There is tons of scientific evidence which indicates that laughter and good health are related and that laughter actually can make us healthier, prevent illness, and even help us live longer.
Laughter changes our body chemistry and increases our capacity to fight disease. Laughing relaxes the body and reduces problems associated with high blood pressure, stroke, arthritis, and ulcers. Some research suggests that laughter may also reduce the risk of heart disease. Historically, research has shown that distressing emotions (depression, anger, anxiety, and stress) are all related to heart disease. A study done at the University of Maryland Medical Center suggests that a good sense of humor and the ability to laugh at stressful situations helps mitigate the damaging physical effects of distressing emotions.
A good hearty laugh can help:
- reduce stress
- lower blood pressure
- elevate mood
- boost immune system
- improve brain functioning
- protect the heart
- connect you to others
- foster instant relaxation
- make you feel good.
Laughter's Effects on the Body...
Lowers
blood pressure: People who laugh on a regular basis have lower standing
blood pressure than the average person. When people have a good laugh,
initially the blood pressure increases, but then it decreases to lower
than average levels. Breathing then becomes deeper which sends oxygen
enriched blood and nutrients throughout the body.
Changes our
biochemical state: Decreases stress hormones and increases infection
fighting antibodies. It increases our attentiveness, heart rate, and
pulse.
Protects the heart: Laughter may help protect you against a
heart attack, according to the study at the University of Maryland
Medical Center (mentioned above). The study, which is the first to
indicate that laughter may help prevent heart disease, found that people
with heart disease were 40 percent less likely to laugh in a variety of
situations compared to people of the same age without heart disease.
Laughter
gives our bodies a workout: Laughter can be a great workout for your
diaphragm, abdominal, respiratory, facial, leg, and back muscles. It
massages abdominal organs, tones intestinal functioning, and strengthens
the muscles that hold the abdominal organs in place. Not only does
laughter give your midsection a workout, it can benefit digestion and
absorption functioning as well. It is estimated that hearty laughter can
burn calories equivalent to several minutes on the rowing machine or
the exercise bike.
Improves brain function and relieves stress:
Laughter stimulates both sides of the brain to enhance learning. It
eases muscle tension and psychological stress, which keeps the brain
alert and allows people to retain more information.
Laughter improves mental and emotional health...
Laughter
is a powerful emotional medicine that can lower stress, dissolve anger
and unite families in troubled times. Mood is elevated by striving to
find humor in difficult and frustrating situations. Laughing at
ourselves and the situation helps reveal that small things are not the
earth-shaking events they sometimes seem to be. Looking at a problem
from a different perspective can make it seem less formidable and
provide opportunities for greater objectivity and insight. Humor also
helps us avoid loneliness by connecting with others who are attracted to
genuine cheerfulness. And the good feeling that we get when we laugh
can remain with us as an internal experience even after the laughter
subsides.
Mental health professionals point out that humor can
also teach perspective by helping patients to see reality rather than
the distortion that supports their distress. 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 of an event so
that it is not so overwhelming.
Here are some additional things we can do to improve our mood, enjoyment of life and mental health.
Humor helps us stay emotionally healthy.
A healthy sense of humor is related to being able to laugh at oneself and one's life. Laughing at oneself can be a way of accepting and respecting oneself. Lack of a sense of humor is directly related to lower self esteem. (Note that laughing at oneself can also be unhealthy if one laughs as a way of self degradation.)
Mental Health Benefits of Laughter
Social benefits of humor and laughter...
Our work, marriage and family all need humor, celebrations, play and ritual as much as record-keeping and problem-solving. We should ask the questions "Do we laugh together?" as well as "Can we get through this hardship together?" Humor binds us together, lightens our burdens and helps us keep things in perspective. One of the things that saps our energy is the time, focus and effort we put into coping with life's problems including each others limitations. Our families, our friends and our neighbors are not perfect and neither are our marriages, our kids or our in-laws. When we laugh together, it can bind us closer together instead of pulling us apart.
Remember that even in the most difficult of times, a laugh, or even simply a smile, can go a long way in helping us feel better:
Although
healers have intuitively known for centuries that laughter and humor
are beneficial for health and well-being, in our modern world we have
only very recently begun to scientifically investigate the relationship.
And
though we’ve begun to measure the benefits humor has on our health, we
have yet to focus on the question of how to bring humor and laughter
into our lives as therapy.
Nevertheless, pioneers in this new
discipline are out there in their wagon trains braving the trails. We’ve
collected their early findings and present them as follows.
Developing our sense of humor...
Laughter is a birthright, a natural part of life. The part of the brain that connects to and facilitates laughter is among the first parts of the nervous system to come on line after birth. Infants begin smiling during the first weeks of life and laugh out loud within months of being born. Even if you did not grow up in a household where laughter was a common sound, you can learn to laugh at any stage of life.
We may begin by setting aside special times to seek out humor and laughter, as we do with working out. But eventually, we want to incorporate humor and laughter into the fabric of our lives, finding it naturally in everything we do. Here are ways to start.
Some events are clearly sad and not occasions for laughter. But most don’t carry an overwhelming sense of sadness or delight. Most fall into the gray zone of ordinary life, and they give us the choice to laugh or not.
One characteristic that helps us laugh is not taking ourselves too seriously. We’ve all known the classic tight-jawed sourpuss who takes everything with deathly seriousness and never laughs at anything. No fun there.
Here are some ways we can lighten up:
Creating opportunities to laugh...
So, just to make you laugh or chuckle, read these:
If laughter is the best medicine, where is the pharmacy where we can fill our prescriptions?
"Doctor I have a ringing in my ears." "Don't answer!"
The Doctor says "You'll live to be 80!" "I AM 80!" "See, what did I tell you?"
“If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving definitely isn't for you.”
“If you think nobody cares about you, try missing a couple of payments.”
From www.helpguide.org
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PLEASE CONSIDER...
If the information on this site helps you and you'd like to make a donation to BeHappy101.com (to help make others happy), please click on the button below to make a contribution. The amount you donate is entirely up to you. A portion will used to contribute to the happiness of others and is greatly appreciated. [WHY DONATE?] |