Why laughter is truly the best medicine
By John Gloster-Smith and Akasha Lonsdale
Published in "Stress News", January 2007, Vol 19 No 1, by
the International Stress Management Association
The news this summer was that the government was looking into
ways to make us happier. As the BBC programme “The Happiness
Formula” in May 2006 showed, happiness levels in Britain are
falling. In fact the proportion of people saying they are very
happy has fallen from 52% in1957 to just 36% today, despite
huge increases in income. As professionals in the Stress arena,
you will no doubt be well aware of the statistics that show
increasingly serious levels of stress being experienced by
people. So the news about happiness levels is unlikely to be a
surprise.
What research has tended to show, is that there are certain key
factors that contribute to happiness. As the major publicist of
Positive Psychology, Dr. Martin Seligman of the University of
Pennsylvania has determined that three components stand out:
pleasure (the “smiley-face piece”), engagement (the depth of
involvement with family, work, romance and hobbies) and meaning
(using personal strengths to serve some larger end). Seligman
says that engagement and meaning are particularly important.
Other researchers have pointed to bondedness with friends,
family and loved ones as a major contributor.
So, if we look at laughter as one manifestation of happiness,
it turns out that it’s not something we tend to do
alone. “It is a
tool of communication” says Robert Provine of the University of
Maryland. Also
laughter is infectious, once one person starts, others quickly
follow (very difficult if someone gets the giggles in the
middle of something that’s meant to be deadly
serious.) When we
laugh with others, we feel more connected to them – it’s part
of our bonding.
But what has been happening to
laughter and why is it so important? What does laughter have
to tell us about our happiness – and our
wellbeing?
Well, laughter is generally considered to be an essential
behaviour of a happy, joyful person whilst lack of laughter
contributes to anxiety, depression, and illness. In today’s
society, as with happiness in general, we seem to have
forgotten how to laugh. Dr. Michael Titze, a German
psychologist tells us that,
·
In the 1950’s people used to laugh 18 minutes a day, but today
we laugh not more than 6 minutes a day, despite the huge rise
in the standard of living
·
Children can laugh up to 300-400 times a day, but when we grow
up to be adults this frequency comes down to less than 15 times
a day, if at all.
So why has laughter declined?
The answers will not surprise you. Here’s a few reminders. First
there’s the stress of living in a fast world, which is
increasingly dominated by anxiety and fear. Telecommunications
have made bad news instantly accessible to millions, thus
accentuating the anxiety and fear. People are working long
hours, under pressure to move fast. Transport is congested.
Cities are crowded. Divorce and family break-ups are
high. So negative
stress levels are constantly on the increase.
Many people live in the past, feeling guilty or resentful
whilst others worry about the future. Often the cause of perceived
difficulties is attributed to something or someone
else. So we don’t
take true responsibility and find it hard to live in the moment
– which of course is where laughter occurs.
Happiness is perceived as conditional on external factors and
becomes part of the “more, bigger, better” syndrome and the
pursuit of certain things in order to be happy, which if
successful results in a cycle of immediate fulfilment followed
by dissatisfaction and a renewed wanting that leaves a
lingering feeling of “what I have is not enough”. This becomes
a repetitive
feeling that “I have not got what I want, something is still
missing. If only I
could…..or …..when I ……..”. Addiction to desire is seen
as one of the most fundamental barriers to human contentment
and is all-pervasive in today’s society.
Laughter is seen as dependent on a “sense of humour”: we
believe we must have a reason to laugh, that laughter is about
laughing “at” something or somebody else, that it only happens
on certain occasions and that it depends on “one’s sense of
humour” ie. it is dependent on external stimuli or a belief you
have about your personality.
However, major hope is now available.
As a result of research in both East and West, people are
increasingly realising that laughter is something that can be
spontaneously created and need not be dependent on anything. In
fact you can laugh for no reason at all. Authentic laughter is an
energy that wells up from within. It is something that occurs
spontaneously, without a reason, resulting in the experience
often called joyfulness.
People might have lost it but it is perfectly possible to help
them get it back. People can be taught to laugh for no reason,
to discover their own innate capacity to experience their own
well-spring of laughter and joy. You do not have to be happy or
have a “sense of humour” or even have a reason to laugh. You do
not have to be constrained by your social
conditioning.
We are talking here about a simple technique that has proved so
powerful that it has become a world-wide phenomenon, after
being introduced in India by a medical doctor, Dr. Madan
Kataria, to help people manage the stress of life in
Mumbai. Dr.
Kataria was so concerned about this issue that one day he went
out into a park and asked as many people as he could to join
him in an instant laughter club. Eventually he managed to
persuade 4 people to join him. As others watched in initial
bemusement, they took it in turns to tell jokes. As we have
seen, laughter is infectious. Others started to join and soon
he had 50 people in his club.
Unfortunately they ran out of jokes
after two weeks and then two women complained because the
humour had become sexist and rude. To rescue his new idea,
and this was the crucial breakthrough, Dr Kataria turned to
the idea of laughter exercises to help people to fake
laughter, to “fake it till you make it”. That worked a
treat! He also
turned to his wife, a yoga teacher, and borrowed from yoga
some of its deep breathing, which he adapted to simple
breathing exercises to support people’s ability to sustain
the laughter beneficially. Laughter Yoga was born,
his club recovered and soon the park was attracting large
numbers to pre-work laughter sessions. It proved so popular
that it spread, first all round India and now across the
globe.
Why has this been so successful?
First and foremost because it is so easy: anybody can do it.
Such a laughter training technique belongs to all and has no
hidden agenda. It is not at anybody’s expense. It is socially
and emotionally safe. And, very importantly, it is the doing of
it that is beneficial. No thinking is required. It is the
thinking part of the brain that holds the beliefs we described
above that are limiting our natural laughter. Laughter bypasses
this thinking left part of our brain, tapping into our
right-brain functions. Here lie our child-like qualities; it’s
where we are spontaneous and fun, creative and
intuitive.
The practical exercises, which are simple physical techniques,
are aimed at contacting this natural fun side, largely through
“acting silliness”. Also, as we said earlier, laughter is
infectious and as the natural laughter mechanism kicks in, fake
laughter becomes real laughter. Finally, as it also makes use
of a simple breathing technique, it is a highly effective form
of aerobic exercise that makes you feel good. We see it all the
time in the bright smiles, flushed faces and shining eyes of
participants after a laughter session.
So why is laughter truly the best medicine?
Well, it is scientifically proven that,
even if you pretend to laugh or act happy, your body produces
“happiness” chemicals. Our bodies do not know the difference
between thinking about doing something and actually doing
it. Whatever the
source of laughter, it leads to the same set of physiological
changes in the body. Laughter generates the release of positive
chemicals, which
·
Enrich the blood with plentiful supplies of oxygen
·
Boost the immune system and bring relaxation
·
Counteract harmful stress chemicals
·
Release endorphins, the body’s pain-killer hormone, and give a
sense of well-being
·
Counteract depression, anxiety and psychosomatic
problems
·
Ensure good sleep
·
Bring a happy glow to your face and make your eyes
shine
This is supported by the research of 19th Century
French physiologist, Duchene, who found that a “real” smile
(when the lips part and turn up and the muscles contract around
the eyes to create crow’s feet), involuntarily sends a signal
of genuine joy to the brain of the person
smiling. So
even an induced “real” smile can uplift your
mood. (Try
it now. How
do you feel?). And of course when we
experience a “real” smile from someone else, we tend to
automatically smile back, even if we don’t know the
person.
In the 1970’s, it was Norman Cousins,
author of “The Anatomy of an Illness” who found that a large
part of what cured him of a potentially fatal illness, was
watching funny films. This sparked serious scientific
interest. Subsequently Dr William Fry of Stanford
University, California, showed that laughter stimulated the
heart rate, provided good cardio-vascular exercise and
decreased the chances of respiratory infections whilst Dr
Lee Berk of Loma Linda University Medical Centre,
California, proved that laughter produced fewer arrhythmias,
lowered blood pressure, lowered the levels of stress
hormones, (particularly cortisol), reduced the need for
medication and ultimately resulted in fewer heart
attacks.
Laughter has been so beneficial physiologically, that it’s
sometimes called “internal jogging”.
But the physiological benefits are mirrored by psychological
benefits.
Illness also has its psychological causes. Happier people tend
to have fewer illnesses. Researchers have found that happiness
or related states like hopefulness, optimism and contentment
appear to reduce the risk or limit the severity of
cardiovascular disease, pulmonary disease, diabetes,
hypertension, colds and upper-respiratory infections. People
who struggle with life are often more predisposed to these
illnesses. According to a Dutch study of elderly patients
published in 2004, those upbeat mental states referred to above
reduced an individual’s risk of death by 50% over a 9 year
period. Also, doctors have known for years that clinical
depression can worsen heart disease.
Laughter, however, makes it easier to handle life and its
challenges, because it puts us intensely “in the moment”, and
it’s when we are in the moment, that we are not aware of our
problems. It’s as if we literally drop them. Can you remember a
time when you’ve laughed and things have somehow seemed
different? We even
say we’ve “laughed it off”. Laughter puts us at ease: people
who laugh, worry less than those who don’t.
It helps us handle challenges because it relaxes us and gives
us a better perspective: a period of laughter gives us the
opportunity to look at things differently and defuses painful
emotions. With practice, it develops joyfulness so that this
precious experience is more present in everyday
life. By acting
silliness in groups and having a great laugh about it, we build
self-confidence which helps us drop our inhibitions. As said
earlier, it also helps communication because laughter is an
important social skill that keeps communication fun. It
develops our innate sense of humour, helps us find more
laughter in our lives and thus changes our perception of who we
are for the better. What a simple gift we’ve got – if only we
used it more!
So laughter training
has widespread application. It has been successfully used in
corporate environments for team building, stress management,
communication, employee engagement, innovation and creativity.
It has been provided for seniors, children, parents, in
relationship training, in tourism, with cancer self-help
groups, associations dealing with depression, and in hospitals
and other medical settings.
If we take corporate environments in more detail,
it has been found that the use of laughter has a positive
effect in reducing stress, which as you know is the number one
cause of absenteeism. Also it is a major communication
enhancer. It reduces the sense of conflict since it is hard to
be in conflict with someone you are laughing with. It creates a
sense of safety and people feel more open. It stimulates fun
and we become fun to be with. We become more likeable.
Criticism seems to collapse. Barriers are broken down and a
sense of bondedness is created. People feel more
self-confident.
Laughter is therefore not surprisingly used as part of team
building and to foster creativity and innovation in teams.
Laughter connects people. People who laugh together, work
better together. Companies that want to improve EQ in their
managers have found that the use of laughter has helped create
better emotional balance. As laughter is a right-brain
activity, it stimulates the creation of new ideas, especially
through play. Finally it has a part to play in peak performance
because it increases the supply of oxygen to the brain. As Dr
Otto Warburgh, the 2 times Nobel Prize winner found, the lack
of oxygen was the root cause of illness. Laughter raises the
oxygen supply to the body, enhancing its functions.
So without doubt, laughter has a major role to play in the
unfolding of our potential. If we want to boost our happiness
levels, we can start by laughing - just for the sheer joy of
it. Participants in our laughter training find that when they
learn to laugh for no good reason, they tap into a power that’s
always been there but couldn’t always be
accessed.
Through this they boost their bondedness with others and
find that laughing together brings them together. They
feel more engaged, more positive, more enthusiastic and
more able to create a meaningful life in every
way.
As we said earlier, what an amazing gift - enjoy it and
learn to live life laughing.
(c) The Empowering Partnership Ltd. 2006
For further information about Laughter Training click here
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