Table of ContentsView AllTable of ContentsPhysical BenefitsMental BenefitsSocial BenefitsHow to Laugh More

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Table of Contents

Physical Benefits

Mental Benefits

Social Benefits

How to Laugh More

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Humor is one of the24 character strengthsone can possess. Even more so, this positive trait can also impact our health. Laughing regularly helps us feel better physically and mentally, even offering social benefits.

Recognizing the many health benefits of laughter can help us understand the importance of adding more humor into our lives. We also share a few things you can do to laugh more often, enabling you to maximize humor’s benefits.

Physical Health Benefits of Laughter

You may have heard the saying, “Laughter is the best medicine.” This phrase sums up how taking the time to laugh can boost our physical health. Here are a few ways it does this.

Boosts Immunity

Improves Heart Health

Studies have associated laughter with a lower prevalence of cardiovascular diseases. In one particular study, researchers noted that people who laughed daily had a reduced prevalence of conditions affecting the cardiovascular system.This makes regular laughing good for the heart,

Can Your Heart Hurt From Stress?

Reduces Metabolic Syndrome Risk

Another study links laughter with a reduction in metabolic syndrome risk factors.In this study, subjects who engaged in laughter yoga (a form of yoga that utilizes simulated laughter) for 12 weeks significantly reduced their body weight, body mass index (BMI), and stress—all of which can increase one’s risk of developing metabolic syndrome.

Also sometimes called insulin resistance syndrome, metabolic syndrome refers to a group of factors that, together, can increase yourrisk of diabetes, stroke, heart disease, and more.

Increases Longevity

Another piece of research adds that, in addition to being associated with reduced cardiovascular disease incidences, regular laughing is also connected with reduced all-cause mortality.This suggests that laughter canenhance longevity.

Eases Pain

More recent research confirms laughter’s positive effects on pain. For instance, in a study involving 40 subjects, researchers found that their pain tolerance was favorably influenced after watching a comedy for 30 minutes, while pain tolerance decreased after viewing a documentary for the same length of time.

Protects Physical Function

If our physical functionality declines, we can find it harder to do everyday activities such as dressing or bathing ourselves. Laughter appears to reduce the risk of developing functional disabilities, particularly when we laugh regularly and with others (more so than whenlaughing alone).

Strengthens the Core

A good belly laugh is good for building strength in the trunk, particularly the abdominal muscles, even working the internal obliques more than traditional exercises.Laughing also engages muscles in the diaphragm and shoulders, giving you a good non-exercise workout.

Mental Health Benefits of Laughter

Laughter doesn’t only benefit us physically but mentally too. Here’s how.

Lowers Stress

How Prolonged Stress Impacts Your Health

Improves Depression

Laughing can also alter levels of neurotransmitters in the body, namely dopamine and serotonin, also increasing the release of endorphins.Together, this help improvedepression symptoms.

Serves as a Distraction

What happens when you laugh? You tend to forget about things that are bothering you. This makes laughter a good way to take the focus off of the challenges you face. It helps distract you, even if just for a moment, giving you a much-neededmental health break.

Changes Our Perspective

When we face major tragedies ortrauma in our lives, it can affect how we view the world. According to research, humor can make severe events funnier over time.This helps us keep these incidents in perspective while reducing their negative impact on our mental health.

Laughter as a Coping Mechanism

Social Benefits of Laughter

Laughter also helps usconnect with others.Think of times when you’ve been with friends and laughed so hard that tears rolled down your face. Did this make you feel more connected with your friends? It’s likely that your answer is yes.

Just as with smiling and kindness, most people also find that laughter is contagious. So, if you work on laughing more, you can help others laugh more and realize these benefits as well.

By elevating the mood of those around you, you can help reduce their stress levels and perhaps improve the quality of social interaction you experience with them, reducing your stress level even more!

How to Get More Laughter In Your Life

Laughter is a greatstress management strategybecause it’s free, convenient, and beneficial in so many ways. If you want more laughter in your life, these strategies can help.

Laugh With Friends

Going to a movie or a comedy club with friends is a great way to get more laughter in your life. The contagious effects of laughter may mean you’ll laugh more than you otherwise would have during the show. Plus, you’ll have jokes to reference at later times.

Having friends over for a party or game night is also a great setup for laughter andother good feelings. Making time for this kind of fun is as important as any other habit you keep in your life to support your health.

Find Humor in Things

Whenfacing life’s frustrations, try to laugh about them. If something is so frustrating or depressing it’s ridiculous, realize that you could look back on it and laugh later. Think of how it will sound like a story you could tell your friends, and then see if you can laugh about it now.

With this attitude, you may also find yourself being more lighthearted and silly, giving yourself and those around you more to laugh about. Approach life in a more mirthful way to reduce your stress toward negative events.

Fake It Until You Make It

Just as positive effects of smiling occur whether the smile is fake or real, simulated laughter also provides benefits.The body can’t tell the difference. Plus, simulated or self-initiated laughter turns into genuine laughter over time.

So, smile more and fake laughter if you need to at the beginning. You’ll still achieve positive effects, and the fake merriment may lead to real smiles and laughter.

10 Big Benefits of Smiling

Enjoy Humorous Media

There’s no shortage of laughter opportunities from entertainment. You can find humorous media at the theater, as well as at home with movies and comedy sitcoms.

Takeaways

Laughter can help improve our physical and mental health, while also helping us feel more connected socially. Look for ways to laugh more in your life, enabling you to enjoy all its benefits. Encourage your friends to do the same.

14 Sources

Verywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read oureditorial processto learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.

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Hayashi K, Kawachi I, Ohira T, Kondo K, Shirai K, Kondo N.Laughter is the best medicine? A cross-sectional study of cardiovascular disease among older Japanese adults.J Epidemiol. 2016;26(10):546-552. doi:10.2188/jea.JE20150196

Funkakubo N, Eguchi E, Hayashi R, et al.Effects of a laughter program on body weight and mental health among Japanese people with metabolic syndrome risk factors: a randomized controlled trial.BMC Geriatrics. 2022;22:361. doi:10.1186/s12877-022-03038-y

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.What is metabolic syndrome?

Sakurada K, Konta T, Watanabe M, et al.Associations of frequency of laughter with risk of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular disease incidence in a general population: Findings from the Yamagata study.J Epidemiol. 2020;30(4):188-193. doi:10.2188/jea.JE20180249

Louie D, Brook K, Frates E.The laughter prescription: A tool for lifestyle medicine.Am J Lifestyle Med. 2016;10(4):262-267. doi:10.1177/1559827614550279

Tamada Y, Yamaguchi C, Saito M, et al.Does laughing with others lower the risk of functional disability among older Japanese adults? The JAGES prospective cohort study.Prev Med. 2022;155:106945. doi:10.1016/j.ypmed.2021.106945

Wagner H, Rehmes U, Kohle D, Puta C.Laughing: a demanding exercise for trunk muscles.J Mot Behav. 2014;46(1):33-7. doi:10.1080/00222895.2013.844091

American Psychological Association.Stress in America 2022.

Yim JE.Therapeutic benefits of laughter in mental health: A theoretical review.Tohoku J Experiment Med. 2016;239(3):243-249. doi:10.1620/tjem.239.243

Michel A.The science of humor is no laughing matter. Association for Psychological Science.

Georgia State University.Laughter-based exercise program for older adults has health benefits, Georgia State researchers find.

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