren.”
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