BELLY LAUGHTER IN RELATIONSHIPS
SOMETHING ELSE POSITIVE BELOW
THE BELT
By
Enda Junkins, MSW, LMSW-ACP
CHAPTER I
Belly Laughter in Relationships:
Something Else Positive Below the
Belt
_______________________________________________________________________
After God created the world, He
created man and woman.
And then to keep the whole thing
from collapsing,
He created humor.
--Ernie Hoberecht
_______________________________________________________________________
Laughter is in many ways one of life’s greatest mysteries. It’s
common enough that we see it as an everyday fact of life, but we
don’t really understand it. It is not something that we even feel a
need to understand. We just accept that laughter happens, and we
like it. We generally take it for granted until it’s not around.
Then we really miss it.
Sometimes, when I remember the good times in my own marital
misadventure, I know that I miss the laughter we shared, and I am
sad that I missed its vital significance in prolonging my
relationship. As a professional counselor and laughter therapist, I
am acutely aware of laughter’s importance today and would like to
share that importance with you. To set the stage for our discussion,
let me take you back to a time in my relationship that I enjoyed but
unfortunately took for granted.
One
August my husband and I decided to take advantage of the glorious
San Juan Mountains of Colorado for a well-deserved vacation. We
resolutely let go of our "serious" married life, rented a jeep, and
went "four wheeling" for a week. We laughed together a lot as we
bounced our jeep over peaks crowded with wild flowers, mountain
streams, and waterfalls. We had lots of uncomplicated fun and the
laughter that goes along with it.
In our
jeep, we climbed high above even the tiniest towns, and as we rose
higher and higher, leaving all stress behind, I felt my spirits rise
as well. An unexpected laughter started deep within me and then,
burst forth for no reason at all. My own joy lifted me up. Perhaps
you’ve had spontaneous fits of laughter much like mine, so you know
how wonderful I felt over and over again as my husband and I laughed
together for no specific reason. I wish I had valued it more at the
time. Had my husband and I known to encourage this kind of laughter
in our everyday lives, I believe we could have had a satisfying
relationship. However, it was not to be.
Unlike
my husband and me, there are people in the world who have been wiser
about laughter. I don’t know if Ralph Waldo Emerson had ever been to
the San Juan Mountains, but he would have recognized the laughter
there. He believed that "the earth laughs in flowers" and if that’s
true, every spring and summer, the San Juans erupt into deep belly
laughter, covering the hillsides with hundreds of colorful
wildflowers. If even the mountains let go and laugh, it should be a
lesson to human beings to follow the mountains’ example and allow
and enjoy our own capacity for deep belly laughter more often than
we do. We also need to value it more for its unique contribution to
our lives.
The
laughter we casually take for granted is almost magical in the way
it impacts us so positively and in the way it adds pleasure to our
interactions with others. In light of this fact, it’s interesting
that we’re careless about appreciating our ability to laugh and that
we don’t laugh more than we do.
It’s
true, nonetheless, that even though we don’t laugh as much as we
could, most of us do value laughter, at least on some level. We know
it’s connected to things that are funny and that it feels good. We
don’t always know, however, that it is also a serious necessity for
good healthy relationships and good personal health. Sometimes it
confuses us a bit that something so light can also be vitally
important. We don’t yet understand why laughter is such a mixture of
funny and serious. The contradictions are part of its mystery.
Laughter Is Part of Attraction
________________________________________________________________________
The number one reason for choosing
a mate
is the ability to laugh together.
--Parade Magazine poll, 1985
________________________________________________________________________
What we do know about laughter is that it’s a good thing. Most
laughter is positive and adds quality to our lives. These are
reasons we seek laughter in our relationships. When couples meet,
laughter is a big and wonderful part of their initial attraction for
one another.
Nathan, for example, goes to lunch with no thought of meeting the
woman of his dreams. He and his companions are more interested in
their corned beef sandwiches than romance. While enjoying his lunch,
Nathan laughs easily with his friends in their corner booth in the
restaurant. His laughter catches Madeleine’s eye because he looks so
pleasant and upbeat. She likes the way he tosses his head back when
he laughs. As she watches him, she finds his laughter contagious,
and she begins to smile herself. She lights up, and it’s as if she
has hung a welcome sign around her neck.
Madeleine catches Nathan’s attention, and he is attracted by her
smile. Impulsively, he approaches. Confident and relaxed by his
laughter, he feels good, and he’s riding a natural high. His eyes
are shining, and laughter still dances in their depths. Something in
their smiles and the laughter moments before creates a bond between
them, and a new relationship begins.
Laughter makes it much easier for Nathan and Madeleine to meet.
Comedian Victor Borge maintained that laughter is the shortest
distance between two people. Nathan and Madeleine would certainly
agree. Although potential love will find a way without any
shortcuts, anything which smoothes the way is a plus. The mystery of
laughter and the mystery of love are an unbeatable combination.
We’re all fortunate that they are intertwined.
When
coupled with biological forces urging us to connect with other human
beings, laughter makes us feel safer and adds the qualities of fun
and playfulness to our attraction for one another. It eases much of
our awkwardness and helps us glide through those moments which might
otherwise leave us red faced and stammering. Our laughter is
contagious, and even those of us who seem inclined to a more solemn
approach to life find ourselves drawn into laughing with someone we
love.
In
addition to talking a lover’s talk, we seem to laugh at even the
feeblest attempt at humor on our partner’s part. By doing so, we
give him or her the gift of feeling witty. In addition to giving
this gift, without even knowing it, we let go of our own anxieties.
Past and current embarrassments evaporate with laughter, and we feel
marvelous as a result. When we release anxiety through laughter, our
love surges to the surface, and we are able to fully experience and
enjoy it. It’s a wild and joyful ride.
Nathan
and Madeleine seem swept along by forces of nature, caught up in
both the pleasure and the intensity of being in love. As they spend
time together, they are lifted and carried by their laughter, even
at the most serious moments. They don’t think about it much, but
they laugh when they need it most, easing conflict and creating
intimacy. It makes them want to be with each other even more, warts
and all. In laughter, they have what may be the only time in their
relationship when "the warts" don’t matter because they love the
"frog" who made them.
In love, Nathan, Madeleine, Bryan and Victoria are each delighted
with the other’s differences. Each is interested in everything about
the other. For now, difference is not a threat but an advantage.
Their differences compliment each other, and they feel more
complete.
By falling in love and laughing with one another, they have created
a welcome relief from the scrambling to compete that they generally
experience in everyday life. They feel safe with each other. These
four people have found what we’re all seeking—unconditional
acceptance. They have a friend who won’t leave and who likes who
they are.
When
we’re in a laughing, loving relationship, the hurts we experience in
everyday life are not as overwhelming. Our laughter shrinks them to
a smaller, if not inconsequential, size, and we don’t have to face
them alone. We have someone to support us and to commiserate with
us. As we hold onto one another in times of distress, we grow closer
and closer together. As a result, even distress has its good side.
Bryan
can’t do enough for Victoria. His laughter has opened him up
emotionally so he can express the love he feels inside. He doesn’t
question why he feels so generous and openhearted with her. He
accepts the fact that love creates laughter, and the laughter
creates an environment in which his love can grow.
As a
man, he has learned to believe that he has to control his emotions
most of the time. He has done it for so long that it has become a
part of what he considers his nature, but loving Victoria creates an
exception to the rule. However, in addition to love, he finds
himself coping with other thoughts and feelings as well. He feels
things he doesn’t even recognize because they have long been buried
in his unconscious mind. His feelings, creaking a little from
disuse, have begun to surface because his unconscious mind perceives
his relationship as a means for healing old wounds.
Although it can be a little unnerving for him, it also feels
surprisingly good. Feeling means laughing, and he likes laughing
again. At first, he wonders why he ever shut it down to such a
degree. Then he is amazed to discover he doesn’t care why. He
realizes he just wants to let go. When he does, laughter fills him
up with good feelings that support his love for Victoria.
In
accepting the gift of laughter without question, Bryan avoids one of
the major pitfalls curtailing the ability to laugh. Laughter is born
of right brain activity and, therefore, lacks reason and defies
analysis. It’s deliciously out of control because it’s not a
rational process. Unfortunately, that makes some of us
uncomfortable, and we start to question.
When
people start to think about their laughter and try to isolate its
origin, they stop laughing. Rational analysis is a left-brain
function and not conducive to laughter. If we feel we have to offer
ourselves or anyone else an explanation about why we are laughing,
it is the end of our laughter. Fortunately, couples in love aren’t
overly concerned with reasons for their good feelings, and,
therefore, laughter flourishes.
Laughter Puts Us Intensely in the
Moment
________________________________________________________________________
Humor keeps you in
the present. It is very difficult
to laugh and be
disassociated with people around you. In that one moment
together you have
unity and a new chance.
Nathan
and Madeleine are a young couple in love. Victoria and Bryan are
older but caught in love’s magic nonetheless. It’s somewhat
different for them, but not in many ways that matter. After years of
serious living, they are loving and laughing once again. They giggle
together like school children. Life seems funnier than usual, and
their laughter is energizing. What they thought was never-ending
fatigue is a memory, and they seem to be riding the crest of a
positive wave.
Serious
issues are less overwhelming to Bryan and Victoria as they encounter
them in a relationship filled with laughter. They are having fun
again and feeling great! It’s no wonder we all yearn for what we had
in the beginning of our relationships. If nothing else, we were
intensely alive.
Both
couples feel fully accepted by their partners. Laughter has a lot to
do with this feeling. Since laughter creates constant perspective,
all the uncomfortable traits of our partners seem both unimportant
or entirely bearable. We are even able to convince ourselves they
are somehow endearing, and we view them with indulgent affection.
Laughter puts anxiety on a back burner for everyone, but especially
for lovers. Because we can’t laugh and worry at the same time, the
future seems far away and less consuming. We are focused on the
present and wrapped in a single instant in time. Laughter and love
happen in the moment, and hurling caution to the winds, we reach out
and seize that moment.
When
Bryan looks at Victoria, he only sees how much he loves her. When
they laugh together, issues that could be areas of conflict seem
less important. Laughter opens many possibilities, and solutions
seem to appear by magic. Any need to criticize or analyze has lost
its appeal.
Victoria looks at Bryan and also sees how much she loves him.
Although the world hasn’t changed, she has. She and Bryan laugh over
dopey little things like the way his Southern accent sounds over the
phone or the way she eats one thing at a time on her plate. Their
laughter is almost giddy, and it seems as normal as a cup of coffee
to start the day. She snuggles into their relationship, and the
world seems far less complicated than before.
When
they are together, the many things Bryan and Victoria juggle on a
daily basis no longer distract them. They aren’t as frantically
focused on work, chores, family, and friends. Love seems to have
relaxed them, and laughter puts them fully in the moment. They no
longer want to keep trying to do so many things at once. They are
not preoccupied with other things. They focus on one another. They
now realize that they had lost this sort of clarity in the whirling
march of details dominating their lives. It feels fantastic to let
go for a while and deal with only one thing.
Love has a code name: Laughter.
--David
Holmutstrom
Laughter is a marvelous opening for love. It breaks down the
instinctive barriers between two people and allows them to trust
each other. The fears most of us have about other people are rooted
in the past. People have hurt us, and we developed strategies to
protect ourselves from any more pain. Our families have also passed
along protective beliefs and behaviors, which have evolved over
time.
Like
Romeo and Juliet, we often have to defy the family rules in order to
love one another. Happily, for us, fears and suspicions seem to
dissolve in our laughter. The bonding qualities of laughter allow us
to feel such emotional closeness that we want to be physically and
spiritually close as well. It’s something deeper than just biology.
It’s part of the mystery of laughter that we have yet to solve.
Another
special quality laughter brings to relationships is its ability to
minimize our need to gain self-confidence by analyzing and judging
other people. When we laugh with the person we love, criticism seems
to collapse. We are able to let them be themselves and enjoy them
even more for that. As laughter opens us up and allows us to be
vulnerable, we become willing to make changes. We no longer need to
keep score of the good things we do for our partners. We lose track,
and we don’t even care. Laughter, supporting our love, makes us
generous to a fault, and we feel better giving than receiving.
In
love, Nathan, Madeleine, Bryan and Victoria are each delighted with
the other’s differences. Each is interested in everything about the
other. For now, difference is not a threat but an advantage. Their
differences compliment each other, and they feel more complete.
By
falling in love and laughing with one another, they have created a
welcome relief from the scrambling to compete that they generally
experience in everyday life. They feel safe with each other. These
four people have found what we’re all seeking—unconditional
acceptance. They have a friend who won’t leave and who likes who
they are.
When
we’re in a laughing, loving relationship, the hurts we experience in
everyday life are not as overwhelming. Our laughter shrinks them to
a smaller, if not inconsequential, size, and we don’t have to face
them alone. We have someone to support us and to commiserate with
us. As we hold onto one another in times of distress, we grow closer
and closer together. As a result, even distress has its good side.
Bryan
can’t do enough for Victoria. His laughter has opened him up
emotionally so he can express the love he feels inside. He doesn’t
question why he feels so generous and openhearted with her. He
accepts the fact that love creates laughter, and the laughter
creates an environment in which his love can grow.
As a
man, he has learned to believe that he has to control his emotions
most of the time. He has done it for so long that it has become a
part of what he considers his nature, but loving Victoria creates an
exception to the rule. However, in addition to love, he finds
himself coping with other thoughts and feelings as well. He feels
things he doesn’t even recognize because they have long been buried
in his unconscious mind. His feelings, creaking a little from
disuse, have begun to surface because his unconscious mind perceives
his relationship as a means for healing old wounds.
Although it can be a little unnerving for him, it also feels
surprisingly good. Feeling means laughing, and he likes laughing
again. At first, he wonders why he ever shut it down to such a
degree. Then he is amazed to discover he doesn’t care why. He
realizes he just wants to let go. When he does, laughter fills him
up with good feelings that support his love for Victoria.
In
accepting the gift of laughter without question, Bryan avoids one of
the major pitfalls curtailing the ability to laugh. Laughter is born
of right brain activity and, therefore, lacks reason and defies
analysis. It’s deliciously out of control because it’s not a
rational process. Unfortunately, that makes some of us
uncomfortable, and we start to question.
When
people start to think about their laughter and try to isolate its
origin, they stop laughing. Rational analysis is a left-brain
function and not conducive to laughter. If we feel we have to offer
ourselves or anyone else an explanation about why we are laughing,
it is the end of our laughter. Fortunately, couples in love aren’t
overly concerned with reasons for their good feelings, and,
therefore, laughter flourishes.
Laughter Makes It Easier to Cope
_________________________________________________________
If I did not laugh, I think I should die.
--Abraham Lincoln
It’s
always nice when something flourishes which feels good and which
serves a positive purpose. This is true of laughter because it helps
couples cope with things a little better. They can cope because
laughing at problems provides them with a better perspective.
Most of
us have a tendency to pay such close attention to our issues that
they are eventually a huge part of all we see. If we are able to
laugh about our serious things, however, they simply can’t be that
huge. Being in a relationship often magnifies our unresolved issues,
but couples that maintain the ability to laugh about them are better
able to roll with the punches.
As a
culture, we admire people who are flexible and able to deal with
things as they come. It’s curious, therefore, that we also have such
a strong tendency to focus on things so seriously. Moreover, since
serious things require guidelines, we feel forced to make up rules
for everything, and relationships are no exception. There are many
things we think one should and should not do in relationships. For
instance, we should sleep in the same bed and go places in the same
car. The man should drive. Women should do the housework and men,
the yard work. If we love each other, we should be able to know what
our partner is thinking and be able to respond perfectly at all
times.
Therefore, as the result of expectations like these, couples tend to
make up their own rules about laughter in their relationship. They
get some of their rules from their families and some from society,
but wherever they get them, they rigorously hold to them. For
example, we feel that when we are in an important relationship, we
should not laugh about sex or money. They are far too serious. It’s
a shame, though, because both things are perfect issues for play.
In
maintaining this serious approach to relationships, most people have
a rule in place which states that problems have to be approached
carefully rather than lightly. If you laugh, you don’t understand,
or you’re not a responsible person. There are many more, similar
rules to this in our society, and these rules work hard to suppress
a couple’s willingness to laugh.
All
these rules about laughter prevent us from understanding that
laughter doesn’t diminish the importance of things in the true sense
of the word. It simply changes our view of “the importance” so we
can feel less overwhelmed and better equipped to cope. Because we
find this concept hard to understand, however, we remain reluctant
to accept it. Therefore, we laugh less often.
Couples
who laugh in spite of the rules, however, stay more comfortable with
one another. They are less apt to turn mountains into molehills.
Small things stay small, and big things shrink enough to be handled.
Kathy and Chris, for example, found their ability to laugh about
serious issues to be an advantage when they found themselves deeply
in debt. Unforeseen financial setbacks had created what seemed to be
an insurmountable problem. They fretted, worried, and found
themselves descending into a pit of ongoing anxiety and
irritability.
Finally, Kathy couldn’t take the pressure of her anxiety anymore.
Reasoning that all the worry in the world wasn’t going to help them
pay off The DEBT, she began to look for a better way to look at the
situation. Kathy decided to give The DEBT a name. She began to call
it “Bunny” because it kept multiplying.
Then
Chris picked up the ball with her, and they both began to talk about
Bunny instead of The DEBT. As a result, it became less overpowering.
They stopped having nightmares about it and put together a plan to
pay it off. They were able to accomplish their goal and have a
little fun with it and with each other as well. In an adverse
situation, they were actually able to strengthen their relationship.
Laughter Helps You Enjoy Life More
The sound of laughter is like the vaulted dome
of a temple of happiness.
--Milan Kundera
Laughing couples don’t worry as much as serious ones, and as a
result, they enjoy life much more. They look for humor in most
situations, and that humor provides them with laughter. The laughter
makes their circumstances seem less serious and therefore tolerable.
When we can see at least some aspect of the silly or ridiculous in
what we’re doing, we find a solution more easily, or, at least, we
buckle down for the ride with less fear and resentment.
Mary
and Norman were a couple who could laugh in serious situations. Not
long after they were married, they went off on a sailing adventure
in the Caribbean. They were fairly new at sailing and had no
experience in handling ocean storms. A squall surprised them on a
day that had dawned bright and sunny. During the storm, their sails
were torn, and they suddenly found themselves staring danger in the
face.
While
Norman struggled to get the sails down, Mary handled the wheel. She
had to steer the boat away from the wind to protect Norman from the
wild, snapping lines that could knock him unconscious. To do so, she
had to aim for shore. As they moved closer to the rocks, Mary’s fear
caused her to start laughing. She was pretty sure they were going to
die, and it seemed like she was going to go crazy as well.
Fortunately, neither catastrophe happened since they were able to
get the sails down at last.
Later,
as they motored to a safe harbor, exhausted and wet to the bone,
they laughed and joked about their brush with disaster. They also
laughed at how they would look limping into the marina with tattered
sails. Laughing at the humor they found in the situation kept them
from being irritable with one another and saved them from ending
their vacation on a bad note. Instead, they saw it as an adventure
to remember with a smile and a touch of pride that they had met
Nature on her own terms and survived.
Laughter Eases Conflict
________________________________________________________________________
When you laugh, you can’t hate.
--Michael
Pritchard
In
addition to easing us through trying circumstances, laughter also
helps us deal with the disagreements that crop up in relationships
because it interrupts the power struggle. It’s really hard to lock
down in conflict with someone when you’re laughing. Conflict is a
big problem for people to handle in their relationships, and they
often find themselves fighting over things that seem minor in
retrospect. Laughter has a magical ability to defuse anger by
releasing it. That release, in turn, prevents or stops the conflict,
eases the tension, and enables people to see one another’s point.
Then they can resolve the issue and move on.
For
instance, Casey and Dan had been arguing all day. They couldn’t see
eye to eye on anything to save their lives. They had disagreed about
the children, the work around the house, and paying the bills. Each
felt the other was unappreciative and had no concept of the stress
under which they were operating.
The day
before, they had planned to go out but had not yet finalized their
plans. Later in the afternoon, during a lull in both the arguing and
the chores, Casey asked Dan what he thought they should do for the
evening. Without missing a beat, Dan said, “Let’s fight.” Casey and
Dan both burst out laughing. With the tension gone, they were able
to decide what they wanted to do without a disagreement to steal
away the pleasure.
When
couples keep laughing, they can think about what goes on in their
relationship. They can see options that are not hidden from view by
unacknowledged and unresolved emotions. They are able to balance the
difficulties they encounter with the fun and the good times. They
also remember why they love each other.
We saw
this with Kathy and Chris when they named their debt. In spite of
their difficulty with money, Kathy and Chris never blamed each other
for the problem, nor did they blame their relationship. They stayed
in touch with their love for each other and leaned on each other for
support. They eased the pain of financial strain with their
laughter.
Laughter Adds Enjoyment to
Ordinary Things
Humor takes your mind off the negative
and turns it into laughter that’s positive.
--Buddy Hackett
In
addition to smoothing things out and providing clarity and balance,
laughter allows couples to enjoy even the mundane things in everyday
life. Daily chores are less burdensome when we laugh while doing
them. We aren’t always having fun, but we do have a lot more fun
with laughter than without. It’s astonishing just how playful we
feel because we’re laughing.
Liz and
Tim, for example, had to clean their swimming pool. It had almost
reached the point of being a health hazard. Without enthusiasm, they
collected their supplies, surveyed the pool with dismay, and debated
on where to begin. One of them would have to get into the water to
open the drain. Neither felt like volunteering.
Suddenly inspired, Liz pushed Tim into the water. He surfaced
sputtering and promised revenge. He climbed out of the pool,
growling playfully. He grabbed the squealing Liz and jumped into the
pool, pulling her in with him. They splashed around a little,
laughing at the way they looked with pool grunge on their faces and
in their hair. Then they tackled the actual work of cleaning the
pool. Somehow, it didn’t seem as awful as it had before.
A
playful approach to everyday things in our relationships is a key
factor in keeping them healthy. Play is a source of fun, and
laughter eases us through those dicey issues from the past. Although
we associate play with children, it isn’t meant for them alone. Play
teaches children living skills, and adults should play for the same
purpose. It injects fun into many things that are no fun
realistically and helps us do things that would otherwise dismay us.
In his
book, Enjoyment of Laughter, Max Eastman comments on the
importance of play as “not only something we do, but also something
we are while we do it.” Play transforms us. Since we feel playful
from birth, we have to work hard to give it up. Somehow, though,
most of us manage to do it. Fortunate couples hang on to it,
however, and they keep laughing. Their laughter leads to more play
that leads to more laughter. It feeds on itself.
Laughter and Humor Are Different
________________________________________________________________________
Humor allows for a boundary between where we are
and some of the cruel things that happen to us.
--Joseph Steiner
We do
ourselves a great disservice when we give up play. Then we make
matters worse. We confound and confuse ourselves even more by
thinking laughter and humor are the same. This results in our need
to make rules about when and where we can laugh and what we can
laugh about.
Laughter and humor are, in fact, two different things even though
they are closely related. Laughter is a spontaneous, physiological
process that we all have from birth. As babies, we laugh, but we
don’t utilize humor. Our sense of humor develops later on. As we
grow, we learn what is funny in our homes and the world around us,
and our laughter feeds the humor. Humor then, in turn, feeds the
laughter. Humor becomes a trigger for laughter. If we see and
remember the differences between the two, we won’t need as many
rules for laughter.
In
spite of the differences, it’s the connection between the two that
makes us search for a lifetime companion with a sense of humor.
Humor helps keep us laughing together, and laughter takes us out of
our seriousness. Although our important relationships are a vehicle
for healing, we can actually have fun along the way. Laughter
magically transforms those heavy, hurtful parts of our lives into
something lighter from which we can recover.
When we
laugh with our partners, we ourselves are fun, and we provide good
company for one another. We’re able to re-experience something that
is at least reminiscent of the unselfconscious silliness we enjoyed
when we first fell in love. Since we can’t go back to that place in
time no matter how much we would like to, we can at least keep the
feelings alive. Laughter reminds us of our love for one another, and
therefore, we feel it again and again. It’s a part of our original
relationships that need never end.
In
Laughter We Are Not Alone
_______________________________________________________________________
Laughter is not at all a bad beginning
for a friendship, and it is by far the
best ending for one.
--Oscar Wilde
Laughter also provides another bridge to the
beginnings of our relationships. When we find someone to love, we
feel a profound relief that we are no longer alone. Our primal fear
of death by isolation can’t withstand our twin defenses of laughter
and love, and it retreats into the recesses of our minds. We
gratefully relax into the comfort of a companion who loves us and
joins with us to create a “tiny tribe” of our own. We no longer live
in fear of abandonment.
Laughter is a gift
of connection for human beings, and that’s why we are drawn to each
other when we laugh. When the “new” wears off in our relationships,
laughter keeps us caring and supports us as we endure the painful
aspects of growth, both individually and together. Laughter is
profoundly important in the maintenance of life long relationships.
As a counselor, it
is my privilege to enter a very personal place in my clients’ lives.
I hear tales of relationships lost and relationships found. Laughter
is always present in the beginning and always absent at the end.
It’s a fact that relationships that lose their laughter become
brittle and break.
As sad as I am to
hear about those broken relationships, it is my pleasure to hear
tales of relationships that endure. Without fail, laughter always
plays a vital role in that endurance. People report that they
continue to like one another because they laugh. They appreciate the
ongoing laughter in the relationship and acknowledge its role in
easing them through the difficult times.
In my
clients’ laughter, I recognize their connection with their partners,
their friends, and their families. As they invite me into their
lives through their laughter, we form yet another kind of
relationship, another connection. It seems that our fears of
loneliness are mostly “a tempest in a teacup.” All we need to fend
it off is laughter with another human being.
So—laughter in a relationship is a positive: below the belt, above
the belt, and under the belt. It is essential in keeping our
relationships alive and well. It will enable us to choose to stay
together with gusto instead of resignation.
Now, in
order to go for the gusto, the following exercise should get you
started laughing. If you’ve already started, it should help you keep
going —so, loosen up those face muscles and get ready for some belly
laughter.
Exercise
Belly
Laughter for Couples
Stand
facing your partner. Place one hand on your partner’s arm or
shoulder. Place the other hand on your belly (or theirs if you
prefer). Look your partner in the eyes and on the count of three
begin to laugh. Fake it until it becomes the real thing. Cut loose
with your “pretend” laughter so it’s deep and belly shaking. After
you stop laughing, pause and feel the feelings you have inside. Pay
attention to the feelings you have for your partner. Enjoy them a
moment and then share some of these feelings with one another. Wind
up with a nice, warm hug. If you begin and end your days this way,
your relationship will benefit and so will you.
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It is bad to suppress laughter.
It goes back down and spreads to your hips.
--Fred Allen
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