Something You Should Know - Powerful Ways to Regulate Your Emotions & What Laughter Does for You
Episode Date: January 12, 2026When children grow up and look back on their childhood, what do they remember most about their parents? It turns out it’s not what many parents assume. This episode begins with research revealing wh...ich parenting behaviors leave the strongest, longest-lasting impressions — and how they shape adult relationships. https://time.com/4097995/parenting-kids-remember/ Some emotions can completely hijack your day. Anger, anxiety, frustration, and stress often feel automatic — as if you have no control once they show up. But that’s not actually true. Dr. Ryan Martin explains science-backed ways to regulate emotions both before they spiral and in the moment. Ryan is Dean of the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences and Professor of Psychology at the University of Wisconsin–Green Bay, and author of several books on emotions, including Emotion Hacks: 50 Ways to Feel Better Fast (https://amzn.to/4qrv9fj). Laughter feels good — but why do we do it? And why do humans laugh so much more than other animals? Is laughter actually good for your health, or is it just enjoyable? And what makes something funny in the first place? Christopher Duffy joins me to unpack the science and psychology of laughter. He’s a comedian, television writer, host of the TED podcast How to Be a Better Human, and author of Humor Me: How Laughing More Can Make You Present, Creative, Connected, and Happy (https://amzn.to/3LjKOyi). And finally, you’ve probably heard you should never let your gas tank drop below a quarter full — but is that really true? We wrap up by separating myth from reality and explaining when low fuel actually matters and when it doesn’t. https://www.carparts.com/blog/fact-or-myth-driving-with-less-than-a-quarter-of-a-tank-of-fuel-is-bad-for-your-car/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on something you should know, what do kids think of their parents after the parenting is all over?
Then, how to regulate your emotions.
It's not all in your head. There are other ways. For instance,
there is a lot of data out there to suggest that drinking water and staying hydrated is something that affects our emotional life, that when we get dehydrated, we are more emotionally reactive.
Also, is it true that you shouldn't let your gas tank get below a quarter of a tank?
And understanding laughter, what it is, how it works, and what it does for us.
This is why I love laughter.
It's so fun to be locked in a moment with your friend, where you are laughing so hard that you're crying.
That creates these memories that you then think about and talk about for years
and become the core of your identity.
All this today on something you should know.
From the creative team behind the Brutalist and starring Academy Award nominee Amanda Seifred in a career best performance,
Searchlight Pictures presents The Testament of Anne Lee.
With rave reviews from the Venice Film Festival, this bold and magnetic musical epic tells the story inspired by a true legend.
Anne Lee, founder of the radical religious movement, The Shakers, The Testament of Anne Lee.
Exclusive Toronto engagement January 16th in theaters everywhere January 23rd.
Something You Should Know.
Fascinating Intel, the world's top experts, and practical advice you can use in your life.
Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
You know, being a parent, something I've thought about, and I'm sure every parent thinks about,
is when your kids are grown, when the parenting is all over, what will your kids think of you?
And that's what we're going to start with today on this episode of something you should know.
I'm Mike Herruthers. Hi and welcome.
So when you're all done parenting and your kids grow up, they leave the nest and all the dust is settled,
what will they remember about you?
Well, according to an article on the Time Magazine website, here's what really matters.
The times you made them feel safe or unsafe.
Those would be the times you chased away the monster under the time.
to the bed. But kids feel unsafe when they see their parents lose their temper. Those memories
stick. The times you gave them your undivided attention. Kids measure love primarily by
our attentiveness to them. The times you stop what you're doing to have a tea party or go outside
to throw a ball, those will be memories etched in their minds and hearts forever. The way you interact
with your spouse. You are the model for what a relationship.
looks like. Your words of affirmation or criticism. Their identity and self-worth are molded largely
by your words. And traditions. Kids have a deep need for predictability. They will cherish family
traditions. So you really should have some. And that is something you should know.
Life has a way of serving up emotional ups and downs for all of us.
That part's not up for debate.
But what is often misunderstood is where those emotions actually come from
and how much control we really have over them.
When you look at the science of emotion,
it turns out that regulating how you feel isn't just a matter of willpower or thinking positive.
The everyday choices you make,
how you sleep, what you eat, how you spend your time.
Even the routines you follow can either support emotional balance or quietly sabotage it.
So how does this all work?
And what are some simple practical ways to feel better, sometimes faster than you might even expect?
Here to explain is Dr. Ryan Martin.
He's Dean of the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences,
and Professor of Psychology at the University of Wisconsin Greenbebe.
and he is author of a couple of international bestsellers,
Why We Get Mad and How to Deal with Angry People.
His latest book is called Emotion Hacks, 50 Ways to Feel Better Fast.
Hi, Ryan, welcome to something you should know.
Hi, hey, thanks for having me.
I'm really excited to talk with you today.
So first of all, explain what you mean by emotion hacks,
what they are and how they work.
I think that's a good place to start here.
Yeah, so there are lots of,
and lots and lots of little things we can do that will have a big impact on our emotional well-being.
And so I think sometimes people think, well, in order to feel happier or to feel less sad or to feel
less scared or less angry or whatever, I need some sort of big life change.
And that might be true for some people that they would benefit from a big life change.
But a lot of times the answers to our emotional wellness or our emotional well-being is to make lots of or even just a handful of little changes to adjust our sleep, to spend more time in nature, to socialize more, to think about our thoughts, to think about the situations we're putting ourselves in and so on.
And when we make those little changes, we can see this really big profound impact.
And so give me an example of how that would work, just so we're not talking in the abstract here,
just to get real concrete, just pick an example and lay it out for me.
You bet.
So I'm going to pick probably the easiest one and one I am doing right now, which is staying hydrated.
So we know that there is a lot of data out there to suggest that drinking water and staying hydrated is something that affects our emotional life,
that when we get dehydrated, we are more emotionally reactive than we would otherwise be.
And so by simply saying, you know what, I'm going to prioritize this relatively simple act for many people, at least, by saying I'm going to prioritize this thing, we can have this positive impact on our emotional well-being.
And so think about the different aspects of an emotional experience, and that includes a stimulus,
that includes our mood at the time of that stimulus, how we think about the stimulus, and so on.
I've outlined these 50 different things that you can do for, you know, some in each of those
different categories to respond in a more healthy way when we do encounter negative experiences.
So it's not so much that an emotion comes up and then you do something to mitigate whatever the
problem is this is more of a proactive, preventative thing.
Sort of.
A big part of what we do when we're dealing with negative stimuli is respond in the
moment.
So part of what I'm trying to advocate for is that people pay attention to how they
respond when they experience a negative stimuli in their life, right?
How they respond when they are stuck in traffic or when someone says something cruel
to them.
that's a big part of what it takes to manage our emotions.
At the same time, though, there's a bunch we can do in advance of those stimuli.
And there are ways that we can take care of ourselves.
There are ways that we can think about how we engage with the people around us by doing things
like staying hydrated that I mentioned, getting a good night's sleep, managing our stress,
being aware of the situations we put ourselves in that we actually invite into our lives
by paying attention to those things and by being really intentional about those things,
we can have this healthier emotional life down the road.
So those two examples you just gave a moment ago of like being stuck in traffic or
or, you know, somebody saying something that upsets you or what those are two very common examples
that people have trouble with.
So could you give some examples of like,
so how would you deal with that differently
rather than explode and get upset and pissed off?
So one of the things I always like to do with people
is encourage them to what I call diagram and emotional incident.
So I want you to think through when you experience a situation like that,
let's think about the whole thing really completely.
So for instance, when you get stuck in traffic,
There's a couple different things that are happening, right?
There's the stimulus itself, which is you getting stuck in traffic.
There's also your mood at the time that you got stuck in traffic.
So are you stressed?
Are you hungry?
Are you running late for something?
Are you tired and so on?
There's the way you think about that stimulus.
So what it means in your life, are you, is this going to ruin your day?
Is this going to ruin your career?
Do you think everybody else on the road is an idiot?
It is God taking vengeance on you, whatever the thoughts are.
And then there is your emotional response and how you deal with that.
So anger, fear, sadness, whatever that is.
And then there is what you do in response to all of that.
So how you behave.
Do you pound on your horn?
Do you start giving people a finger?
How do you respond?
So what I encourage people to do is to think about what an intervention looks like
in each of those different categories.
How do you, so it's a little bit too late once you're in the situation to think about
whether or not you could have made different decisions leading into it.
But maybe for next time, you can think about the different decisions you could make so that
you end up not getting stuck in traffic.
I encourage people to think about taking care of themselves so that when they are faced
with those situations, they aren't feeling is overwhelmed by it.
So that's taking care of themselves.
And so their mood at the time is impacted.
But also I encourage people in that situation.
Okay, think about how can you reframe what's happening so that you have a, so that you're thinking about the consequences in a realistic way.
Not that you're lying to yourself, but you're saying, okay, how big a delay is this?
Is this going to cost me five minutes, 10 minutes, 30 minutes?
How bad a delay is it?
and what is that delay going to mean to the rest of my day?
It might be that it's not as bad as you're making it out to be
once you really sit down and start thinking about it.
You know, when you have one of those moments when you're stuck in traffic
or something's frustrating you or whatever,
and you get all worked up about it.
And later you think, well, what was that about?
Why did I get, it all worked out.
It was all fine.
It wasn't as bad as I was making it out.
And yet we kind of,
to never learn from that. Like the next time it happens, you get just as frustrated. Like, we don't,
we get this unrealistic look that this is the end of the world and it, it almost never is.
Yeah. That's one of the real challenges when it comes to dealing with feelings or dealing with
emotions is that by definition, when you're having them, you have a different set of thoughts
than you would have without them, right? That by definition, part of what
they're doing is influencing your brain in ways that make it harder for you to potentially think
rationally or more reasonably. And so so much of this is actually training ourselves to do
exactly what you're describing, which is to kind of stay calm in the moment and think through
the situation in a more rational way and interpret those consequences in a
in a more rational way. And that takes practice. And actually what you're describing, I think,
is a really important part of that practice, which is to reflect on it after the fact and to ask
yourself what are some tough questions to ask yourself in the moment, but that are, hey, why did I
react this way? What was I going through? Why was it so hard for me in this moment to think more
clearly why did you know and in doing that I liken this some of a big sports fan I actually likened
this to watching game tape right so after after a soccer game you know I we sit down and we watch the
footage and we talk about the mistakes we made and we talk about what we could have done differently
I think that reflecting on your experiences can play that role for you and can help you get ready
to do something a little bit different next time and the you
The problem is sometimes when we reflect back on that, we don't do the work at looking
in ourselves.
We do the work of looking at how everyone else behaved.
And so we've got to turn that around a little bit and say, okay, what can I do differently
next time?
We're talking about managing your emotions with some emotion hacks.
And my guest is Dr. Ryan Martin.
He is author of the book, Emotion Hacks, 50 Ways to Feel Better Fast.
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So, Ryan, oftentimes when you get upset emotion,
Like I'm thinking about driving, your immediate reaction is often that everybody else is a jerk,
that that guy cut me off, he must be a jerk, that that person, it doesn't know how to drive,
that we're fine.
It's the other guy who's the problem.
I had this conversation with my son over the weekend.
He was playing basketball.
He was disappointed in his playing time.
In between games, we sat down and talked, and I said, here's the thing.
I agree with you 100% that you should be frustrated with your playing.
time. I don't know why it is the way it is, but let's focus on the parts of this that you can
actually control. Maybe that's your body language when you're in there. Maybe that's how you're
communicating with your coach. Who knows what it is, but let's figure out what parts we can control
and let's try and focus in on that as we move forward because we don't have a say in how other
people are going to treat us. For me, and I think for a lot of people, there is a difference
between those emotional moments that hit you all of a sudden.
Something happens in that moment versus the times that you can prepare for it.
Like, okay, the boss wants to see you.
What's this about?
I can sit down and kind of prep myself for that.
But those moments where it just catches you off guard seem to be the toughest.
Sometimes situations just sneak up on us.
things, highly emotional situations that we weren't prepared for.
A lot of times, though, these situations don't sneak up on us.
We can see them coming or at least we know, at least we know they are potentially going to happen, right?
So I can predict with 100% certainty that at some point in my life, I'm going to get caught in traffic again.
And because I know that, I can think now when I'm in a clear state of mind, how I want to handle that when it happens.
In doing so, I get better at it just by sort of rehearsing it in my mind, practicing that out, thinking through that.
And we can actually do this with, you know, interpersonal conflict.
We can do this in a host of ways.
We can think through these things and practice for them so that when they happen, we've essentially rehearsed it.
And that makes it far easier in the moment when it's happened.
And then the other part is the reflecting back on it and doing that honest.
assessment that I mentioned before. What parts of this should I have done differently or what parts of
this could I have done differently? And by doing that, we're essentially doing it. It's another form of
rehearsal where we're better able to handle that in the future. Because then once we've had that
rehearsal, once we've kind of gone through that, we can now later on when we actually do find
ourselves in those moments, we are prepared for that. And we can,
You know, maybe it's something where people have a mantra that they use, which is one
recommendation I have for people is like, pick a mantra, something that you say to yourself
in those tough moments and then remember to say it.
Like what?
Like what's an example of that?
Yeah.
So the mantra I use and one of the things I really encourage people to do is put a lot of
thought into what their mantra is.
But the mantra I use is do the next right thing.
and that is my way of giving myself some grace for the fact that I may have made mistakes in the past,
but acknowledging that I'm always trying to do the right thing.
And when I face a negative experience, I can remind myself,
okay, this is your moment to do whatever is the right thing.
One of the things that happens for, I think, for a lot of people,
is that when emotional things happen, there's a tendency to think the worst.
that this is the end of the world, that this is going to lead to more bad things.
How do you stop that spiral downward where here's something that isn't great,
and now it's going to just get worse and worse and worse?
Yeah, so the name we use for that a lot of times is catastrophizing,
and it's when we just blow things way out of proportion.
And one of the first things, and I will tell you,
I do think there's something to be said for people just needing a moment to spiral.
And that's maybe okay, especially if you've sort of got the benefit of time on your side to sort of run through that.
I actually think one of the things we sometimes do with people in our lives when they're spiraling or when they're catastrophizing is we try to tell them too quickly, okay, calm down, relax, it's not that bad.
And all of that feels really minimizing.
And so I think it's okay to just take a moment to sort of let that spiral as long as you can pull it back in relatively quickly.
And once you've had that moment, I think that's when you start to potentially ask yourself two questions.
The first question is, how bad is this really?
And once you're in a little bit more reasonable frame of mind, you can start to ask yourself how, like truly, what are the very real consequences of this?
And then start to think through almost like a checklist of, okay, it's going to mean this.
It's going to mean this.
And it's going to mean this.
The other thing you can do is start to ask yourself, how can I mitigate those consequences?
What is the thing I can do to try and solve this?
And now all of a sudden, that spiral becomes empowering.
That spiral becomes a, okay, so I actually have some power here to fix some of these things.
And even if it's just a little bit of power, even if there isn't a ton of
I can do, it's still better, I think, for people to take a little bit of ownership in the solution
than to let it go.
What are some of the other?
Because I hadn't heard about hydration affecting your thoughts and your mood and all that.
What are some of the other ones that you didn't mention that people might not be aware of?
Yeah.
So there's a couple biggies that I really, really like.
One is actually the importance of spending time in nature.
And so spending some time on a walk in nature.
Honestly, it even just can work if you're not in a place where you're surrounded by nature.
It can even work to watch nature videos or to look out a window and just see some green space.
And it works even better if you do that in a way where you are unplugging as much as you can.
And so if you can, you know, turn off your.
phone or not take your phone with you and really go out and spend that time immersed in the environment.
The other piece of this too is it works even better if you can give yourself a task that is sort of
specific to the nature. So the example that I really like that we've seen some really interesting
research on is bird watching. So if you go out not just to spend time in nature, but you
give you say I'm going to I'm going to look for birds or I'm going to try and identify plants or I'm going to try and identify rocks.
Anything that will get you focused on the nature and out of your head is really, really valuable.
So spending time in nature is a biggie.
The other one that I really like is any kind of engagement with the arts.
And that doesn't necessarily, and I say this is someone who is not a good artist, right?
someone who has zero real artistic skills or very, very little at least, that spending time
engaging in the arts either by participating in some craft type workshops or things like that
or maybe spending some time with expressive writing or just going to shows and performances
that those things can be really good ways to help increase your self-esteem,
increase your happiness, engage with other people.
That's another part of this that's really important,
is socializing, engaging with other people,
is all of these things help you navigate stressful situations
when you experience them.
It seems like all of those things have in common
that you're getting out of your head,
you're getting away from the thing that's bothering you,
you're distracting yourself by going out in nature
or talking to people or doing art or whatever.
you're not you're unfocusing from the problem.
Yeah, and this is really important.
So about two months ago, I actually developed a little bit of a sleep problem.
I was waking up in the middle of the night and my mind was racing.
And I know this happens to a lot of people.
And so one of the things I discovered about myself during that time is that it's kind of hard for me to shut my brain down,
that I don't always feel comfortable with that sort of silence.
and so I got and I said like I said I am not a good artist so I got a coloring book and started doing that just about 10 minutes a day as a way of and what it does for me is it it takes away the stress of having to try and create nice art which I don't think I'm capable of doing but it it allows me to um
like focus on something other than my thoughts while and kind of engaging in creating something.
And so it's been a really nice, simple habit for me.
There's no goal of trying to get better even or show it to people.
It's just something I like to work on on my own that gives me a little bit of break from my thoughts.
Well, unless you are someone who is always in control of their emotions at all times,
which is no one.
This is really helpful.
These hacks can be really useful.
Dr. Ryan Martin's been my guest.
He's the dean of the College of Arts, Humanities,
and Social Sciences,
and professor of psychology at the University of Wisconsin
in Green Bay.
And he is author of the book Emotion Hacks,
50 Ways to Feel Better Fast.
Ryan, thank you for sharing this.
You bet. Thank you very, very much.
I appreciate talking to you.
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the five members of an elite commando group nicknamed the Stone Wolves
raged against the oppressive rule of the Kradirakian Empire,
which occupies and dominates most of the galaxies inhabited planets.
The wolves fought for freedom, but they failed,
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Four decades after their heyday, they each try to stay alive and eke out a living.
But a friend from the past won't let them move on.
And neither will their bitterest enemy.
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Enjoy it as a standalone story or listen to the entire GFL series beginning with season one,
The Rookie.
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It's probably safe to say that most of us like to laugh.
And we're often told that laughter is good for us.
It brings people together, eases stress, even improves our health.
But when you stop and think about it, laughter is kind of strange.
I mean, other animals don't really laugh, not the way we do.
So what is laughter exactly?
Why do we enjoy it so much?
Why does it seem to be such a uniquely human behavior?
and what role does it actually play in how we connect, create, and relate to one another?
Here with some answers is Christopher Duffy.
He's a comedian, television writer, host of the TED podcast How to Be a Better Human,
and he's author of a book called Humor Me, How Laughing More Can Make You Present, Creative, Connected, and Happy.
Hi, Christopher, welcome to something you should know.
I'm Mike. Thanks so much for having me.
Sure.
So why laughter?
Why did you pick this as a topic to say, well, let's look a little deeper?
Well, I mean, the first and most honest reason is because laughing is really fun.
I mean, this is what I think of as like a good day is if I can laugh really hard.
So that's the first reason why I was really interested in laughter.
And then the second kind of a little bit deeper reason is because I really feel like as I look around at the world,
and people that I know and just my own day-to-day experience,
it just felt like there's this real missing piece
where things are very serious and heavy.
And there's not a lot of social value these days
placed on lightness and laughter
and the connection and joy that can come from having a good sense of humor.
I feel like people kind of either take it for granted
or don't think it's very important.
And I think it is so important.
Does everybody laugh?
It seems like, you know, babies laugh.
So it must be something we're born with.
with. It is, it's universal. It's across cultures. It's across continents. And it is, it's really
fundamentally important. So there's clearly a reason why we do it. But it serves a really important
purpose in our lives as a way of creating social bonds as a way of relieving tension and creating
group identities too. I think that's one of the evolutionary ideas is that that's why we started
to laugh and joke is to create in group identities and to understand who was in and who was out of
the group. Yeah, that's what's so fascinating is it does seem that laughter is a group activity. I mean,
yeah, you can laugh when you're by yourself, but it's a lot easier. It seems more natural to laugh
in a group. It just does. I mean, the same movie you watch at home on your TV by yourself might be
funny, but if you watch it in a theater with a lot of people, you're much more likely to laugh at the
funny parts. That's definitely true. That's not just.
just your experience. There's a lot of science that I came across from researchers who study
laughter that shows that that is absolutely the case that laughter occurs much more frequently
when we're in social settings. And also just aside from the whole science part of it, this is
why I love laughter. I mean, it's so fun to be locked in a moment with your friend where you
are laughing so hard that you're crying, you're holding your sides. It just is like, that creates
these memories with a friend, with a romantic partner,
with a family member that you then think about
and talk about for years and become this core of your identity.
I also think that at a time when we have a real deficit of attention, right?
There's so many screens and distractions
in every part of our life.
It's very common to be in a conversation
with someone who is only kind of half there or a quarter there.
And what I love about laughter is you are in the moment
when you are laughing.
You are not half laughing and kind of half out.
When you're really, really laughing,
you are fully in it with the other person.
And that's such a beautiful and precious thing these days, I think.
What makes something funny?
Well, I will say that it is really subjective,
but I think there's kind of two theories that
makes sense to me about what makes something funny.
One is called the benign violation theory.
So that is you're doing something that's kind of not allowed,
but it's not allowed.
hurtful or harmful, right? It's not like a benign violation, a classic example of that is a tickle,
right? If you tickle a kid, you're kind of attacking them, but it's not hurting them, right? If you
grab them really hard, that's not benign. That's scary. And if you just give them like a little
pout on the head, it's not a violation at all, so it's not funny. So there's this, there's this sweet
spot of crossing a boundary, but crossing a boundary in an okay way that makes things funny.
The other idea about what makes things funny, the other scientific idea that I think makes a lot of sense for more kind of intellectual jokes is called encryption theory.
And the idea for that is that basically anything that is a joke is I present you with a lock and you have a key that turns that lock and opens it.
You can decrypt the joke.
So I'd say something to you.
You understand the play and then it's funny to you.
And the reason why people think that might be an explanation for a lot of humor is because across cultures, across continents and societies, people are super attuned to fake laughter, right?
Me going like, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
You can tell instantly that that's not a real laugh.
And they think that that may be because evolutionarily, if you presented someone with a riddle and they pretended to laugh and get it, they weren't actually part of your group.
So it was dangerous for you to believe that that person really got it.
So we're very attuned to whether people actually get it and can understand our riddles and jokes and decrypt them or not.
But boy, when people do get our jokes, I mean, laughter is like this lubricant, this social lubricant.
We like being with people who make us laugh and we like people who find us funny.
And when that magic happens, it's special.
Of course, it's kind of hard to like get out there and make friends unless you do it with laughter and humor.
Then you just want to hang out with people.
Those are people who make you laugh and you make laugh.
It's fun.
It doesn't feel like a chore.
Instead, it feels like, we got to do this again.
This was incredible.
For me, that's like, that's why I leave the house every day is hoping, just hoping that someone will make me laugh or laugh at my jokes.
And are you pretty good at that?
You know, I would say that there are many people I've met who would say I'm very bad at that.
But some people think I'm really good at it.
So you know, you only need a few.
You don't need everybody.
Yeah.
And also this is one of those things where if you sometimes if you know you try too hard,
you come across a little like sweaty and constantly making jokes, you can never have a serious conversation.
People don't like that either.
You have to be able to do it when it's appropriate, but also turn it off.
You know what I find interesting is how people like different humor.
Not everybody laughs at the same thing.
You know, some people like potty.
humor, but other people find it so disgusting and offensive. And some things just, you know,
they strike you funny because of your sense of humor. But I don't really know what a sense of humor is.
Yeah, there's a, well, there's certainly a really big split between people who think like
body humor or potty humor is funny or not. There tends to be like a bright line between those two
kinds of people. I will say that I think that sense of humor is universal. But what you find funny
is extremely personal and various person to person.
So what I mean by sense of humor is the ability to see the absurd in the world,
to notice and find strange and delightful things around you,
the ability to laugh at yourself,
and the desire to connect with other people
and to put yourself out there to take a social risk.
I think those are the building blocks of an actual sense of humor.
What you find funny,
what those things that you find delightful and absurd,
and laugh-inducing, that changes person to person.
So that is extremely personal.
But I'm a really big believer that a sense of humor is a mindset and a mental muscle that
you can strengthen and grow and make stronger.
I think I've seen over the course of my career, both as a comedian, watching other comedians
start out and get funnier and funnier and funnier and funnier.
And also as someone who's taught comedy and taught workshops to people who have no desire
to ever perform on stage.
I've seen how you can learn these skills and bring more laughter and more humor into your life.
So I really do believe that a sense of humor is a universal set of skills that can be taught and practiced and learned.
But there does seem to be a lot of people, there seems to be a lot of people who are just naturally funny.
They just in any situation can find the humor in it.
And there are other people who simply cannot.
And, you know, they just don't have that.
And I don't know if that's a virtue or not, but, but there does seem to be naturally funny people.
You know, I'm going to push back on you a little bit here.
I, I think that there are certainly people who are as adults, it comes more natural to them.
But the idea that some people are born with it and some people aren't, I really don't believe that.
I think if you go to an elementary school and you look at kids who are, you know, eight, nine years old playing, you're going to see that they all have great senses if you're
They're very willing to play, make believe, and pretend and ask silly questions and laugh.
You know, certain kids have a little bit more of a serious side to them as well, but they're able to access humor and laughter in a way that I think a lot of adults aren't, which tells me that it's more of like we are, we get socialized to not do these things, to to not ask questions that might make us look ridiculous or look less impressive, that we get socialized to not.
pretend and that we get socialized to not pay attention to the small odd details and to instead
focus on the things that are quote unquote normal. So I do think that it is something that everyone
has access to. Of course, like anything, right? There are people who are naturally faster and
naturally slower. I don't think everyone has the same level of ability. But I do think it's something
that everyone has. But you know people who you would say, he's really funny. That guy's really funny.
Oh, of course. Yes, yes. Yeah. I guess the thing that I'm pushing back
on is the idea that like you're born with it and you either can or you don't you do or do not have it like
sorry I just wasn't born with it but yes no I didn't mean that I didn't mean that I I
what how you get it is one thing but there are people there are people who seemingly are
naturally funny that they're they can more easily be funny in a conversation and there are
people who are more awkward and whether it's definitely God-given or it's learned there do
seem to be people who are funny and people who are not so funny.
Oh, yes, this is undeniably true.
But there are people you interact with and you go, well, that person is the least funny
person that I've ever seen in my life.
That person is the equivalent of drywall.
And then there's other people where you go, that person is hilarious.
Every single interaction with them made me feel so connected and laughing.
And we, I just like, I couldn't get enough of it.
It was great.
Yes, there certainly have, I have those experiences all the time.
And also, you know, a lot of times if you don't click with someone comedically, like, they make a joke and they think it's funny.
And you think like this is one of the most painful experiences of my life to try and navigate this person thinking that that's funny.
Talk about the math of comedy.
This is something I find really interesting because many, many, many years ago, I did stand up for a while.
And so you kind of start to examine what it is that makes people funny.
and there is like a math to it.
And so talk about that.
Yeah.
There are these rules that make things funnier.
And there's this math of comedy like you brought up.
So one of the really basic pieces of the math of comedy
is if you have a funny word or a punchline,
you want that to go at the very end, right?
So if I say like, and then it turns out he had a kazoo,
it's funnier to end on kazoo, then it's like,
and the kazoo was in his pocket.
For some reason, that just does not do it for us as much, right?
You want the funniest word to be last.
And part of that is because then there's a pause, a natural pause, which lets people fill
the pause with their laughter.
And so you need that space that laughter can fill into.
And actually, even in regular conversation, if you look at where laughs happen, they so often
happen as kind of this social lubricant that fills the empty spaces and erases any awkwardness.
piece of the math of comedy that this is one of the most classic comedy rules is the rule of
three. So a lot of really funny things are patterns. And the way, the simplest way to establish a pattern
is you bring something up once, you bring it up again. And then the third time, it's a pattern.
And it's funny. It's the funniest time when you bring that thing up the third time. If you, if you
watch sitcoms, if you watch funny movies, you will notice this happening all the time, that
something gets brought up once. It gets brought up a second time and it's funny. And it's
It's really funny the third time.
And again, for reasons that I don't think anyone can exactly pinpoint, it's not as funny if you bring it up a fourth time or a fifth time.
It kind of has diminishing returns.
So there's this really incredible maximum satisfaction rule of three.
And then there's all sorts of other pieces of like comedy math for how what those three should be.
Because you generally want things to escalate.
So like, hey, I'll see you at the store.
Hey, I'll see you at your wedding.
Hey, I'll see you at the president's inauguration.
Right.
Like, those are three escalating things.
It's typically funnier to go up like that.
But if you go too fast, then it's kind of like the joke doesn't really make sense.
If you go say like, all right, I'll see you tomorrow at your house.
I'll see you tomorrow on the moon.
There's not really many, many places to go from there.
Right.
Like, what's more absurd than the moon?
So this is sometimes referred to in like the comedy math as a.
You want to take the local train to crazy town, not the express.
And again, these are things that like I think about when I'm writing standup jokes or
writing, you know, jokes for a comedy TV show.
But I think that they actually do apply when you're just having a conversation or
trying to have more laughter in your regular life as a regular person.
Because you can think about, right, like if, if you are someone who sometimes
finds yourself like being the awkward one in conversations, one, one typical problem
that people have is that they have brought something up like too much.
many times. They haven't followed the rule of three. Instead, they're following the rule of four or five.
So if there's something that makes everyone laugh, you have like this natural occurring joke where,
right, like someone hears a car horn honk outside and they go like, hey, I'll be out in a minute.
And everyone laughs. Okay. It's kind of a silly, like basic whatever joke. But then next time a car honks,
someone else says, hey, I'll be out in a minute. Someone else says that. And it's funny. It's really
funny. If you do it a third time, it's definitely going to be funny. But if you do it a fourth time,
people are going to be like, we've already heard the car horn joke. You know, like,
that's past it. And sometimes people don't realize that they're kind of beating this thing into the ground.
The other ones of like that you want to end with the funniest thing. One of the common ways that people
like ask for help with comedy is like, I have to write a speech or I have to give a toast at a wedding.
And I think this is one of the biggest things that people forget. It's like they say the funny thing and then they're intending to say another sentence after.
And it's like, if you have a funny anecdote and it ends with. And that's when we found out that it was my brother in the car.
don't say something else.
Just say, and that's what you found out,
it was my brother in the car, laughs.
You know, like, you have to end with the funny thing.
And then be quiet.
Exactly.
And then give them the space to laugh.
And sometimes, and everyone's had this experience
of being funny and then realizing you went too far,
it's inappropriate, you shouldn't have said that.
And it's hard to know where that line is.
Yeah.
Again, comedy is so context-dependent.
and so subjective and it depends on the relationship with the person who you're talking to
and where that relationship is this particular day.
And tone and there's so many pieces.
So it is kind of inevitable that you will get it wrong.
It's also kind of inevitable that you will get it wrong even without comedy with just
having a conversation with someone for long enough.
You're going to say something that's a little awkward or strange.
But comedy certainly raises the stakes a little bit more.
This is where I actually think that like I would draw a distinction between comedy and humor.
Right? Like comedy is like the performance. And so if you're just trying to perform, right, then it's like, it's all about me. Pay attention. But if you're trying to have a good sense of humor, to me, a humor is about like laughing together and having a really like wonderful time with lots of laughs as a whole. So it might be that you're just laughing at the other person's joke. So how can you with that goal of having like a better sense of humor in a in a collective way, how can you then like own up to, hey, I stepped over the line and I didn't mean to. And.
let's not do that again.
I think a really big piece of that is being willing to laugh at yourself.
Let's say like, oh, gosh, I put my foot in my mouth so badly.
I'm so sorry.
You know, and to laugh about that as well, to not just laugh outwardly focused, but also inwardly focused.
I know you're not a scientist necessarily, but you do talk about laughter as medicine in your book.
So talk about that.
Because we hear laughter is the best medicine, but what does that mean?
Laughter is the best medicine is this phrase that people say all the time.
And I think that we kind of all know that that is transparently not true, right?
Like, obviously penicillin is better medicine than laughter.
Obviously, if I am in pain and you're about to do surgery on me, I wouldn't be like,
forget the anesthesia.
Let me just hear a couple of great knock-knock jokes.
Like, that's just transparently wrong.
But for the book, I did some research and I talked to,
emergency room doctors. I talked to a psychologist who ran a lab studying anxiety. And I talked to
a nursing professor who worked in a nursing home with elderly patients. And they all showed me
different ways that humor and laughter has played a really important role in their clinical practice.
And the biggest piece is that laughter, it's not necessarily about like solving your medical
issue, but it is about reframing your experience. Right. Like,
You can go from being so focused on like pain and loneliness and unhappiness and then laugh and it can release that tension and reframe how you see it.
And that can actually play a really significant role in your medical recovery from a condition, right?
Like changing the way people think about and feel about their condition is a real important medical outcome.
So an example that an emergency room doctor gave me is that often before he stitches someone up, he has to give them a local.
anesthetic and the local anesthetic really burns when you first give it. It hurts before it makes the person numb.
And he's found that if he can get the person to laugh right before or as he gives them the anesthetic,
that they experience the pain much less, that they have a much better experience of receiving this anesthetic.
So he's in Boston and he would, you know, sometimes say to his patient, if it seemed like they would
appreciate this, he would say, like, what I'm about to do is going to hurt more than what the
Yankees did to the Red Sox last night. And they would, you know, laugh at this like, I didn't expect my
emergency room doctor to say that.
And then the laughter would allow them to experience pain less.
And at the nursing home, this nursing home in Hong Kong, they ran a study where they had people do basically a humor course where they found things that made them laugh.
They shared them with this other group.
And what they found is that the elderly residents of this nursing home had increased satisfaction with their life.
They had decreased loneliness.
And they experienced less pain in their day to day because laughter was this part of their life.
So that's an incredible outcome that also has kind of no negative side effects.
So in some ways, laughter is the best medicine as long as you use it with other really good, effective medicine.
Well, laughter is something everybody does, or I hope they do at some point in their life.
And yet we don't talk about it much.
We don't really understand what it does, how it works, and the benefits of it.
So I appreciate you sharing that.
Christopher Duffy has been my guest.
He is the host of the podcast How to Be a Better Human
and author of the book, Humor Me,
How Laughing Can Make You More Present, Creative, Connected, and Happy.
And there's a link to his book and to his podcast in the show notes.
I really appreciate you making time to have me.
Thank you so much for this.
You've probably heard that driving your car with less than a quarter tank of gas
is bad for the vehicle.
Well, that idea mostly comes from older cars,
where running low could expose or damage the fuel pump.
In modern cars, that's mostly no longer true.
Driving below a quarter tank by itself won't hurt your engine or your fuel system.
But with that said, running very low on fuel or frequently driving on fumes
can cause problems over time.
Gasoline helps to cool and lubricate the fuel pump,
and when the fuel level gets too low, the pump can run hotter than it should.
Extremely low levels can also allow the pump to pull in sediment from the bottom of the tank,
and that can clog filters and contribute to where.
So here's the practical takeaway.
Dipping below a quarter tank isn't a big deal,
but routinely pushing your tank close to empty isn't great for your car,
and it increases your chances of actually running out of gas and being stranded.
Filling up around a quarter tank isn't a hard rule,
but it's not a bad idea.
And that is something you should know.
Something You Should Know is produced by Jennifer Brennan, Jeff Havason.
Executive producer is Ken Williams.
I'm Mike Carruthers.
Thank you for listening today to Something You Should Know.
