Being genuinely humorous and encouraging people to share a
laugh together can help make you popular and successful. Humor helps you
experience the lighter side of life, bringing happiness to everyone you meet,
and it's been recognized as an important part of getting a job. A survey of 737
CEOs found that 98 percent of them favored hiring someone with a sense of humor
over someone who didn't. Shrug off your stern self and tickle your funny bone.
See Step 1 for more information.
Step 1 :
Developing a Sense of
Humor
1. Learn a little about what makes you laugh.
Laughter itself is unconscious. While it's possible for us
to keep ourselves from laughing (not always successfully), it is very hard for
us to produce laughter on demand, and doing so will usually seem
"forced."[2]Fortunately, laughter is very contagious (we're about 30
times more likely to laugh in the presence of others), and in a social context,
it's easy to start laughing when others are laughing.[3]
Studies have shown that three things make us laugh the most:
a sense of superiority over someone else behaving "dumber" than us; a
difference between our expectation of something and the actual result; or
welcome relief from an anxiety.
2. Learn to laugh in boring or unfunny
circumstances.
It's good to know that the less funny a place is, the easier
it becomes to add the element of humorous surprise. It might be easier to get
people to laugh about an office workplace than to get people to laugh in a
comedy club.[5]
This is why The Office, the NBC show, uses an office as its
setting: it's about as boring as it gets. They even process paper. How boring
is that?! We're not used to looking at an office as a funny place, so when it
is funny, it's especially funny.
3
Learn
to appreciate witty wordplay and puns.
A lot of the time, comedy comes from linguistic confusion
(unintentional) or linguistic playfulness (intentional). We sometimes find
things humorous when there's a gap between our words and our meanings.
Freudian slips are linguistic errors that are believed to
expose what you were really thinking rather than what you "meant" to
say, and are often of a sexual nature.
Witty wordplay is more intentional: "A chicken crossing
the road: poultry in motion." Or this one, where the words
"hockey" and "fight" are switched: "I went to a fight
the other night and a hockey game broke out."
4
Appreciate
irony.
There's perhaps nothing in comedy more widely cited but more
thoroughly misunderstood than irony. Irony occurs when there is a gap between
our expectations of a statement, situation, or image and the actual experience
of it.
Comedian Jackie Mason illustrates irony with a joke:
"My grandfather always said, 'Don't watch your money; watch your health.'
So one day while I was watching my health, someone stole my money. It was my
grandfather."
This joke messes with one of our fundamental expectations:
that grandparents are nice, friendly people who are utterly harmless, and that
the advice they offer should be sincere.The joke is funny because, in it, we
are presented with a grandparent who is rascally, thievish, and
double-crossing.
5
Trust
in your inner sense of humor.
Being funny doesn't come in a "one-size-fits-all"
package. What makes you funny is unique to you and the way you observe the
world. Trust that you do have a funny bone; as babies we laugh from 4 months of
age, and all children express humor naturally from kindergarten age, using
humor to entertain themselves and others. It's already in you – you just need
to bring it out!
Source : Funny Jokes
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