Health%20and%20Humor - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Health%20and%20Humor

Description:

He read humorous books, watched funny movies, and watched tapes of 'Candid Camera. ... Difficulties, Trials, Tribulations, and All That Not-So-Funny Stuff. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:488
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 44
Provided by: publi
Category:
Tags: 20humor | 20and | funny | health | stuff

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Health%20and%20Humor


1
Health and Humor
  • AATH Association of Applied and Therapeutic
    HumorTheir 2016 Annual Meeting will be in Mesa,
    Arizona

By Alleen Nilsen and Don Nilsen
2
The Nilsens at the 2014 AATH ConferenceRed
Skelton Museum in Vincennes, Indiana
3
(No Transcript)
4
(No Transcript)
5
The Bible tells us A merry heart doeth good
like a medicine but a broken spirit drieth the
bones.
  • Modern writers who have explored the idea include
  • Of course this picture of our laughing grandson
    makes us want to believe that laughter is good
    for people.
  • Patch Adams
  • Regina Barecca
  • Rod Martin
  • Mary Kay Morrison
  • Paul McGhee
  • Norman Cousins
  • William Fry
  • Vera Robinson
  • Patty Wooten

6
Patty Wooten as Nancy Nurse
http//www.jesthealth.com
7
Rod Martin, and his colleagues in Canada have
found that
  1. Affiliative and self-enhancing humor is
    potentially beneficial.
  2. Aggressive and self-defeating humor is
    potentially detrimental.
  3. Anyone doing research with humor and health needs
    to be aware of these differences.

8
Martin also works with A State-and- Trait
Cheerfulness Inventory.
  • It defines a sense of humor as an emotional
    temperament (i.e., the tendency to be habitually
    cheerful and playful), which is consistent with
    the way humor is most often conceptualized in the
    humor and health literature.
  • However, Martin warns against simplistic,
    exaggerated, and unsubstantiated research. He
    is especially critical of methodological
    weaknesses in the research on humor and the
    immune system.

9
(No Transcript)
10
A Sense of Humor Questionnaire was administered
to all 65,000 adults in one county in Norway
  • Researchers were searching for correlations were
    between a persons sense of humor and illness
    symptoms such as nausea, diarrhea, pounding
    heart, muscular-skeletal pain, blood pressure,
    overall health satisfaction, and obesity.
  • After controlling for age, no meaningful
    relationships were found between sense of humor
    and other illness symptoms.

11
  • The researchers concluded that although
    high-humor individuals do not seem to have
    objectively better health, they are somewhat more
    subjectively satisfied with their health.
  • Martin concluded that despite reports in the
    popular media, the research findings on health
    benefits of humor and laughter were not as
    strong, consistent or unambiguous as is commonly
    believed.

12
Paul McGhee, in his The Laughter Remedy Health,
Healing, and the Amuse System, takes these kinds
of criticism into his book but nevertheless
advises
  • Become more playful surround yourself with
    humor you enjoy. Begin telling jokes and funny
    stories. And laugh at yourself.

13
Definition of calories
14
Two Answers to the Calories Problem
Theyre too beautiful to eat.
15
John Morreall writes about the power of hearty
laughter in the way that it . . .
16
  • increases blood circulation,
  • ventilates the lungs,
  • increases oxygen intake,
  • reduces water vapor and carbon dioxide in the
    lungs,
  • and decreases the risk of pulmonary infection.
  • But Rod Martin cautions that hearty laughter may
    also have deleterious effects because while
    extroverts tend to laugh more, they also are
    likely to drink alcohol, to smoke cigarettes, and
    to be obese.

17
John Morreall, in his writing explains that the
relief theory has two forms. Humor can be a
relief from pre-existing nervous energy as when
rambunctious kids are forced to sit quietly for a
long time. Once the pressure is off, they often
resort to horseplay, buffoonery, and laughter.
  • The second kind is the set-up for a joke or
    cartoon that may require concentration, attention
    to detail, and emotional engagement. The punch
    line is a release of either type of pent-up
    energy. For an example he gives
  • I had written to Aunt Maud
  • Who was on a trip abroad
  • Then I heard shed died of cramp,
  • Just too late to save the stamp.

18
Conundrums
19
Other Research Findings
  • Humorous laughter lowers the level of stress
    hormones (epinephrine, cortisol, dopac, and
    growth hormone).
  • In the brain, catecholamines are secreted, which
    may increase alertness, reduce inflammation, and
    trigger the release of endorphins, the brains
    natural opiates.
  • This may account for the reduction of pain as
    reported by researchers including Norman Cousins
    and Ofra Nevo, who does research in Israel.

20
Ironic Truths
21
If Humor Is So Good For Us, Where Can We Find It?
  • One place is at Alcoholics Anonymous meetings
    where humor helps transcend the moment and attain
    a broader perspective.
  • One member told how even when she was drunk or
    hung over, she tried to be what society expected
    her to be. She volunteered to help with her
    sons Cub Scout troop on a day they were sewing
    moccasins.
  • Of course she got a laugh when she reported, I
    remember sewing it, honest-to-God I can still
    feel it, onto my finger.

22
(No Transcript)
23
Clowns have a long history dating from the 15th
and 16th centuries and the Italian commedia
dellarte.
  • Shakespearean Harlequin
  • Modern Scary Clown

24
All Cultures Have Clowns
  • It takes nothing more than a prop of some kind to
    turn ordinary people into clowns.
  • More formal clowns include circus performers and
    character clowns.
  • Charlie Chaplin was world-famous because he did
    not rely on language.
  • Sports mascots are also clowns as they mime in
    huge arenas, wear over-sized costumes, do
    acrobatics, and use huge props.

25
Clowns Loved by Our Grandparents
  • Emmett Kelly was so skilled at pantomiming the
    role of Weary Willie that Ringling Brothers
    allowed him to remain in the circus arena for the
    whole performance. He would sweep a circle of
    light into smaller and smaller circles and then
    chase it under a rug or into a trash can.
  • Harpo Marx was mute and communicated by honks,
    whistles, and pantomime. He wore a fright wig
    and an overcoat with enormous inside pockets from
    which he pulled out ice cream cones, cups of
    coffee, and once in a while, a blowtorch.

26
Canadian Association of Therapeutic Clowns
  • http//www.therapeuticclowns.ca/index.html

27
Patch Adams is the most famous American supporter
of humor and health.
28
Clowns Have a Code of Conduct
  • While in character, clowns should not be seen
    doing normal things like shopping or eating.
  • They should not appear in public wearing only
    part of their costume.
  • When at sports events or community celebrations,
    they should be willing to fill in dead time,
    provide photo opportunities, give young children
    someone to relate to, and remember that their job
    is bringing happiness.

29
Clowns Protested When . . .
  • Bob Dole referred to President Clinton as Bozo.
    Larry Harmon, the creator of Bozo protested
    having his characters name used as an insult.
  • One Halloween, a Paulsboro, New Jersey police
    officer dressed as a clown managed to arrest 12
    individuals wanted for routine traffic offenses.
  • He bragged that the costume got him inside homes
    where if he had come in his uniform and asked for
    someone by name, he would have most likely been
    told, He isnt here.

30
There is no end to the types of clowns now being
developed.
  • These live clowns at Disney World are plants.
  • The newest clowns are connected to hospitals.
  • In more than 100 U. S. hospitals, clowns either
    roam the halls pushing humor carts, giving out
    smiley faces, joke books, and clown dolls, or
    managing full scale humor rooms.

31
The Humor in Hospitals is usually provided by
nurses rather than doctors.
  • This might be because nurses work more closely
    with patients than do doctors so they get to know
    them better.
  • Also nurses are often caught in the middle of a
    hierarchy and gain power by joking and clowning
    around with patients, often at the expense of the
    doctors.

32
2012-2013 Teddy Bear Toss for 12,947 Kids at
Penn State Hersheys Childrens Hospital
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vP4ENgOxVZm0

33
Norman Cousins
34
  • In 1979, Norman Cousins, editor of the Saturday
    Review of Literature, published his best-selling
    Anatomy of an Illness.
  • He had a serious collagen disease that affected
    the connective tissue of his spine and joints.
    The disease was life-threatening, his pain was
    intense, and the doctors gave him little hope for
    a full recovery.
  • He was frustrated by the hospital routines and
    his slow progress, so he checked himself out of
    the hospital and into a nearby hotel.

35
  • Because of his celebrity status, the doctors
    visited him and delivered his medication, while
    he used humor-intervention therapy. He read
    humorous books, and watched funny movies, and
    tapes of TVs Candid Camera.
  • He found that the more he laughed, the longer his
    body was without pain.
  • He persuasively made the case that if it is
    possible to have a psychosomatic illness, then it
    is also possible to have a psychosomatic
    wellness.

36
  • In 1971, Dr. WILLIAM FRY at Stanford Universitys
    Medical School began empirical studies on the
    effects of humor and laughter. He went beyond
    anecdotal stories by objectively testing and
    measuring physical responses to humor.
  • He found that the chemical compositions of tears
    are different when a person is laughing as
    compared to crying.
  • Dr. Fry showed that peoples bodies are tense
    when listening to a joke, but relaxed at the end.
  • He compared the bodys production of dopamine
    when laughing to a runners high, which is why he
    calls laughter Internal Jogging.

37
  • William Fry says that hearty laughter is a kind
    of internal jogging
  • Here is an exercise that you might want to
    consider ?

38
VERA ROBINSON, a Nurse Educator, published an
influential book Humor and the Health Professions
in 1977.
39
Alleen and Don Nilsen American Association of
Therapeutic HumorDoug Fletcher Lifetime
Achievement Award Winners
  • http//www.aath.org/lifetime-awards
  • http//www.aath.org/past-award-winners

40
We know that humor is good for people, but we
also want to offer some warnings
  1. People have individualized senses of humor. What
    makes one person laugh might annoy or insult
    someone else.
  2. Even if its true that people with a good sense
    of humor live longer it might be that people who
    are healthy and successful have more reason to be
    cheerful.
  3. Also pleasant patients may receive better health
    care than do grumpy and hostile patients.

41
  • While hearty laughter pumps adrenalin and other
    powerful chemicals into peoples blood streams,
    other things have the same effect on health and
    healing e.g. visits from pets, family members,
    close friends, and clergy, etc.
  • If laughter enhances the immune system, then what
  • what about implant patients. A stronger
    immune
  • system might cause them to reject their
    implants.
  • At the least, we will go along with the scholar
    who
  • compared using humor to changing a babys
    diaper. It doesnt permanently solve any
    problems, but it makes things more acceptable for
    a while.

42
In conclusion, here is a picture that made us
laugh, not because Bruce Jenner wanted to be a
woman but because he thinks this is how
65-year-old women look.
43
  • Thanksgiving Dinner Diets
  • http//www.youtube.com/embed/TX9EAavxrus
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com