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HumorMatters
Frequently
Asked Questions
Warning: Humor May be
Dangerous to Your Illness 
This website is
dedicated to the Power and Practice of Positive Therapeutic
Humor.
The Goal of this site is to Educate, Inform, and Help you network and locate
resources.
You will learn about Humor and its relation to Health and Healing.

What is Humor?
The answer to the question "What is Humor" is not a simple one.
First, humor is the experience of incongruity. In ones environment the
incongruity may be experienced when someone falls down in a situation when they are not
expected to fall down, or the incongruity can be between concepts, thoughts, or ideas
often illustrated by the punch line of a joke or the caption of a cartoon.
Second, as James Thurber has stated, "Humor is emotional chaos remembered
in tranquility." We commonly say, "It wasnt funny at the time." Later
with distance we can appreciate the humor. This occurs frequently when people are
experiencing a crisis, and at some later time the crisis situation is perceived as
humorous.
Third, humor can be experienced in the joy of "getting" it. Humor can
be the understanding of something that we at first did not comprehend. This occurs
everyday in misunderstandings at which we laugh.
Fourth, the experience of the "forbidden" (laughing in church), or
"getting away with" something (often seen with children) is often experienced as
humorous..
Finally, for me, humor is comprised of three components: wit, mirth, and laughter. Wit is the cognitive
experience, mirth the emotional experience, and laughter the physiological experience. We
often equate laughter with humor, but you do not need to laugh to experience humor.
The more important question instead of "What IS humorous?"
is the question "What do You EXPERIENCE as humorous." As
individuals we tend to experience humor by either "getting it" (which
tends to be cognitive or intellectual response), by feeling it (which tends to be
an emotional response), or by laughing at it (which is more of a physiological
response). There is a wide range of life's experiences that are experienced as
humorous. Like beauty being in the eyes of the beholder, humor is in the funny bone
of the receiver of the experience.
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Can one increase
one's sense of humor?
According to the Comedian Steve Allen, we can indeed increase our sense of
humor. We can do so by exposing ourselves to those parts of life that we experience
as humorous. For example we can increase our exposure to comics, sitcoms, joke
books, comedy clubs, etc. We can also look for the humor around us as we attempt to
expand our comic vision. We can do so by observing the world through the eyes of
exaggeration and a broad silly perspective. I carry a clown nose with me and wear it
in moments when I am trying to spread the humor. I also carry bubbles and other
humorous props in my car so that I have them available for those moments when I want to be
playful or lighten up.
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How do I use humor more
effectively?
For most people using humor effectively requires practice and planning so that
one can utilize "Planned Spontaneity" which is the process of building one's
humor repertoire so that it can be accessed when one wishes. Often I am told by workshop
participants, "I can't tell a joke!" My reply is, "Of course you can,
but you must prepare and practice just like you would to learn any skill. You had to
learn and practice to drive a car. When you began, it felt clumsy and awkward, and
today it is an integral part of your life." To use humor effectively requires
planning such as collecting cartoons, one liners, jokes, anecdotes, etc. I keep an
extensive humor log on my computer. I carry a small memo pad with me wherever I go,
and when someone tells me a story or joke that I want to remember I write it down.
If I do not write it down, I forget. I plan my humor by collecting jokes,
stories, cartoons, etc. and I use the humor spontaneously as situations present
themselves.
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How do I know when to
use humor with others?
The safest (interpersonally) times to use humor are:
1. When another person uses humor with you.
2. When you have a strong relationship with the
other person.
3. When the situation is socially
"appropriate. (Humor at a party and at a funeral may be experienced
differently.)
4. When you use humor that is aimed at yourself
(as opposed to humor aimed at another person.)
5. When you use humor to poke fun at a
situation but not at another person or group of persons.
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What is the
difference between hurtful and healthful humor?
In general, healthful humor stimulates wit, mirth, or laughter. It
creates closeness and intimacy. Hurtful humor creates pain and distance. Often
healthful humor pokes fun at oneself and situations while harmful humor pokes fun at other
individuals or groups. Sarcasm, put downs, ethnic jokes, and anti jokes (anti men,
women, religious groups, nationalities, ethnicity, etc) are all considered hurtful as
opposed to therapeutic. "Laughing with others is an ice breaker while
laughing at others is an ice maker."
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Where can I learn
more about therapeutic humor?
Read the articles posted on this web site.
Join the Association for Applied and Therapeutic Humor.
Visit web sites of other therapeutic humor experts.
Attend humor conferences.
Read books on therapeutic humor.
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What does the
research say?
Unfortunately, the research on therapeutic humor is very lacking and most of
the research is actually on laughter and not humor. Laughter of course is a
physiological response to humor.
Research has presented the following conclusions:
Laughter reduces serum cortical (a hormone released during the stress
response).
Laughter increases imunoglobbin A (an antibody that helps fight upper respiratory
disease).
Laughter increases tolerance to pain.
Laughter increases heart rate, pulse rate, and "juggles" the internal
organs.
What does the research NOT say:
There is no research (to my knowledge)
that indicates that Endorphins are secreted during laughter. It is a
commonly held belief that endorphins are released, and proponents of the value of
humor as well as, the media continue to cite this belief without any evidence as to its
accuracy. (I am offering a $50 reward to the first person who shows me an
original research study that indicates that endorphins are increased during
laughter. The Tan and Berk studies show some difference between types of endorphins
but do not show an overall increase.) This means that we do not
yet know if endorphins are released during laughter.
There is also no research that indicates that humor heals illness. We may infer that
humor is healing, but there is no direct evidence to support this belief. An
inference that humor is healing can be drawn, for example, in the following way: A wealth
of research has indicated that distressing emotions (depression, anger, anxiety, and
stress) are all related to heart disease. Humor directly changes distressing
emotions. Therefore Humor may reduce the risk of heart disease. (See
Dr. Sultanoff's article on humor and heart disease
published in
the American Association for Therapeutic Humor Newsletter, November, 1998).
Visit Jester 2.0
you can participate in a UC Berkeley Research Study on Humor and read a
collection of jokes. The jokes take about 5 minutes to read, and they will then
offer you a list of jokes tailor made just for your taste.

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Why is humor
essential to an individual's mental health?
Humor is essential to mental health for several reasons. First, it assists us
to connect with others. Our needs to affiliate with others is enhanced through humor.
Second, humor reduces stress by assisting us to view the world with
perspective. Humor shifts the ways in which we think, and distress is greatly associated
with the way we think. It is not situations that generate our stress, it is the meaning we
place on the situations. Humor adjusts the meaning so that the event is not so powerful.
Shakespeare has said, "Nothing is good or bad. It is thinking that makes it so."
Third, humor helps us by replacing distressing emotions with pleasurable
feelings. As I wrote in one of my articles, "Humor and distressing emotions cannot
occupy the same psychological space." You cannot feel angry, depressed, anxious,
guilty, or resentful and experience humor at the same time. Most of us have experienced a
time when we have been angry and someone, while in the throws of our being angry, does or
says something humorous. A typical response is, "Dont make me laugh. I want to
be angry." Intuitively we know that we cannot maintain distress and experience humor
simultaneously.
Fourth, humor changes how we behave, when we experience humor we talk more,
make more eye contact with others, touch others, etc. Humor increases energy, and with
increased energy we may perform activities that we might otherwise avoid.
Fifth, humor changes our biochemical state by decreasing stress hormones and
increasing infection fighting antibodies. It increases our attentiveness, heart rate, and
pulse.
Finally, humor is good for mental health because it feels good!
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How can a lack or a
loss of sense of humor affect a patient's mental health?
Without humor ones thought processes are likely to become stuck and
narrowly focused leading to increased distress. Since humor helps pull one out of
emotional distress, the lack of humor would eliminate a healthy way for one to feel
better. A lack of sense of humor is directly related to a lower self esteem. A healthy
sense of humor is related to being able to laugh at oneself and ones life. Laughing
at oneself can be a way of accepting and respecting oneself. (Note that laughing at
oneself can also be unhealthy if one laughs as a way of self degradation.)
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Can humor
effectively assist in the treatment of mental illnesses?
Humor can teach others that they can manage their emotions. Since humor
replaces emotional distress, an individual can use humor to reduce distress. An anxious
individual can use humor to lower anxiety by visualizing a humorous situation to replace
the view of an anxiety producing situation.
Humor can also teach perspective helping patients to see reality rather than
the distortion that supports their distress. I frequently teach clients to manage their
emotions by using humor to decrease distress.
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To reach us: 
The human race has one really
effective weapon, and that is laughter.
Mark Twain, U.S. Author (1835-1910)
Sponsored by:
HumorMatterstm 
Steven M. Sultanoff, Ph.D.
Mirthologist and Clinical Psychologist
3972 Barranca Pkwy. Suite J-221
Irvine, CA 92606
949-551-8839
949-654-4500
mailto:mirthman@humormatters.com
and
The Land of
Mirth and Funny
P.O. Box 50312
Irvine, CA 92619-0312
949-654-4500
mail
to:mirthman@humormatters.com
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