I was quite excited when I opened this on Sunday morning,
because I'd read about these 'laughter clubs' in India, and thought it all
sounded like ... well, a laugh. I was amazed and really pleased there was one five
minutes from our house. I'd read that simply by starting to laugh artificially
in a large group, you automatically start to really laugh, which releases all kinds of beneficial chemicals*.
Apparently, laughter evolved in humans because our natural
groups were too large for grooming** to work as the bonding thing. Tests have
shown, and anyone who's been to a good comedy night knows, that laughing with a
big group of strangers makes you feel good about yourself and about the people
you're laughing with.
I set off excited about the buzz I was about to get from
mass laughter, but realized I didn't have the five pounds to pay for the
session, so had to nip to the cashpoint. I wasn't stressed – the laughter of 30
or 40 people would cover the sound of me sneaking in a bit late. I'd just go to
the back of the crowd and slowly tune in to what was happening.
I parked up at five past six and pushed open the door. A
lady of a similar age to me was standing there watching the doorway. There was
no one else there. 'Laughter yoga?' I said, awkwardly. 'It's the Wimbledon
men's final', she said, looking concerned. She peered out of the window. 'I
don't think even Audrey's coming '.
This already wasn't the free-wheeling,
hide-in-a-crowd-primal scream thing I was hoping for.
'I'm Caroline – I'm the teacher ...' - another lady appeared
– similar age, similar look of embarrassment and horror - '... and this is Sue
– it's her yoga room'. She leant so desperately out of the window that she
almost fell out. 'I'm just wondering if Audrey will be coming ...'. By ten past six we were all resigned to the
uncomfortable scenario. 'Shall we start?' said Caroline, meaning 'Please can we
not do this?' 'Yes!' I said, enthusiastically, but thinking 'Please can we not
do this?'. 'Let's stand in a circle!' said Sue. But her eyes didn't lie – they
were saying, 'Please can we not do this?'. 'Just a second,' I said. I went over
to the window, praying that Audrey was there. Whatever Audrey was.
'So ... let's start with some ha ha ha, ho ho hos with
clapping!', said Caroline. 'OK!!!' I said, keenly, hoping she was about to
offer the option of losing an eye. Caroline and Sue started off the activity,
peeping to check I was throwing myself in to the same extent as they were.
I remembered from reading about laughter yoga that the
teacher is a) not supposed to be funny, and b) not supposed to talk much at
all. Caroline was breaking both these rules from the start – she was talking
non-stop and, fortunately, very funny. In fact both the women were natural
physical comics. During the improvised comedy-catch game, my forced laughter immediately
turned real as we did ridiculous dummy throws and fancy catches. I also started
to realize how surreal the whole thing was, which also made me laugh, so after
five minutes, I was laughing twice at the same time, which is always a plus.
The two women were so good at slapstick and clowning, the it
was impossible not to really laugh. Although it's not quite the laughter yoga
invented by Dr Madar Kataria in India (they played a recording of him chuckling
in the background), it did the trick. I really, really laughed, and felt all
the benefits you get with that.
The last activity – humming meditation – was a replacement
activity for the small group. We sat back-to-back in a triangle, closed our
eyes, stuck our fingers in our ears, and hummed, with instructions to
experiment with the volume and pitch of the hums. For the first minute, I was
mainly checking that they were doing it too, and not just laughing while they
videoed me. Once I was satisfied they were humming too, I got into it, and
played around with everything from almost inaudible Paul Robeson humming to
glass shattering high-pitched stuff. I was just making a mental note to take up
deaf-blind humming as a serious hobby, when I realized that the background
noise had gone. I took my fingers out of my ears, to find that the laughter
ladies were in the middle of a conversation that had clearly been going on for
a long time. I reckon I had been making a humming knob of myself for at least
five minutes.
And that was it – I was feeling quite high at the end of an
hour, and would definitely do a group session in the future. In fact the
perfect Sunday evening natural high could well be an hour's laughter yoga
followed by a skinny dip with humming.
The laughter ladies do mental flossing.
*... and, depending on the state of your pelvic floor, some
that rot the carpet
**ape-type, not Rolf Harris-type
4 comments:
Only no 24 in mid-July! You're falling behind....
This inspired a bout lie-in giggling round ours.
It's something Lemonberry might enjoy.
Thanks for the inspiration. I'm currently venturing through my own list of things. You've given me a few ideas.... and some I've blatantly ripped off!
https://chrisdoesfiftyatfifty.wordpress.com/2015/10/10/number-11-laughter-yoga/
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