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Healthy Children, Laughing All The Way! E-mail
Wednesday, 01 August 2007
rosemarypotter1

by Rosemary Lee Potter, Ed.D.

Special to Tropical Breeze

About now, many families are thinking, “What happened to summer?” While there may be a few more days to squeeze in travel or vacation, many folks are through with that summer phase and even back to buying school clothes and supplies, to be used in the upcoming fall semester.

Still there is time for some important experiences for children. Laughter is a good place to start. It’s not so simple nor appropriate any more to just start simple, physical tickling. Children have become sure commercial targets of all the media’s so-called comedy that can be aimed at them — if not through silly animal or animated commercials, then through numerous TV shows with stupid, rapid-fire and often mean joking around. This was a summer bonanza of supposed must-see, big-screen humor. And yes, children laugh, usually at the prescribed moment, just like the audience track heard cackling away. Children come to find short speeches with punch lines one of their favorite comedy styles most likely to amuse them. If you listen to real children talking, they often have adopted that conversational style.

I remember once when visiting New York City, a number of tourists, I one of them, were asked to watch a TV pilot and hit a button every time we thought some element was funny. This was to determine where the audience laugh track would be edited in.

What happened to laughter with, rather than laughter at or the joke’s on her. I’ve seen students accidentally trip over their books or their own feet, only then to endure howls of laughter from classmates. Much of this sudden reaction is also learned from those media experiences. Of course, clowning is supposed to be funny — on screen. Some people like jokes about the bathroom and its use and laugh away, other people off-camera in real life actually find such humor low. We’re different, Each family finds its own laughables. However, some children need to be told that it is hurtful to laugh at someone having trouble, say, who is obese. When asked to stop finding pleasure in someone else’s difficulty, the response from the teasers or ones making the poor joke is “We were only joking.” Sure they were!

Check your children’s humor standard. Really funny or inappropriate response?

Here are some suggestions gleaned from two different families about humor. Both families are known as “smiley” people and enjoy funny things together. One family consults the public librarian and comes home with tried and true joke books. Family members take turns reading the jokes aloud and laughing together. They also learn some silly poetry together (See the late Shel Silverstein’s works.) They even have a “can you top this knock-knock joke?” session. After each joke most people smile and also moan at the answer which usually is a play on words.

The other family suggests that somewhere in the late summer scramble to get ready for school, shopping, doctor check-ups, make a deliberately funny video together. Often the result of such a video is a lot of laughter — both doing it with some silly plot line or script — and then afterward seeing it in the family room together breaking up laughing and munching popcorn. This family becomes filmmakers every August — now a humorous tradition!

Hear the latest? Laughter is not only the best medicine, but also human action which actually improves health. Best — it’s free. Not laughing at all or laughing at others’ misfortunes is truly no laughing matter. Parents need to encourage good, acceptable humor in their children — that is, parents smiling and sharing acceptable humor. Laughing is quite catching. Try not laughing if other people are. Feel how relaxed your body is as you give way to hearty laughing! What a good experience for you and kids too.

Once long ago my parents took my sister and me to see a French film, nearly silent, except for the sound of the water lapping on the beach and murmurs of people in the background. Funny? Hilarious! …Mr. Hulot’s Holiday. The movie vignettes all starred the late Jacques Tati as a well-meaning, but bumbling tourist at a French beach resort

In the theater we laughed until we cried. So memorable were the continuous funny events in the movie, that we just had to mention the film almost anytime we were driving around together. For weeks it would always trigger gales of laughter! People in cars next to us at stoplights looked over curiously to see all of us laughing, smiling — heartily, to say the least. Once my dad had to pull over he was laughing so hard as we redescribed certain scenes.

We will never forget the film, the experience, and., oh, the laughter. It feels good even now remembering and smiling. What a fine family experience. My sister and I laughed about the movie again just the other night! We saw it years and years ago. We remember the fabulous family moment. We always say we had a “good” laugh over it!

Making time out for a good laugh, as they say, with your children is a wonderful way to show that your family matters!

© 2007 Rosemary Lee Potter. All Rights Reserved.

Rosemary Lee Potter, Ed.D., has been a teacher since 1960, including 21 years at Safety Harbor Middle School, and is now a reading teacher at Carwise Middle School, Palm Harbor. Contact her at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or by mail in care of Tropical Breeze, P.O. Box 585, Safety Harbor, FL 34695.

 
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