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Dr. Michael Titze y Brigitte Titze M.A. in Uruguay
Interview with
Dr. M. Titze
By Karina
González
On the theory.
1. Do you subscribe
to any of the traditional psychoanalytic's or do
you look towards new approaches?
About 30 years ago, I received my certificate as a licensed Adlerian
psychotherapist. In Germany
we use the traditional denomination “Individual Psychology”, some use the word “teleoanalysis” (which I prefer to
use as well!). Teleoanalysis is derived from the Greek word “telos” which
means intention, goal. Traditional psychoanalysis looks primarily for the
causes of our behaviour. Teleoanalysis examines the intentions, the
goal-directedness being inherent in all actions. This goal-directedness, of
course, is connected with specific biographical conditions in the childhood
but not absolutely dependent from such prerequisites. Thus, the freedom of
decision is, from the standpoint of Adlerian psychology, decisive for
understanding human behaviour. This standpoint has been adopted by the
schools of humanistic and existential psychotherapy. One of the most
prominent representatives of this tradition was Viktor E. Frankl, the
founder of Logotherapy and Existential Analysis. Frankl (who originally had
been a disciple of Alfred Adler as well) was my most important teacher. I
had personal contact with him for many years. And he was the one who opened
my eyes to recognize that humans are striving incessantly to find the
purpose of life: a meaning that motivates the person concerned to resist
all adversities. Frankl discovered, in this context, the defiant power of
humour: Especially in the context of anxiety disorders the patient was
motivated by Frankl to “ironize” the respective
symptoms – thus exercising a “paradoxical intention”. This approach has
been adopted, meanwhile, by many important schools of modern psychotherapy,
such as behaviour therapy or systemic therapy. In 1982, Frankl introduced
me to William F. Fry, the founder of “gelotology”,
i.e. the research of laughter. Fry, who was an original member of the “Palo
Alto-Group” (dedicated to the investigation of paradoxes in important realms
of human life), since then is my senior mentor.
2. What are the essential elements of individual psychology?
(a) Individual Psychology
is a subjectivistic approach to the phenomena of the psyche. This means
that the object of analysis is not the
sphere of natural, (objectively) “real” facts but of their subjective
interpretation. The term “individual” is derived from Latin “in-dividuum” which means “not divisible”. By that term,
Adler wanted to indicate the holistic fundament of his personality theory:
Man is, in this context, an organic unity; all parts of this unity are
dependent, resp. functionally embedded in the psycho-physic entirety of the
organism. (The whole is more than the sum of its parts!)
(b) Analysis/treatment
is directed towards the dynamics of life. The purpose/goal of this dynamic
movement is the overcoming of all sorts of deficiency and weakness. The
unconscious “wisdom of the body” provides the resources which are useful to
serve this purpose. (Even psychosomatic symptoms can function, in this
context, as a useful means regarding such a purpose!)
(c) This dynamic force is equivalent to a
striving to overcome deficiencies. The fundamental motif of human striving
is a (fictive) goal of absolute safety. This “plus-position” is connected
with pleasurable fantasies of “being on the top”, such as being rich,
omniscient, universally respected, sexually desirable: that means, being in
every respect superior. This “striving for superiority” serves the purpose
to compensate the feeling of inferiority (that is an expression of the
“minus-position”): This feeling of inferiority gives rise to develop
different strategies of self-actualization
Ø
attraction attention (wanting to be the focus of
attention);
Ø
claim for power (dominance)
Ø
tendency for revenge (retaliation)
Ø
tendency for justifying (excusing) of one’s faults
Ø
safeguarding by withdrawal (evasive acting)
All of these strategies can be realized by
active or passive methods. Passive methods make frequently use of
psycho-somatic symptoms. An example is depressive weeping: Adler spoke in
this context of “water power”. By this ironic choice of words he wanted to
indicate that tears not only are caused by depression: additionally, they
may serve the purpose that is contained in one of the above mentioned
strategies.
(d)
Man is creative and able to find a meaning in his/her life. Since
early childhood man is forming specific opinions regarding his/her
environment. We may speak, in this context, of a creative “construction of
reality”. This means that reality is based on strictly (inter)subjective
constructions.
(e) Man is a social being. The community of
cooperating and communication fellow men is a prerequisite for
individuation. The more a child is interwoven into a social network; the
better will be his/her personal competences in future life. Consequently,
all basic problems of life are social problems. Without a developed
“community feeling” the person concerned is liable to get many psychic
illnesses, especially depressions and anxiety disorders. A developed social
competence has a decisive effect on cognitive capacities that make a
“normal” rational conduct possible. Persons who are not provided with
social competence are inclined to develop a “private logic”: Consequently,
their behaviour will be “abnormal”, fellow-men
will experience them as awkward, funny or ridiculous. This, in turn, is
strongly decouraging. As a consequence, the
probability is high for developing safeguarding strategies
(cf. c).
3. What is your understanding of the role you have played in the
intellectual promotion to which you belong and the development of
psychology?
From 1982 until 1992 I have been
the chairman of the Scientific Committee of the International Association
of Individual Psychology. This period was filled with vigorous discussions
as to the question: “Is Individual Psychology (like psychoanalysis) a part
of depth psychology?” Today this question is answered: Most of the
Adlerians all over the world identify themselves with the premises of depth
psychology, especially the hypothesis of a dynamic unconsciousness.
In
Germany, I have concentrated on working out the importance of paradoxical
interventions in the practice of Individual Psychology/teleoanalysis. This
tradition had been initiated by Adler himself in 1914: Como uno de los
primeros miembros del círculo cultural occidental comenzó ADLER a transitar
ya en 1914 los caminos de la paradoja.
Así
él aconsejó a personas que sufrían de insomnio, no hacer "algo contra
ello" – como sería
"razonable desde el punto de vista del sentido común". Al
contrario él aconsejaba a su paciente, el considerar tal síntoma como algo
positivo, como un "signo favorable de una enfermedad mental
curable". A una pequeña niña que tiranizaba a su toda familia cada
mañana ataques de llanto y horas enteras peinandose, ADLER le propuso:
"Escribe en un pedazo de papel con grandes caracteres y cuélgalo en la
cabecera de tu cama: Todas las mañanas debo tener en jaque a toda
familia!" (cit.
según TITZE 1982, pag. 282).
The contact with Viktor Frankl
opened my eyes for the fact that “all paradoxes are grounded by humor” (Frankl)
4. What
psychological approach or authors to your understanding point to the
immediate future of psychology?
There are two realms of research
that are, in my opinion, especially important. First the investigation of
shame, the “hidden emotion”. Shame is an expression of that feeling of
worthlessness and self-doubt which Pierre Janet 120 ago had denominated the
“sentiment d’incomplétitude” - and which Alfred
Adler called the “inferiority complex”. Traditional psychoanalytic therapy
was dealing with the importance of those guilt feelings which stem from the
super-ego and intervene in “immoral” impulses from the unconsciousness
(i.e. sexual or aggressive drives). Modern psychoanalysis, however, has
adopted the basic Adlerian model of determining feelings of
inferiority (minus-position: experienced as shame) which the person
concerned tries to compensate by orienting towards a final goal of
(fictive) absolute superiority (plus position: experienced as pride). This
fictive goal is an ideal. In fact, our post-modern society is flooded with
individuals who try to overcome their problems they have with an extremely
low self-esteem by a striving for absolute power. These individuals are
self-centered or (in psychoanalytic terminology)
“narcissistic”. They lack social interest: their fellow-men are less
experienced as companions, instead they are
increasingly seen as competitors. Therefore, a permanent comparison is carried
out – whether the fellow man is less powerful (= downward comparison,
triggers a feeling of superiority) or more powerful (= upward comparison,
triggers a feeling of inferiority). Oliver James, a British psychologist
conducted a survey about the psychic well-being in Great Britain (O. James:
Britain on the couch, London 1998). Many thousand participants were
included into this survey. The outcome, in short, was: Depression, violence and compulsive behavior have increased considerably since 1950. (Depression
rate is ten times higher than in 1950!) Rates of suicide have increased as
well. Alcohol consumption has increased in all European nations, as has
cirrhosis of the liver. The use of such illegal drugs as marijuana, cocaine
and heroin has increased exponentially, most dramatically among the young.
20% of the total American population suffer from a
mental illness during any given 12 months and 32% will suffer at some point
during their lifetime. Oliver James states:
“Modern life fails to meet a
fundamental human need that evolved millions of years ago – for rank, for a
status in relation to others. It has a remarkable facility for inducing a
feeling of subordination in us, of making us feel like losers even if we
are winners. Originally, during our evolution, the low self-esteem, shame,
humiliation, hopelessness and helplessness (feelings of depression) that
resulted from subordination served as a useful function.(…) Even ‘the most
beautiful woman’ has been touched by the epidemic of depression and eating
disorders which has plagued young women for the second half of the
twentieth century. But why should Princess Diana, a raving beauty of the
highest imaginable status, have these problems? One answer may be that she
compares herself too often with too many people in ways that leave her
feeling inadequate and insecure (…) Depressed people have a disastrous
tendency to compare themselves to an excessive extent with others. (…) This
problem starts early: Aged seven to nine, children begin to make plentiful
social comparisons and this is often accompanied by a significant dousing
of their mood at school and a dislike thereof. (…) We are increasingly
likely to live alone, the care of children has become increasingly erratic
and the elderly are liable to be left to fend for themselves in unnaturally
lonely, estranged circumstances.”
Altogether, these data indicate
that post-modern man is increasingly discouraged, lacking self-confidence
and firm sense of community and solidarity towards his/her fellow-men. Post-modern
man is inclined to view the world as hostile and life, in general, as
dangerous. The self-image is rather negative: deficiencies and faults are
focused, positive resources, talents, and capabilities usually will be
ignored. Therefore, modern psychotherapy has turned from concentrating on
psychic defects and pathological manifestations of the psyche. Instead, the
focus is increasingly directed towards positive aspects: the resources
the person concerned is endowed with. This encouraging procedure – which
has been typical for Individual Psychology since its beginnings! - has been
adopted, meanwhile, by many schools of psychotherapy (e.g. systemic family
therapy). Most importantly, it is a main support in modern trauma-therapy.
And, in the frame of academic psychology, a completely new branch has
grown: Positive Psychology, connected with the names of Martin
Seligman and Willibald Ruch (who is a well-known humor researcher as well). Positive Psychology is
concentrating on “good emotions”, such as joy, optimism, contentment, and
happiness. Individual Psychology regarded these emotions always as an
expression of life-affirming courage.
On the Practice.
1. What is the role of the
therapist in our society and what activities do think correspond to them?
In some way, the modern
psychotherapist’s work is the equivalent of the traditional pastoral work a
priest is expected to accomplish. Therefore, the modern psychotherapist is
not limited on curing psychiatric diseases. Furthermore, the modern
psychotherapists is expected to help his/her “clients” (this word is used
more and more instead of “patient”) to find his/her specific meaning in
life – thereby finding appropriate way of self-actualization. This process
is accompanied by positive feelings, which stabilize the ego. In this
context, Alfred Adler thematized the importance
of a purpose of life (which is dependent from a developed community
feeling!), C.G. Jung used the term “individuation”, Viktor Frankl wrote
about the meaning in life, and the representatives of Humanistic Psychology
(e.g. Maslow, Perls, Rogers) use the term
self-actualization.
2. Where does this
therapeutic method through laughter come from?
Today some 300.000 participants
all over the world
are affiliated to informal “laughter clubs”. This movement
goes back to the Indian physician Madan Kataria who in the early Nineties read about the
results of gelotology (see above), especially the
works of William Fry. Kataria was impressed by
the fact that a hearty laughter is suitable to influence many physiologic
processes in the human in a positive way (look for “gelotology”
in Google!). Kataria, then, was looking for an
effective method to induce laughter in his patients. He recognized that the
traditional method of Hatha Yoga was best suited to
works in this way. The result was a compilation of very simple, short, (but
nevertheless) very effective laughter exercises which are called Laughter
Yoga or Yoga Laughter. The first description of these methods has been
published by Kataria in 1995.
Independently from Kataria, I have developed in 1987 another technique
which, however, is far less known than Kataria’s technique. This has been described in 1993 in
the following interview:
Laughter
Groups
From Humor & Health Letter, March/April
1993, pp. 1-6, ISSN 1066-3088
An Interview With Dr.
Michael Titze
H&HL:
The concept of Laughter Groups is unfamiliar to many of us in the United States.
Tell us about the phenomenon of the Laughter Group and
its popularity in Europe. What is a Laughter Group and what happens in one?
Laughter groups are
becoming very popular in Central Europe and England. I have conducted
laughter groups and seminars on laughter groups for several years.
Laughter groups
utilize humor and are psychotherapeutic in
nature. Patients joining a laughter group must first learn to change their
mode of breathing. Many who come to the groups are restrained and shy. So
they have to find their way out of a symbolic cage which narrows their
mobility and, literally, takes away their breath. These people have to
learn to widen their respiration, i.e. to breathe in such a manner as to
increase their oxygen levels. Breathing style correlates with general life
attitude. Thus laughter group participants must learn to breathe from the
diaphragm -- from deep in the belly. We get them to breathe slowly and
intensively, groaning with very long “aaah.” After
that they have to utter a short “ha!” in a hearty way. Correct breathing is
fundamental to therapeutic laughter.
For several years I
have used a special respiration method in laughter groups which I have
conducted. Deliberately and as quickly as they can, group participants are
encouraged to transport a considerable quantum of air into their lungs,
thus producing a mild form of hyperventilation. After this hatcheling exercise they will usually feel tension and
dizziness. While lying on the floor they start liberating themselves from
such stress symptoms by laughing uproariously -- thus getting rid of the
tension and experiencing simultaneously an excellent feeling of vigor. Thus people realize that they are able to master
their lives in a dynamic and resolute way. Assertiveness and effective
breathing go together.
H&HL: What else do you emphasize in a Laughter
Group?
We deal with
constructive aggression. Constructive aggressiveness is a very important
concern in laughter theories. This is true for instance for Bergson, Gregory, Grotjahn
and Koestler and is especially important to ethologists like Lorenz and Eibl-Eibesfeldt.
Moreover, George Bach’s concept of “creative aggression” is particularly
important. People suffering from the stress of civilized life usually feel
like victims who are condemned to an indifferent, submissive, and passive
life. Patient and passive come from a common root word. Patients in
psychotherapy usually behave in a passive-dependent rather than an
assertive way. Often this has roots in childhood where such people were
raised to feel ashamed of their refractory tendencies. As a result they
fear -- perhaps an unconscious fear -- disclosing their true feelings or
even exposing themselves. They fear being laughed
at by their mates.
People getting into
our laughter groups have usually had painful emotional experiences. When
they join our groups they are encouraged to psychologically disclose
themselves and expose their hidden fears. The experience begins with the
therapist. That is to say, s/he exhibits behaviors
which patients generally fear expressing. By demonstrating these “awful
weaknesses” and vulnerabilities the therapist demonstrates fear and anxiety
which these people know so well but would never deliberately reveal in the
presence of others. On the first meeting the therapist is something of an
actor and does a sort of parody. For instance he may express “his fear” by
stuttering, trembling, gasping for breath, or sharing other experience of
painful imperfection. The therapist does this parody for about 10 minutes.
At the end of this period most of the group participants are usually in a
high state of tension, because the therapist did what they secretly fear so
-- to be without self-control and doing embarrassing things! After the
presentation the therapist asks each person in the group, “What did you
experience? What do you feel?” Usually they say that it was terrible for
them and add, “Because this is the way that I might behave. Therefore, I
try to control myself to prevent such a disaster.” Patients say, “You acted
out what I always feared that others would see in me.” After that each
participant has to perform likewise the most terrifying social situation
which he or she could imagine. They may take material from the past --
something that really occurred -- or may develop a horrifying fantasy. This
is very, very liberating for the patients. They start enjoying it
immediately. They feel as though they are being released from a nightmare
and they desire to share this experience with their mates. Generally they
laugh and a strong group cohesiveness develops.
H&HL: What is
the role of the therapist in a Laughter Group?
The therapist is a
moderator letting the participants act out their fears and agonizing
fantasies. From my experience with laughter groups, people start laughing
spontaneously almost from the beginning. It is not necessary to get them to
laugh by telling jokes or forming a comedy routine. As people do things
which they have always wanted to but have refrained form or disguised or
covered up, they gradually develop feelings of strength and
self-confidence. This is what I mean when I use the term constructive
aggressiveness. Feeling inferiority, insecurity, inhibition, and shame has
something to do with not being allowed to express oneself as a authentic person. This relates somehow to our inner
regulating sense, the superego or conscience. In laughter groups people are
explicitly allowed and encouraged to act freely – the way they would if
there were no social pressure or condemnation.
H&HL: It sounds as though there is an element akin
to paradoxical intention that occurs when the therapist acts out the
patient’s fears.
That is true. I first
began to examine the realm of humor when I was
close to Viktor Frankl. I admire him and got many insights from discussing
and corresponding with him. It was also my privilege to watch him facing a
group of disciples and teaching them how to apply paradoxical intention. There
was so much cheerfulness, inspiration, and wit coming from Dr. Frankl. He
once told us that humor is one the most powerful
“existentials”
-- a
term he took over from Heidegger. Frankl was actually the first one to
introduce humor into psychotherapy. In connection
with his technique of paradoxical intention, Frankl explicitly pointed to
the phenomenon of laughter. He declared that one of the results of
paradoxical intention is that the patient laughs involuntarily. This
laughing, as humor in general, enables the
patient to keep a distance from his neurosis. Paradoxically, Frankl pointed
out that it is necessary for the patient to learn to laugh at his or her
fears. To achieve this the courage to be
ridiculous has to be gained. Even the therapist should achieve this
attitude! This means, as Frankl puts it, to play or demonstrate this
ridiculousness to the patient. (I speak in this context of an humoristic inversion of the therapist’s augustness.)
H&HL: Is the primary approach that you use in
Laughter Groups acting out life fears and embarrassing fantasies or do you
employ other methods as well?
We use acting out in
the first phase. Later when people have no particular problem facing fear
evoking situations, they can go on into other techniques promoting their
assertiveness. For example, we may use some of Albert Ellis’ shame
attacking exercises. Or we may engage in the “silly laughter” exercise
which aims at a nonverbal defense of aggressive
verbal attacks. For this purpose, first of all group members have to list
some of their “most disagreeable weaknesses.” Then each one of them is
confronted, in the mode of a go-round, by the others with “reproaches” “thematizing” exactly these “weaknesses.”
A very important issue in this context is the
training of a non-conventional style of communication. There are three
basic lines to be observed:
1)
questioning the questions
(“cunning silliness”);
2)
exaggerating justifications and
apologies (“paradoxical submissiveness”);
3)
giving
nonverbal answers to verbal questions (“nonplus body language”).
All
of these techniques generate much fun and can be transferred into everyday
life.
H&HL: In addition to the influence of Frankl I
noticed that you have been influenced by Adlerian Psychology. What
connections exist between humor and the Adlerian
perspective?
At the heart of
Adler’s work was the inferior and superior paradigm which was based in
Adler’s concept of aggression. It was worked out by him as early as 1908.
Later it was forgotten and Freud came up with the thanatos
drive. Even today many psychotherapists are afraid of dealing with the fact
that aggressivity is important in human life. For
instance, look at parents abusing their children physically; or look at the
world-wide terrorist activities and wars: all of this is very aggressive. Each
of these incidents exemplifies aggressiveness without humor
-- aggressiveness filled with rage and seriousness. What makes
aggressiveness so terrible is that people are convinced that what they are
doing is absolutely right and what others are doing is absolutely wrong. Humor gives us a Means to see things relatively – to
see that nothing is absolute and that there are myriads of other possible
solutions to be taken into account. As Adler put it, “Everything could be
something else”. This is the formula of paradox. The basic idea of Applying
therapeutic humor is, in the Adlerian sense,
paradoxical encouragement: It is to convince persons who may feel inferior
or weak that they have the power to feel the opposite and that they can behave assertively. Consequently, they
learn to deal with aggressiveness. If it is dot destructive, aggressiveness
can be an inspiration for life and an avenue to active and assertive behaviors. Thus it may have a therapeutic value. In
laughter groups people learn to be aggressive in a non-destructive, i.e.
genuinely humoristic way.
H&HL: How did you first become interested in
studying laughter?
It began five or six
years ago when I was working with patients in groups and using paradoxical
procedures. I observed that people were stimulated by that to get into a
state of mirthfulness. When these people joined in laughing together it was
more liberating (and thus “therapeutic”) that the mere cognitive insight. When
they spontaneously laughed together, it reminded me of the way children
laugh. This is why I got into the habit of asking new group members to
demonstrate how they laugh when they laugh at their best. It is very
interesting to recognize that most of these persons are laughing in a flat
way that is quite different from the way a child would laugh. When a child
laughs the whole body is involved. Tears may be brought to the eyes. I used
to invite the participants of my laughter groups to learn to laugh as kids
laugh. Children laugh loudly and many adults stifle their laughter to keep
from being too loud or appearing disagreeable. Laughing without any
restraint and taking all the potentialities the body gives us may seem to
be somehow embarrassing for our environment. People with emotional problems
are use to controlling themselves and would not dare laugh as freely and
easily as kids do. To realize this brings one back to being the playful
child which is within each of us. This child does not think too much about
life but enjoys being alive and having fun being amused.
As my interest in humor developed further I had the privilege of meeting
Dr. William Fry and reading of his insights, contributions, and
observations in his book, Sweet Madness.
Dr. Ernest Bornemann, a well-known Austrian psychoanalyst, had
compiled within a period of approximately 20 years hundreds of rhymes,
spoonerisms, riddles, and songs contributed by kids between four and 16
years of age. These creations not only are very funny, they are “spicy” in
that sense that they include a lot of “forbidden” language and images –
directed mostly against parental figures. When adults roar with laughter
there are often elements of infantile humor. The
vitality of the hale and hearty “inner child” is expressed. Humor and laughter is an excellent avenue for
approaching this “inner child.”
3. How does Laughter Clubs work?
Laughter Clubs function in a very similar way as the groups of
Alcoholics Anonymous do: The participants join informally: they do not introduce
themselves formally, they even are not expected to
speak anything or to perform in a specific way. The following text
illustrates the respective elements:
All the members stand in a circle or semicircle, according to the
space available, with the anchor person in the middle. He or she gives
commands to initiate different types of laughter and exercises. The most
important point to be noted here is that the members should not stand in a
line to form a circle, as seen in military parades. The idea is that one
should not feel conscious about breaking the circle or the line. It should
be like a crowd format with people standing at random. The distance between
members should not be more than 2-3 feet, the stretch of the arms, as members
are supposed to look into each others' eyes and laugh. If the distance is
more, the eye contact will not be effective enough to stimulate a person to
laugh. Moreover, members should not stick to one place throughout the
session. During each type of laughter, one should go up to different people
and laugh with them with good sustained eye contact, or strike hands with
each other whenever possible, depending upon the type of laughter.
A 20-minute session is a perfect blend of stimulated laughter, deep
breathing and stretching exercises. One bout of laughter lasts for 30
seconds to 45 seconds. After each bout of laughter, or sometimes after two
bouts, two deep breaths are taken, in order to give a break. This avoids
exertion and tiredness. Sometimes, various neck, shoulder and arm
stretching exercises are done in place of deep breathing between bouts of laughters.
Step I: Deep Breathing: The session starts when one takes a deep
breath through the nostrils, simultaneously raising the arms up towards the
sky, at an angle of 45 degrees from the middle of the body. The breathing
in should be rhythmic, in accordance with movement of the arms and one
should keep on filling air into the lungs, as much as possible, and then
hold one's breath for 4 seconds. Then the breath is released slowly and
rhythmically by bringing the stretched arms back to normal position. One
can breathe out through the nose or preferably through the mouth by pursing
the lips, as if whistling silently. By breathing out through the mouth like
this, one can prolong the expiration, so as to also remove the residual
air, which is normally held back in the lungs even after one exhales. Removing this residual air which contains more corbon dioxide, and replacing it with fresh air
containing more oxygen increases the net supply of oxygen to the body. This
is in accordance with yogic deep breathing (a type of paranayama)
where the duration of exhalation is prolonged almost double the time of
inhalation.
Deep breathing is a very valuable exercise for maintaining both physical
and mental health. It increases the vital capacity of the lungs and keeps
all the air cells operational to participate in the exchanges of gases. It
also prevents bacterial infections in respiratory tracts, thereby being
helpful to those suffering from asthma and bronchitis. Deep breathing cools
down the mind and enhances mental stability.
Step II: Ho-Ho Ha-Ha Exercise: All the members start chanting Ho-Ho
Ha-Ha in unison, with rhythmic clapping 1-2, 1-2-3. (Ho-Ho; Ha-Ha-Ha). The
sound should come from the naval, so as to feel the movement of abdominal
muscles, while keep the mouth half open. While chanting Ho-Ho Ha-Ha, a
smile should be maintained and the head and the body should swing forward
and backward as if one is enjoying the exercise. This can go on for up to
one minute.
Step III: Hearty Laughter: After the Ho-Ho Ha-Ha exercise, the first kind
of laughter is hearty laughter. To initiate all kinds of laughter the
anchor person gives a command 1,2,3... and everybody start laughing at the same time. It builds
up a good tempo and the effect is much better, rather than different
members laughing with different timings. In a hearty laugh, one laughs by
throwing the arms up and laughing heartily. One should not keep the arms
stretched up all the time during a hearty laugh. Keep the arms up for a
while and bring them down and again raise them up. At the end of a hearty
laugh, the anchor person starts clapping and chanting Ho-Ho Ha-Ha 5-6
times. That marks the end of a particular kind of laughter. This is followed
by two deep breaths.
Step IV: Greeting Laughter: Again under the command of the anchor
person, the members come a little closer to each
other and greet each other with a particular gesture, while laughing in a
medium tone and maintaining eye contact. One can join both the hands (Namaste laughter), or do Aadaab
Laughter by moving one hand closer to the face (as Muslims greet each
other), or one can bend at the hips and laugh by looking in the eyes of the
neighbour (Japanese way) or there could many other ways of greeting
according to the region, state or country. This is followed by Ho-Ho Ha-Ha
chanting and clapping 5-6 times and deep breathing twice.
Step V: Silent Laughter With mouth wide open: In this type of laughter, the
mouth is opened as wide as possible and participants laugh looking at each
others' faces and making different gestures showing their palms to each
other, shaking their heads and sometimes their hands. Silent Laughter
should be done with quick movements of the abdominal muscles as we do
during spontaneous laughter. It should not be like a prolonged hissing
sound, which looks more artificial.
Important: One should not apply excess force or over exert while laughing
without sound. It can be harmful if intra-abdominal pressure is raised unnecessarily.
One should try to impart more feeling rather than applying too much force.
Step VI: Humming Laughter With Lips Closed: In this type of
laughter, the lips are closed and a person tries to laugh while making a
humming sound which resonates throughout the skull. People can keep on
looking at each other, making some gestures to stimulate each other. Some
people also call it pigeon laughter.
Caution: One should not try to laugh without sound while keeping the
mouth closed with force. This raises undue pressure in the abdominal cavity
that may be harmful.
Step VII: Medium Laughter: In this type of laughter, one laughs gently in a
medium tone while going up to another person, or strikes palms with each
other, either above the head or below the chest or both. There is lot of
movement in the group as one should try to laugh and meet 4-5 different
persons. This is very enjoyable as it is gentle and can be prolonged a bit,
Plus there is interaction between various members.
Step VIII: Swinging Laughter: This is an interesting kind laughter
as it has a lot of playfulness. All the member
move outwards by two meters to widen the circle. On instruction from the
anchor person people move forward by making a prolonged sound of Ae Ae- Aeeeee.....,
simultaneously raising the hands and they all burst into laughter while
meeting in the center and waving their hands. After
the bout of laughter, they move back to their original position. The second
time they move forward by saying Oh- Ooooooo.. and burst into laughter. Similarly,
the third and fourth times they make the sounds of Eh- Eh... E.... and Oh-
Oh... O... Many people are seen behaving like children and enjoying the
fun.
Step IX: One-Meter Laughter:
This is the invention of a Laughter Club member dealing in cloth
merchandise. It duplicates how we measure an imaginary one meter by moving
one hand over the stretched arm of the other side and extending the
shoulder. The hand is moved in three jerks by chanting Ae....,
Ae....., Aeee.....
and then participants burst into laughter by
stretching both the arms. First the imaginary measurement is done on the
left side and then on the right. This cycle is repeated twice. Again, this
laughter has a playful quality. People enjoy the chanting of Ae... Ae..
in a staccato manner.
Step X: Lion Laughter: This
particular laughter has been derived from a yogic posture known as Simha Mudra (Lion Posture). In
the lion posture, the tongue is fully extruded by opening the mouth wide,
while eyes are kept wide open and hands are posed like the paws of a lion
and the person roars like a lion. In Lion Laughter, the basic position
remains the same as stated above. The only difference is that people laugh
with the tongue fully extruded instead of roaring. Lion Laughter gives very
good exercise to facial muscles, the tongue and throat. It is also supposed
to be good for the healthy functioning of the thyroid gland.
Step XI: Argument Laughter: This
laughter is competitive laughter between two groups separated by a gap. Two
groups look at each other and start laughing by pointing the index finger
at the members of the other group. Usually, the women are on one side and
men on the other. This is also quite enjoyable and helps to convert forced
laughter into spontaneous giggles.
Step XII: Dancing Laughter: Members are instructed by the anchor person to
dance in the funniest way and laugh. This is very stimulating and enjoyable
as many people come up with hilarious dance steps. All these types of
laughter are intended to remove inhibitions and make a person more open and
extrovert.
Step XIII: Musical Laughter:
This is not exactly a type of laughter but a singing of Ho-Ho Ha-Ha-Ha in a
chorus based on folk dances, popular songs or any rhythm like conducting an
orchestra by chanting only Ho-Ho Ha-Ha. Occasionally some giggles are added
to make it interesting. This laughter has many variations, depending upon
the state and cultural group.
Step XIV: Gradient Laughter: This laughter is practised at the end of the
session. All the members are asked to come closer to the anchor person. Gradient
laughter starts with bringing smiles on faces and looking around at each
other. Slowly, gentle giggles are added by the anchor person. Others follow
and start giggling too. Slowly the intensity of laughter is increased further.
And then the members gradually burst into hearty laughter. This goes on for
about a minute. It is very refreshing and infectious.
Step XV: Closing Technique: At
the end of the session three slogans are shouted. The anchor person
delivers the first punchline by saying "We
are the happiest people in the world." Everyone raises their arms and
says. Y-e-ee-s. "We are the healthiest
people in the world!" Y-e-s. "We are Laughter Club members!"
Y-e-e-s.
Neck and Shoulder Exercises:
Since there is some fatigue after completion of the first round, members
need to take a break before starting the second round. Here, neck and
shoulder exercises are done. They have been incorporated because cervical spondylosis, neck stiffness and frozen shoulder are
common complaints after the age of forty.
Basic Guidelines for a Laughter Session:
1. All the participants will start laughing at the same time when the anchor
person gives the command 1,2...3.
2. People should not stand far
away from each other. To laugh without jokes, eye contact is the key. During
each type of laughter a person must maintain good eye contact with more
than one of his neighbours.
3. Do not apply too much force
while laughing, it should be more of a feeling and
enjoying of the process.
4. One should try to feel free
like a child and make funny gestures to make others laugh.
Who Should not participate in laughter session?
1. Any person who feels any
discomfort in any part of the body, must get
himself examined by a doctor and work out his physical fitness status
before joining the laughter session.
2. A mildly heavy head, after a laughter session in the beginning, is
normal. Such individuals must not overexert and laugh forcefully. If you
are already a hypertensive patient, get your blood pressure checked at
least once in ten days. Don't participate in laughter sessions if your
blood pressure is high and uncontrolled. However, those taking treatment
and keeping blood pressure within normal limits can join the sessions.
3. Any heart
patient on treatment, or one who has had heart attack in the past must get clearance from his
cardiologist before joining laughter sessions. Those with a history of
heart attacks and those who have had bypass operations done, may join the
session if their treadmill (stress test) results are within normal limits.
4. Hernia: Hernia is a protusion of abdominal contents - various parts of the
intestine mostly the small intestine - through the weakened wall of
abdominal muscles. In those who have undergone any abdominal surgery, the site
of the incision becomes the weakest point. With a repeated increase in
intra-abdominal pressure one might get an incisional
hernia. Another common type of hernia occurs at the groin. The abdominal
contents can protrude through the inguinal canal and produce a swelling in
the groin area while coughing, sneezing and laughing. Elderly people are
more prone to this condition because of muscles weakened by advancing age. Those
suffering from a long-standing cough due to asthma or chronic bronchitis, should be extra careful because they are
more prone to developing hernia.
If someone gets swelling on any
part of the abdomen or discomfort while laughing, they must get themselves
examined by a general surgeon. If diagnosed to be suffering from hernia,
once surgical correction is done, one should be assessed by a surgeon for
fitness before attending laughter therapy.
5. Advanced Piles
(Haemorrhoids): Those suffering from piles with active bleeding, or are at
a stage when piles protrude from the anus, should not join the laughter
session, as these conditions may worsen with increase of intra-abdominal
pressure. The patient may join a Laughter Club once surgical or other type
of treatment is taken.
6. Recent Surgery: To be on the
safe side, one should not join a laughter session, within three months of
any major operation, especially on the abdomen. In the later case, one must
get a go-ahead from one's surgeon.
7. Uterovaginal
Prolapse: In some women, ligaments supporting the
uterus become weak after the age of 40. Downward sagging of the uterus
occurs, causing discomfort in the lower abdomen. One of the signs of such prolapse is involuntary passage of urine while
coughing, sneezing and laughing. Such women should avoid laughter sessions
until they are treated surgically.
8. Pregnancy: In a small percentage of pregnant women, there is a
possibility of abortion if there is a repeated rise in intra-abdominal
pressure and they should avoid laughter sessions, till some conclusive data
is available, after conducting research on the effects of laughter on
pregnancy.
9. During attacks of Cold and Flu: Acute viral infections are highly
contagious and if a person with such an infection laughs, he is likely to
spread the infection by way of droplets in the air. People should stay away
for about a week once they catch a cold. The good news is that regular
laughter therapy increases the resistance of the upper respiratory mucous
membrane and people are getting fewer coughs and colds, as shown by a
recent survey done in the first phase of clinical research on Laughter
Clubs.
10. Eye Complications: Any
person with high intra-ocular pressure (glaucoma) with a history of
rational or vitreous hemorrhage should take the
opinion of an ophthalmologist before joining a Laughter Club.
4. Why does man laugh?
Ethologists (e.g., Lorenz, Eibl-Eibesfeldt) say that weeping and laughing are the
most fundamental forms of communication. More than 100.000 years ago, our
earliest ancestors communicated to their fellows by laughing that they were
in good mood: because they had overcome a dangerous situation or had
defeated an enemy or a wild beast. This triumphant laughter brought the
members of the own in-group together. Thus, its function is cohesive. On
the other hand, this laughter was experienced by strangers not belonging to
the in-group as hostile, threatening, aggressive, or exclusive. This
elementary function is still decisive for laughter: People who laugh
together form an alliance, a “laughing community”. Those who are not
included into this laughing community have to endure a shameful “baptism of
fire”, as Henri Bergson the French sociologists,
Nobel Prize winner and author of the famous book “Le Rire”
puts it: They are excluded, socially banished and “sent to the desert like
the prophets of the Old Testament” (formulation: Léon
Wurmser, a well-known American shame researcher).
5. What is the reason for this lack of humor?
Shame: People who did not develop a firm sense of belonging (which
is a facet of the Adlerian community feeling) never can experience a
healthy self-confidence. Instead, they feel worthless and behave in the way
of outsiders. This, on the other hand, is the precondition to get into the
position of a strange, awkward, “comical” oder
“funny” person – someone who will be the target of derisive laughter by
those who feel strong and “normal” within their in-group:
In my
psychotherapeutic work, I encounter numerous individuals who are afraid of
being funny. In many instances, these individuals had to endure shameful
refusals, disappointments and degradations throughout their childhood
years. Although they long for human proximity, acknowledgement, and love,
they constantly distance themselves from others. Their subjective
experience of life is that they do not belong to the community and that
they are neither liked nor accepted by their peers. Consequently, they are
very lonely.
For such
individuals, the bitter feeling of not being lovable is all‑pervasive.
This feeling may have originated in early childhood when their self‑centered parents were unable to open the door to
"the depot of life."
The above‑described
parents are unable to train their children for a life in the community
which Alfred Adler considers to be the most
important function of education. For these parents, training their children
for life in the community would be emotionally equivalent to relinquishing
power and a correlated predisposition for gain and control, at least within
the family constellation.
When children
have learned to adapt their behavior to the normative
ideals prescribed by self‑centered parents,
then they can hardly ascribe to the many unwritten rules of community life.
Therefore, they rub their peers the wrong way. They act oddly and come
across as outsiders who do not know how to react adaptively. They do not
understand the game rules of social conduct and cannot decode the
"inside jargon" of their peer group. They frequently end up as
outsiders, often rejected and laughed at by other children. This becomes
another shaming experience that confirms the dire presumption that
"There is something wrong with me!" These children then begin to
control themselves. They want to do everything correctly, yet inevitably
fall back into their family role behavior. They
try to keep their playmates happy in the same way they originally learned
to please their parents ‑ by allowing their peers to exploit them or
scoff at them.
Puberty
represents a particularly critical phase as youngsters are generally
concerned with their outward appearance. Shame‑bound teenagers frequently
try to over-control their behavior because they
are afraid of looking foolish within their peer group. This increases their
internal tensions to a breaking point, possibly resulting in psychosomatic
and depressive symptoms. These youths feel uneasy in their
own skin and experience themselves as ridiculous. This triggers a
fear of being targeted for sadistic forms of humor:
The fear of being laughed at (gelotophobia)
paralyzes the free course of body movements and influences the person's
thinking and acting. In this instance, a profound break has occurred since
laughter is no longer lived as an expression of joie de vivre but rather as
a cruel "means of social discipline" (Bergson).
Subsequently, these individuals feel uneasy in their skin as they realize
that they do not belong within the community of their peers. They live as
if they were "in enemy territory" (Adler), withdraw from social
life and adopt a shunning and defensive attitude. They flee from the real
world into a fantasy world where their fiction of great perfection,
superiority and absolute power is all‑pervasive, and this stance
further deepens their alienation from community life. Their alienation is
compounded by the fact that many of the goals they have set for themselves
in their fantasy world are too far-flung and cannot be achieved in
reality. This maladaptive lifestyle generally has a negative effect on
their peers who then turn their backs on such individuals or ridicule them.
6. How does one
laugh and what are the benefits?
The benefits of
laughter are (a) psychological and (b) physiological.
Ad (a) much of our attitude about life
and our capacity to meet life's challenges depends on the quality of the
relationships we have, especially our most intimate relationships that when
they go sour, life tends to feel bleak. Because the quality of our
relationships has a powerful effect on physical and mental balance, as well
as our sense of satisfaction in life, it's important that we keep our
relationships rewarding and fresh.
The data on divorce provide compelling
evidence that we are not succeeding at all. Nearly half of all marriages
end in divorce--cohabitation couplings are far likelier to end badly--and
of marriages that endure, many are less than happy.
Most people know the value of a good
relationship and, no matter how often they have lost at love, keep on
hoping. As a result, advice on how to make relationships work fills shelves
and shelves of bookstores and hours of talk-show time. Some of it is even
good, the product of careful research on happy and unhappy couples.
But of all the elements that contribute to
the warm atmosphere of a good relationship, there is one that seldom gets
translated into advice or even therapy, yet is something that everyone
desires and most people would like more of: Laughter.
It's a safe bet that most of the laughs
married couples get come from TV laugh tracks, not from each other. They
don't emanate from the relationship. More important, they don't feed it.
And if the jokes that make the rounds by email are any gauge, often they
are at the expense of it.
But homegrown
laughter may be what ailing couples need most. Uniquely human, laughter is,
first and foremost, a social signal--it disappears when there is no
audience, which may be as small as one other person--and it binds people
together. It synchronizes the brains of speaker and listener so that they
are emotionally attuned.
These are the conclusions of Robert Provine, a neuroscientist who found that laughter is
far too fragile to dissect in the laboratory. Instead, he observed
thousands of incidents of laughter spontaneously occurring in everyday
life, and wittily reports the results in Laughter: A Scientific
Investigation (Penguin Books, 2001).
Laughter establishes--or restores--a
positive emotional climate and a sense of connection between two people,
who literally take pleasure in the company of each other. For if there's
one thing Dr. Provine found it's that speakers
laugh even more than their listeners. Of course levity can defuse anger and
anxiety, and in so doing it can pave the path to intimacy.
Most of what makes people laugh is not
thigh-slapper stuff but conversational comments.
"Laughter is not primarily about humor,"
says Dr. Provine, "but about social
relationships."
Among some of his surprising findings:
- The much vaunted health benefits of
laughter are probably coincidental, a consequence of it's much more
important primary goal: bringing people together. In fact, the health
benefits of laughter may result from the social support it stimulates.
- Laughter plays a big role in mating. Men
like women who laugh heartily in their presence.
- Both sexes laugh a lot, but females laugh
more--126 percent more than their male counterparts. Men are more
laugh-getters.
- The laughter of the female is the
critical index of a healthy relationship
ad (b) The focus on the benefits
of laughter really began with Norman Cousins' memoir, Anatomy of an
Illness. Cousins, who was diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis, a
painful spine condition, found that a diet of comedies, like Marx Brothers
films and episodes of Candid Camera, helped him feel better. He said that
10 minutes of laughter allowed him two hours of pain-free sleep.
Laughter helps us keep healthy by
enriching the blood with ample supplies of oxygen, the lifeline of our
system. According to the science of yoga, life energy (prana)
flows through the breath. By controlled and deep breathing we can enhance
our own well-being. After 15-30 minutes intensive laughing (= package
offered by a Laughter Club) participants carry home the healthy habit of
deep breathing at least 10-20 times a day. This helps to increase the lung
capacity, thus enhancing oxygen supply to the body.
Laughter helps to remove the negative effects of STRESS,
which is the number one killer today. More than 70% of illnesses like high
blood pressure, heart disease, anxiety, depression, frequent coughs and
colds, peptic ulcers, insomnia, allergies, asthma, menstrual difficulties,
tension headaches, stomach upsets and even cancer, have some connection to
stress.
Laughter helps to boost the IMMUNE SYSTEM, which
is the master key for maintaining good health.
Other benefits include:
- Helps control high blood pressure and
heart disease. While there are many factors for these like heredity,
obesity, smoking and excessive intake of saturated fats, stress is one
of the major factors. Laughter definitely helps to control blood
pressure by reducing the release of stress-related hormones and
bringing relaxation.
- Increasing stamina through increased oxygen
supply
- Alleviates pain and gives a sense of
well being by releasing endorphins, the body’s painkiller hormones.
- Effective antidote for depression,
anxiety and psychosomatic disorders: laughter boosts the production of
serotonin, a natural anti-depressant.
- Gives an excellent internal massage to
the digestive tract and enhances blood supply to important internal
organs like the liver, spleen, pancreas, kidneys and adrenal glands.
- Ensures good sleep and reduces snoring
because laughter is very good for the muscles of the soft palate and
throat
- Brings a happy glow to your face and
makes your eyes shine with a thin film of tears which are squeezed
from the lachrymal sacs during the act of laughter.
7. Is it better to laugh
alone or in a group?
It’s hardly possible to laugh for one’s own during a longer period
of time: This is only possible in the frame of a (laughter) group!
On the investigation.
1. Tell us about the
investigation you have completed and on which you will give a lecture at School of Psychology-University
of Republic in our country, Shame and Gelotophobie:
Afraid to laugh and the ridiculous. Results of an investigation into the
causes of the inferiority complex.
In a book, authored in 1995, I described numerous patients who had
been treated by me because of depression or anxiety disorders. In all these
cases an underlying inferiority complex was decisive. I tried to associate
the Adlerian theory of inferiority feelings with the new theory of shame
emergence (connected especially with the name of the American
psychoanalyst Léon Wurmser).
To illustrate this, I incorporated into my writing the fairy tale of
PINOCCHIO (which thematizes shame experiences
extensively). In this context I coined the term GELOTOPHOBIA and described
ways to treat this specific shame-bound disease:
The Pinocchio Complex
Dr. Waleed A. Salameh:
Interview with Dr. Michael Titze
Humor & Health Journal, Volume V, Number 1, January / February, 1996
 
Waleed Salameh
(W.S.): What is the Pinocchio Complex?
Michael Titze
(M.T.): The Pinocchio Complex is a phenomenon that refers to those
with gelotophobia (fear of being laughted at). These people have never learned to
appreciate humor and laughter positively. I see
this condition as being analogous to Pinocchio who was a marionette or
puppet made of wood. In the physical sphere, many emotions manifest
themselves in our muscles. We communicate by the way we carry and present
ourselves. When fear is experienced every being gets stiff and develops
muscular tension. This is for instance the case when a mouse is confronted
by a snake and has no chance to either disappear or attack the snake.
The fight or flight responses
provide the opportunity to attack or flee. These are adaptive mechanisms
that have survival value. But there is a third scenario that unfolds when
there is no chance to run or fight: that is to develop a state of muscular
tension.
W.S.: This would be the
equivalent of what possums might do when they are attacked by other
predators. They hang from trees by their tails and pretend to be dead. The
expression "playing possum" comes from that and refers precisely
to this psychological state of stiffness and apprehension or complete
stupor that the person is stuck with following the attack of deformed humor.
M.T.: Generally the
muscular tension is associated with emotional panic. Panic in turn means
that the individual is experiencing a significant degree of fear. In this
situation there seems to be no possibility for using one's Élan vital (or
life energy) for aggressive purposes, like attacking the aggressor, or for
fleeing.
W.S.: What you are saying
is that these people are completely stuck, psychologically frozen in time,
because of that experience.
M.T.: That's right. How
does this reaction develop? In my opinion, people get into this reaction
pattern as the result of certain shame experiences which, in many cases, can
be traced back to childhood. These people were forced by their reference
persons to behave in a way that was incompatible with the natural
inclinations to be aggressive or run away. They had to behave in a very
strict, normative, and formalistic way. Otherwise, they would have suffered
love withdrawal or certain forms of mental abuse such as being put down,
being humiliated, laughed at, or not taken seriously. Consequently, they
repeatedly experienced shame. Self-confidence and self-esteem could not emerge
in a sufficient way. In these people, the affective conviction of being a
real human is not apparent.
W.S.: You say there are
physical characteristics that these individuals develop. What are those
physical characteristics?
M.T.: The French
philosopher Henri Bergson wrote a fantastic book
entitled Laughter. In this book Bergson precisely
described the Pinocchio Complex when he compared people being laughed at or
being cynically put down with puppets or marionettes. This is exactly what
the Pinocchio persona is: a wooden puppet.
If someone is uanble to develop a sense of belonging in his childhood
because s/he didn't experience the feeling of being loved and estimated by
his or her parents, the result according to Bergson, is that this
person would be unable to fit into a group in a relaxed way. So s/he will
tend to separate from groups. Such individuals don't develop adequate
social skills. Shame casts them into the role of a shunned defensive
character. They hide away, they are loners. They do not take any risks in
their social lives. The main purpose of their lives is to protect
themselves from being laughed at by others. This is what the term gelotophobia means! Bergson
says that these people are punished by society for being ridiculous.
W.S.: So being laughed at
is their punishment for not being sociable. To put it in a succinct form,the Pinocchio Complex
seems to refer to those destructive after effects of laughter on the
personality of those who have been the object of derision.
M.T.: The most sensitive phase is
puberty. Generally, younger children are not interested in not fitting into
the norms of society. But in puberty, youngsters carefully examine how
others behave. If they do not know the guiding norms or what is expected of
them, then they are laughed at. Subsequently, they take on the role of an
outsider. For instance, they may be laughed at because they dress
differently, are unable to express themselves clearly, or because they do
not haveg dates. The result is that they
ultimately behave in a very peculiar way. They develop the Pinocchio
Complex.
W.S.: What are the special
characteristics that you would identify as peculiar to those with the
Pinocchio Complex?
M.T.: They behave in a way
that is typical for shame. For instance, they may blush. The physical
tension brings them to tremble, shortness of breath and to stutter. Their
appearance is not lively. Their facial expression is that of a mask. Their
arms and legs may not move in a spontaneous way. When they are stalking
around, this gives them a funny appearance so that others may watch them
with amusement. This, again, provokes more tension because they try to
deliberately control their spontaneous body movements which is physically
impossible. Subsequently their appearance approximates what Pinocchio was
supposed to look like since he was not made out of flesh and blood.
W.S.: What common
qualities do you see in those who view humor
negatively?
M.T.: They are lonesome
and distrustful. Their attitude is "agelotic"
( being unable to appreciate laughter) because
they have never experienced that laughter can bring people together or that
it can help cement individuals to create a community. The initial reason
for this attitude was that they felt separated from their early reference
person. This reference person, in many cases a self-centered
mother, lacked a "smiling face". The face they recollect
corresponds with the petrified countenance of a sphinx: being blank,
constantly disinterested, and cold as ice. This is the agelotic
face of shame! When infants are confronted with such a face, the
"interpersonal bridge"(Kaufman) cannot be constructed. These
children experience themselves as being unconnected to others. They do not
experience laughter as a positive means of shared identity. These children are
left, emotionally, "in the lurch". So they can't develop what
Alfred Adler has called a community feeling. Their fellows prove to be
hostile strangers who treat them in a cruel way. And one weapon these
strangers use is derisory laughter. This is what dissociated children fear
so much, and not without reason! It is my conviction that being laughed at
is one of the most cruel ways of dehumanizing a
person.
W.S.: What are your
objectives in the treatment of these individuals?
M.T.: In our therapy
groups the "therapeutic clown" serves as a co-therapist. S/he
becomes the encouraging model for those suffering from gelotophobia.
All clowns expose themselves in public with the intention to be the
laughing stock for others. But they don't suffer from it. Those who suffer
from gelotophobic symptoms therefore need to
learn to deliberately behave as clowns. They grow from developing the same
cognitive pattern and the same emotional and behavioral
attitudes a clown has. This experience helps to liberate them from the
feelings of hurt they may consciously or unconsciously associate with
laughter.
Furthermore, the therapeutic
clown is a good behavioral model for for healthy children. The way children behave is never
perfect. You can look at the child in two ways. If you look in a normative
way, a child is someone who makes a lot of mistakes and is, therefore,
objectively inferior and weak. If you look, however, at the emotional
strength of children you can recognize their creative power and their
capability to enjoy life. They can be spontaneous and are able to laugh in
an open way. Many people look at the child in the first way, evaluating the
child's behavior under the strict ideal norms of
adulthood. As a result, discouraged children may come to the conviction
that everything they do is inadequate.
The introduction of the clown
figure into therapy, allows him or her to serve as an auxiliary ego. For
example, the therapeutic clown may come and whisper peculiar, crazy, or mad
things into the patient's ears. By serving as a model of assertiveness, the
therapeutic clown can mediate a momentous sense sense
of strength and adequacy.
Thus, the therapeutic clown is
the ego double of a strong child. In this context, my own professional role
as a "humor therapist" is to give analyzing
hints - to serve in some way as a movie director.
W.S.: What are some of the
specific techniques which the therapeutic clown may use under your
direction to effect change?
M.T.: In my opinion the
most effective training is to become a "contrary clown" because
there are many forms of clown behavior.
W.S.: Like what?
M.T.: The harlequin for
instance is a competent clown but the buffoon is the stupid one. He is not
able to do anything correct. He falls down because he wears terrible shoes
and so forth. This type of clown who does the worse is the contrary clown! He
does the opposite of what is expected of him.
American Indians knew this type
of clown. They called him the "trickster". He always did the
opposite of what was expected in the respective society. In all cultures
you have this opposite makeup in some form. When people suffer from gelotophobia, we teach them to consciously behave as a
contrary clown, that is to do the opposite of what
they have been trying to do so far. This makes it possible for them to
gradually lose their gelotophobic anxiety.
For instance, in our groups the
protagonists have to behave in a very stupid way. When they speak, they are
encouraged to behave like rascals. For instance, we teach them to put their
tongue between their teeth or take in some water and keep it in their mouth
while speaking. Another exercise is to have them walk and move as if they
were jumping jacks.
W.S.: In a way you are
exaggerating their symptoms in order to extinguish them.
M.T.: In our groups, they
learn to systematically behave in a ridiculous way and use this behavioral appearance as a weapon to bring others into
a state of tension. When, for instance, a psychologist comes as a visitor
to the group, a group member has to address him or her and behave in such a
strange and peculiar way that the visitor does not know how to respond. So
that, paradoxically, he or she gets the impression that they are being
laughed at by those who are suffering from gelotophobia!
The intention is to teach group participants to handle a peculiar and embarassing situation or behavior
in an assertive mode. This means that they can behave behave
assertively by being ridiculous.
W.S.: You believe that the
discharge of aggression is necessary to get rid of negative patterns. Is that
a part of your work?
That is true. I was somewhat
inspired by the work of psychologist George Bach and his theory that
"creative aggression" is not dangerous on any account. We are
living in a time when people think that aggressivity
is something very negative. Bach's idea is not to be afraid of
non-destructive forms of aggressivity. I use the humor groups to introduce non-destructive aggressivity into the lives of persons who fear the
destructive aggressivity of others. In this
context we make use of potentialities of humor,
especially the forms of humor that use elements
of clownish behavior.
W.S.: So one technique is
to put water in one's mouth and speak while holding the water in the mouth.
Another is to have people act like a marionette with their arms and hands. The
third one is to work with a clown to express embarassing
forms of behavior.
M.T.: Being intentionally
ridiculous in front of a group helps gelotophobic
patients overcome their inhibitions. Another good technique is to use
elements of Zen to get those afraid of laughter to stop using their
restricting logical thinking. Excessive focus on logical thought is a major
cause of their state of tension. They think too much. They are also
involved in "double thinking" when they think that other persons
are thinking critically about them - and so on! This reinforces their
feelings of shame over and over. One therapeutic goal is to get these
patients to think less so they can react more spontaneously. Consciously
acting in a manner that is silly or ridiculous is surely a paradoxical type
of action.
For example, when someone is
asked why s/he is blushing s/he may say, "Because the snow on the Himalayas is very warm". Or, "There are
three baskets filled with eggs". Or, "Because of the water of
Z-3". Patients are systematically trained to use such sentences to
create many types of illogical explanations.
W.S.:What is Z-3?
M.T.: I don't know.
Another technique we teach is to
repeat a certain nonsensical response no matter what they are asked. This
also helps to distance them from the carousel of logical thinking. It helps
an individual to stop doing what many paranoid people do: looking
everywhere at everybody to protect oneself from being laughed at. Gradually
patients begin to decenter from the normative
structure of their own thinking. When I speak with you and I always tell
you the same absurdl stuff, it is not possible
for you to get me to switch lanes and get me to be embarassed.
This is because I am the one who forces you to stay at the point that was deliberatly fixed by me.
W.S.: What if the
aggressiveness is directed at you?
M.T.: As a therapist I
appreciate it very much. I usually respond using a technique which you have
described very well in your own work - exaggerating or maximizing. If they
tell me I am an idiot, I look for some encore!
W.S.: You mean for example
you might say, "You are being too generous in your description of me. I
am actually the king of idiots."
M.T.: This approach is
analogous to judo, where you use the opponent's own force and re-direct it
to your advantage. I have used this technique for many years and found it
often possible to exaggerate something further. People soon realize that
what I am doing is humorous. What I am doing is playing the role of the
contrary clown.
W.S.: Do you have some
clinical examples, vignettes, or anecdotes that illustrate your theory?
M.T.: I want to mention a
40 year-old woman who looks much younger than her actual age. She is a
teacher and whenever she was with small children she had no problems
because then in a sense she was a child too. However, when she had to
address the children's parents she experienced so much tension that she was
almost in stupor. Before she joined our group she had been treated
psychoanalytically for many years which was very time consuming and
expensive.
The first time she came into our
group, it was as though she was standing in front of her student's parents
who she believed looked at her with eyes full of criticism and disdain. After
some group work, she attended a parents meeting where she was wxpected to address the parents. When she put the tip
of the tongue between her teeth and told them, "I am standing here,
completely inferior, trembling of fear" she underwent a tremendously
liberating experience. At that moment, there was uproarious laughter
because no one could believe she could do this. For her, it was a great
personal success. This is what Frankl had in mind with his concept of
paradoxical intention. Frankl, however, used paradoxical intention more
cognitively whereas we use it mainly to exaggerate body movements or
emotional expressions.
W.S.: What are some
examples of other interventions?
M.T.: Another technique is
verbally playing with the voice. An example is speaking in a voice that is
too high or too low, or with irregular intonation
such as sounding like an audio tape on slow speed. One may sound like an
old 78 R.P.M. record which is set on the 45 R.P.M. speed.
W.S.: From observing your
group I noticed you use the technique of content reversal. For instance,
when someone spoke about how happy he was to be in the group, you reversed
it and paraphrased it as saying that he is very upset to be spending so
much time with people who are asses.
M.T.: Yes. This technique
involves changing the content of what someone just said to you. The
technique is most useful when the content of the patient's comment was
forced on by the internalized normative ideals of conscience. In other
words, you confuse the message's content so that patients can discover what
the content really means for them. This then liberates them from the state
of playing possum.
W.S.: What impressions
stand out to you from your involvement in this work?
M.T.: I have been doing
this work for 15 years. The psychoanalytic approach is interesting but it
is not sufficient and I find it sometimes boring for both the patient and
the psychotherapist. When I watch people developing joyfulness and a
humorous attitude, it tells me that they are comfortable and eager for
these experiences. This is the way small children behave when they are
together. For those suffering from the Pinocchio Complex, the group
experience provides an opportunity to discover their "inner
child" and enjoy experiences that they missed while growing up. That
way they come to emotionally develop a sense of community or belonging as
described by Alfred Adler. Thus, therapeutic humor
can provide the preconditions for bringing to complition
a yet uncompleted process of socialization. This is the case for persons
who grew up up in a shame producing atmosphere
and never experienced what social cohesiveness and solidarity mean. A
therapeutic humor group is the training field for
sociability.
W.S.: It sounds as though
your work with laughter groups has changed your understanding of
psychotherapy and you have become more innovative or experimental in
interventions. How about using your humor and
laughter exercises as a form of intervention for those who may not be
experiencing the Pinocchio Complex?
M.T.: A complete Pinocchio
Complex is rare. However, everyone experiences some degree of shame-bound
self-esteem problems. Everyone has been laughed at and at times has been
fearful of what others might think about him or her. In cultures where
excessive debasement and blame are used to control behavior,
children often grow up thinking that they are not good enough or should be
better. Feeling as though one is not good enough results in a sense of
inadequacy or inferiority.
When people try to be perfect,
their motivation is dominated from childhood, by an endless pressure to
perform. They never experienced the feeling being "good enough".
They were used to being regularly criticized because they didn't measure up
to the high expectations of their reference persons. So they would not have
succeeded in developing a sound self-confidence.
So when they consciously start
to be imperfect or to exaggerate their imperfections, they gradually lose
their fear of being criticized. How does this come about? Simply put, new
game rules are set up. The patients are not confronted with any conditioned
expectations that could inhibit them. Therefore, they can proceed to the
playground of social life in a free and easy way, like children who have
not yet learned to take things seriously. Subsequently, these individuals
can gradually develop a new assertive identity.
W.S.: Another emphasis in
your work is the way you frame the work as being more of an educational and
learning experience rather than a therapy experience. For example, I
noticed that you call the group a training or educational group rather than
a therapy group. The context of training or learning doesn't have the same
connotation as psychotherapy. People are freer in a learning setting.
Also I see a type of reframing
in this work. For example, if you want to teach someone how to dance the
tango, which is a very intricate dance, you don't say, "I'm going to
teach you to tango," but rather say, "Why don't you come over to
my workshop and we will do some dancing." If we started talking about
how to tango they might develop a mental block about the difficulty of the
task. So you say let's dance and the tango emerges.
I see your work as being both
very organized and very loose. You don't want to be too organized because
it would defeat your purpose and lead to the polarity of perfection. On the
other hand, you don't want to be too loose or disorganized because we would
not teach anyone anything. We play between looseness and organization and
in that way put some flesh and bones on Pinocchio's wooden frame.
I would like to close our interview with a quote from Ludwig Wittgenstein
which I believe captures the spirit of what you are doing to help liberate
people from the constraints of the Pinocchio Complex. He said, "If
people did not do silly things, nothing intelligent would ever
happen."
In the following years a scientific co-operation with Dr. Willibald
Ruch, now Professor for Personality Psychology
and Diagnostics at the University
of Zurich was
established. I described this in an article out of which the following excerpt
is taken:
Current personality studies
New evidence about gelotophobes
stems from personality studies. For example, Ruch
(2004) reported that gelotophobes tend to be
introverted and neurotic with slightly elevated scores in early psychoticism measures. Also they seem to have
experienced intense shame in their lives and they experience shame and
anxiety during a typical week. Gelotophobes feel
negative emotions when hearing others laugh (see Ruch,
Altfreder and Proyer,
2009). The formulation of a tentative model of the causes and consequences,
as derived from the clinical studies, might facilitate putting forward
hypotheses for empirical tests in further studies and experiments.
Criteria for the assessment of gelotophobia
Proper assessment of gelotophobia
is essential for both research and therapy. Initial identification of gelotophobes stems from clinical experience with these
patients. Later those impressions were more formalized into a facet model
(see below) and finally a questionnaire assessment was undertaken.
Clinicians who meet gelotophobic
patients for the first time generally recognize their typically bashful
bearing. This defensive attitude may be expressed by very formal conduct,
difficulty in maintaining eye contact, speaking in a low voice, displaying
an obsequious demeanor, and by an awkward
posture. An important criterion for the assessment of gelotophobia
is, finally, the patients’ pronounced sensitivity with regard to any kind
of humorous remarks. Obviously, gelotophobic
patients are not able to deal in an uninhibited way with humorous material:
In this context, they mostly will react “agelotically”, i.e. their face will grow stiff and
their possible polite smiling will freeze. In psychoanalytic terminology, a
specific counter-transference might emerge containing ambivalent feelings
such as uneasiness, amusement, pity, and disdain.
A facet model derived from
prototypical statements
In a research project additional criteria for the
assessment of gelotophobia were defined (Ruch and Titze 1998). This
was achieved by associating the constitutive nosological
elements of gelotophobia with typical statements
of gelotophobic patients:
Traumatizing experiences with laughter and mockery
in the past: “During puberty I avoided contact with peers so that I
wouldn’t be teased by them.” “When I was in school, I was teased quite
often”.
Ø
Fear of the humor of others: “Others seem to find pleasure in
putting me on the spot and embarrassing me”. “It takes me very long to
recover from having been laughed at”.
Ø
Discouragement and envy
when comparing oneself with the humor competence
of others: “I feel inferior around quick-witted and humorous people.” “When
I participate in discussions I often think that my statements are
ridiculous.”
Ø
Paranoid sensitivity
towards alleged mockery by others: “I get suspicious when people laugh in
my presence.” “When strangers laugh in my presence, I often think that they
could be laughing at me.”
Ø
Dysfunction of the
harmonious interplay of physical motions: “When I smile in someone’s company,
I feel like my facial muscles are cramping.” “My posture and my movements
are somehow peculiar or funny.”
Ø
Dysfunction in
appropriately expressing verbal and non-verbal communications: “If I wasn’t
afraid of making a fool of myself, I would speak much more in public.” “It
is very difficult for me to come up and meet others in a free and easy
way.”
Ø
Social withdrawal: “When I
feel I’ve made an embarrassing impression somewhere, I never return to the
same place again.” “ I avoid participating in
funny activities at festivals because I feel myself becoming cramped
inside.”
These criteria were shown to converge very well
and be largely unidimensional (Ruch 2004).
Questionnaire assessment
A list of 46 statements being related to
the above mentioned facets of gelotophobia (=
GELOPH 46) was compiled (Ruch and Titze 1998) and used to explore differences between
various clinical groups and normal controls. It turned out that most of
those statements were able to discriminate well between gelotophobes
(as assessed by clinical judgment) and shame-based and non-shame-based
neurotics (Ruch and Proyer
2008 a).
Applying several criteria helped to identify a subgroup of statements that
allow for a short, efficient and valid separation of the groups. While the
list of statements is much shorter, its reliability was not impaired (Ruch and Proyer 2008 b). The
convergence of clinical criteria and questionnaire data found in the
initial study speaks in favor of the construct
validity of the measure. The various contributions in the current special
issue provide some evidence for criterion validity (see also Platt 2008; Proyer et al. 2005). However, more information
regarding validity needs to be provided.
HUMOR International Journal of Humor
Research (1) 2008
The fear of being laughed at: Individual and group differences in
Gelotophobia. (Abstract)
Ruch, Willibald & Proyer, René
Single case studies led to the discovery and phenomenological
description of Gelotophobia and its definition as
the pathological fear of appearing to social partners as a ridiculous
object (Titze 1995, 1996, 1997). The aim of the
present study is to empirically examine the core assumptions about the fear
of being laughed at in a
sample comprising a total of 863 clinical and non-clinical participants. Discriminant function analysis yielded that gelotophobes can be separated from other shame-based
neurotics, non-shame-based neurotics, and controls. Separation was best for
statements
specifically describing the gelotophobic symptomatology and less potent for more general
questions describing socially avoidant behaviors.
Factor analysis demonstrates that while Gelotophobia
is composed of a set of correlated elements in homogenous samples, overall
the concept is best conceptualized as unidimensional.
Predicted and actual group membership converged well in a
cross-classification (approximately 69% of correctly classified cases).
Overall, it can be concluded that the fear of being laughed at varies
tremendously among adults and might hold a key to understanding certain
forms of humorlessness.
_____________________________________________________________________
The active cooperation with Ruch lasted until the end of 2004. Until then his group
is doing further statistical research that is culminating in an
international study in which about 23.000 persons have been interviewed via
GELOPH 46 (Ruch & Titze
1998):
Gelotophobia, the fear of being laughed at
This is the
website accompagnying the
"Multi-Nation-Study on Gelotophobia".
Background
Based on clinical observations
the German psychotherapist Michael Titze
described putative long-term effects of early, intense and repeated
exposure to mockery and not being taken seriously, namely what he coined
the term Gelotophobia (i.e., the fear of being
laughed at; from gelos = Greek for laughter).
According to Titze (1996) certain patients seem
to be primarily concerned with being laughed at by others, as they are
convinced to be ridiculous objects.
Experimental Study of Gelotophobia
The
Zurich-based research group conducted first empirical studies on this new
concept. First, it was shown that a group of diagnosed gelotophobics
(by clinical experts) could be separated empirically from groups of normal
controls, non shame-based, and shame-based neurotics by means of a list of
statements describing the experiential world of gelotophobics
(Ruch & Proyer, in
press-a). In a follow-up study assessment criteria for Gelotophobia
were defined and an economic scale for the subjective assessment of Gelotophobia was introduced (Ruch
& Proyer, in press-b). In our research group
we currently study Gelotophobia in its relation
to personality, well-being, orientations
to happiness, body image, emotions (in particular fear and shame),
humor, interpretation of
ambiguous acoustic and visual stimuli as well as physiological
and psycho-motor expressions (among others). Based on these studies we
were able to demonstrate the existence of the phenomenon through different
strategies; i. e. in self-reports,
semi-projective tests, and experimental settings.
Ruch, W., & Proyer, R. T. (in press-a). Ruch, W., & Proyer, R. T.
The fear of being laughed at: Individual and group differences in Gelotophobia. Humor:
International Journal of Humor Research.
Ruch, W., & Proyer,
R. T. (in press-b). Who is gelotophobic?
Assessment criteria for the fear of being laughed at. Swiss Journal of
Psychology.
Outline
of current study
The aim of
the present study will be to provide evidence for the existence of the fear
of being laughed at (i.e., Gelotophobia) in
different places of the world. This aim will be achieved by an analysis of
the prevalence of gelotophobic symptoms in the
different samples. A comparison of item and sample statistics in the
different nations together with a comparison of the psychometric properties
of the questionnaire in the samples will be conducted. Results of the study
are expected to be available in autumn 2007. A follow-up study
including a broader variety of assessment instruments is currently being
planned.
Researchers
from the following 90 regions/countries have joined the research group so
far (August 2007).
|
Argentina
|
America-South
|
|
Australia
|
Oceania
|
|
Austria
|
Europe
|
|
Azerbijan
|
Eurasia
|
|
Bahamas
|
America-Central
|
|
Bangladesh
|
Asia
|
|
Belgium (Flemish)
|
Europe
|
|
Belgium (French)
|
Europe
|
|
Botswana
|
Africa
|
|
Brazil
|
America-South
|
|
Bulgaria
|
Europe
|
|
Burkina
Faso
|
Africa
|
|
Cambodia
|
Asia
|
|
Cameroon
|
Africa
|
|
Canada (English)
|
America-North
|
|
Canada (French)
|
America-North
|
|
Chile
|
America-South
|
|
China
(Hong Kong)
|
Asia
|
|
China
(Macau)
|
Asia
|
|
China (Mainland)
|
Asia
|
|
Colombia
|
America-South
|
|
Croatia
|
Europe
|
|
Cyprus
|
Europe
|
|
Czech
Republic
|
Europe
|
|
Denmark
|
Europe
|
|
Egypt
|
Middle East
|
|
England
|
Europe
|
|
Estonia
|
Europe
|
|
Ethiopia
|
Africa
|
|
Fiji-Islands
|
Oceania
|
|
Finland
|
Europe
|
|
France
|
Europe
|
|
Germany
|
Europe
|
|
Greece
|
Europe
|
|
Hungary
|
Europe
|
|
Iceland
|
Europe
|
|
India
|
Asia
|
|
Indonesia
|
Asia
|
|
Iran
|
Middle East
|
|
Iraq
|
Middle East
|
|
Ireland
|
Europe
|
|
Israel
|
Middle East
|
|
Italy
|
Europe
|
|
Japan
|
Asia
|
|
Jordania
|
Middle East
|
|
Kenya
|
Africa
|
|
Lebanon
|
Middle East
|
|
Lithuania
|
Europe
|
|
Malawi
|
Africa
|
|
Malaysia
|
Asia
|
|
Malta
|
Europe
|
|
Mauritius
|
Africa
|
|
Netherlands
|
Europe
|
|
New Zealand
|
Oceania
|
|
Nigeria
|
Africa
|
|
Northern Ireland
|
Europe
|
|
Norway
|
Europe
|
|
Pakistan
|
Middle East
|
|
Papua New Guinea
|
Oceania
|
|
Poland
|
Europe
|
|
Portugal
|
Europe
|
|
Puerto
Rico (USA)
|
America-Central
|
|
Republika
Srpska
|
Europe
|
|
Romania
|
Europe
|
|
Russia
|
Asia
|
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Middle-East
|
|
Scotland
|
Europe
|
|
Slovakia
|
Europe
|
|
Slovenia
|
Europe
|
|
Solomon-Islands
|
Oceania
|
|
South Africa
|
Africa
|
|
South-Korea
|
Asia
|
|
Spain
|
Europe
|
|
Sri
Lanka
|
Asia
|
|
Sweden
|
Europe
|
|
Switzerland (French)
|
Europe
|
|
Switzerland (German)
|
Europe
|
|
Switzerland (Italian)
|
Europe
|
|
Taiwan
|
Asia
|
|
Thailand
|
Asia
|
|
Tunisia
|
Africa
|
|
Turkey
|
Eurasia
|
|
Turkmenistan
|
Asia
|
|
Ukraine
|
Europe
|
|
Uruguay
|
America-South
|
|
USA (East Coast)
|
America-North
|
|
USA (Midwest)
|
America-North
|
|
USA (South)
|
America-North
|
|
USA (West Coast)
|
America-North
|
|
Venezuela
|
America-South
|
______________________________
Dr Jessica
Milner Davis, Senior Visiting Fellow, Arts and Social Sciences, UNSW
Gelotophobia: Australian Data in a Multi-nation Study of the
Fear of Being Laughed at.
Gelotophobics (possessing a pathological fear of
appearing an object of ridicule to social partners) tend excessively to
believe others are constantly evaluating them for ridiculousness and thus
fear being exposed to laughter. The phenomenon was first described in
German case studies by clinical psychologist Michael Titze.
This fear was shown more frequently than expected in 2003 empirical studies
in Germany, Austria and Switzerland
(2000+ participants, Ruch and Proyer),
in England (Platt,
author of Ridicule Teasing Scenario questionnaire RTSq,
2006) and in Italy
(Forabosco). Ruch and Titze developed and validated a self-report
questionnaire (Ruch 1998) for international use.
Recent studies show different “national prevalences”,
ranging from 3% Gelotophobics, to 15% plus,
without age, gender, or class differences. In 2007, studies were undertaken
at UNSW (Cranney, Milner Davis and Thomas) and University of Melbourne (David Rawlings). Other
countries include Japan
(2 samples), Taiwan (2),
India (3), USA (4), Malawi,
Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Chile (1 each). Ruch’s collation of international results is
forthcoming in 2008. This paper reports Australian questionnaire
adaptations (comprehensibilty and multi-cultural
background) and initial results. Possible applications include bullying,
workplace relations, clinical and forensic psychology
___________________________________________________
Serious fear of laughter? Could
be gelotophobia
Wednesday
July 9 2008
By DANIEL WOOLLS
Associated Press Writer
ALCALA DE
HENARES, Spain
(AP) - From the frontiers of mirth research, scholars offer
these words of comfort: If you are mortified of dancing for fear of being
the butt of jokes, don't worry, you are far from alone.
There's even a word for it - gelotophobia. Sound like a disease involving Italian
ice cream? No, it's the potentially debilitating fear of being laughed at.
This condition - the term comes
from gelos, Greek for laughter - was among the
topics discussed this week at a four-day meeting of the International
Society for Humor Studies, an Oakland, Calif.-based collective of psychologists, sociologists,
linguists and other academics who probe funniness from every conceivable
angle.
[…]
As for gelotophobia,
psychologist Willibald Ruch of the University of Zurich said it was first proposed as
a distinct phobia - and given a name - about a decade ago.
“`Studying the negative effects
of being laughed at is entirely new,” Ruch said.
A typical gelotophobe
could hear a stranger's laugh and think it is aimed at him. In an extreme
case this could provoke breaking out in a sweat, heart palpitations,
trembling or simply freezing up. “So, yes, they would not be behaving
properly,”' Ruch said.
Ruch said his team
surveyed 23,000 people in 75 countries and found gelotophobia
present to some degree in each nation, affecting between 2 and 30 percent
of the population.
“Within Europe, Britain
is on the top. Absolutely on the top,” he said. The incidence in the U.S. is about 14 percent, slightly below
that of Britain.
Ruch declined to say
which country topped the list globally, insisting his team is trying to get
the data published first in a scientific journal, but allowed that some
Asian and African countries are high on the list.
At the conference, researchers
from Australia, China and Japan also presented findings
on gelotophobia among their citizens.
____________________________________________________________________
Xavier Delgado: Temer el humor,
Julio 10, 2008-08
Escuchar y atender atentamente
diversas presentaciones sobre el miedo al humor (denominada por los
estudiosos del humor Gelotofobia) me
ha permitido reflexionar y hacerme
cargo de las dificultades y aversión que ciertas personas pueden sentir
hacia un estímulo tan inofensivo y positivo, a priori como puede ser el
humor, la risa o la sonrisa en un contexto social.
Parece ser que
haber tenido un desarrollo problemático en la infancia, tener experiencias
en que no te sientes tomado en serio o has sido ridiculizado, haber sido
objeto en la juventud o adultez de intensas experiencias
traumáticas donde se han reído de uno o ridiculizado (caso del acoso
escolar, sexual o laboral) son causas de la gelotofobia
según ha observado Michael Titze, entre otros
autores, en grupos clínicos.
Ello ha
permitido investigar hasta dar con un inventario que permite detectar esta
afección y sus consecuencias. Hay diversos estudiosos de este fenómeno en
Japón, Australia y Finlandia que, en estos días, nos han ofrecido sus
opiniones al respecto. Algunas de sus conclusiones sugieren que:
- la gelotofobia correlaciona con rasgos de personalidad
tales como la introversión
- en una muestra
de estudiantes de secundaria japoneses no se observaron diferencias
significativas en las puntuaciones de gelotofobia
comparando un género y otro
- en un estudio
finlandés se observa que los descriptores de gelotofobia
correlacionan con puntuaciones significactivas
del síndrome de desgaste profesional en los sujetos evaluados.
Para más
información sobre el tema podeis contactar con el
Dr. Paavo Kerkkänen (en
Finlandia), autor de la comunicación “Gelotofobia,
burnout amb workplace bullying” que
fue presentada anteayer en el 20th International
ISHS Humor Conference a través de su correo
electrónico.
____________________________________________________________________
2.
What amplitude do you think is the results of your
investigation?
More and more researchers and students are interested in the concept
of gelotophobia. The reason may be that in our
post-modern world people increasingly are striving for their individual
significance because the social network, the interpersonal cohesion is
being invalidated. The single individual is, thus, left in the lurch by
his/her fellow-men. He/she, thereby, questions narcissistically his/her
personal worth. The result, frequently, is a lowering of one’s self-esteem,
going hand in hand with the conviction to be worthless and ridiculous.
3. You will dictate training seminars at the Centre for psychotherapists Adleriano
Montevideo. What do you consider is the development of discipline in Uruguay?
South American depth psychologists have contributed much to the world-wide
literature of psychoanalysis. Very important are the contributions of
Freudians from Argentina
and Mexico.
In the case of Jungian Analytic Psychology and Adlerian Individual
Psychology, I think that the Montevideo
group with its leader Prof. Hazán as a similar
importance.
4. Do you
have a story about our country?
What we know in Germany
about Uruguay
is, of course, its importance as a football/soccer-nation and the authentic
cradle of Tango. Further, Germans appreciate the fact that Uruguay has the perfect climate for Northern
Europeans and, above all, is known to be one of the safest countries (with
the best telephone network all over South America).
Many Germans know that Montevideo is the
capital of the South American trading union – thus being the equivalent of Brussels the capital
of the European Union.
One thing, however, is associated best with Montevideo:
It is the German movie “Das Haus
in Montevideo” (The house in Montevideo) which is
based on a novel of Curt Goetz. This movie appears regularly on TV in
Christmas time! It deals with professor Traugott
Hermann Nägler who lives with his wife and 12
children in a typical small German town. One day the pastor appears with
the news that the sister of the professor had died in Montevideo. (Years ago, she had been
repudiated by the family at the professor’s instigation because she had
born an illegitimate child. In her testament this sister has decreed that
the professor’s oldest daughter Atlanta
should inherit valuable properties in Montevideo.
But the professor rejects this inheritance – out of moral reasons! However,
the pastor, the mayor and the professor’s succeed in changing his mind.
Thus, the professor, his daughter Atlanta
and the pastor travel to Montevideo
to come into the inheritance.
In Montevideo,
the professor is astonished because of the many young girls in his sister’s
house. He is convinced that this must be a brothel. Therefore he leaves,
together with Atlanta,
this house with indignation. The pastor, however, starts to investigate
this case, he interviews many person and comes to
a conclusion which is completely different from the professor’s ugly
fantasies: In reality, the sister had a successful career as the singer
Maria Machado. Big parts of her property had been donated by her to a
foundation supporting single girls and unmarried mothers. This foundation
would receive the remaining money ($ 750.000) as well, unless “in the home
of my virtuous brother Prof Dr Traugott Hermann Nägler my own tragedy sould
be repeated.” In this case, the mother of the illegitimate child should
receive this amount of money. The deadline was one year.
The professor is despaired. He telegraphs to Atlanta’s friend to come
ommediately. To Montevideo. After his arrival this young
man asks for Atlanta’s
hand (to marry her). But this would mean that all the money would be lost!
Thus the professor drops a hint that the young man should make Atlanta pregnant before
he would marry her. After that a bad conscience arises in the professor and
he forces Atlanta’s
friend to box his ears (beat him).
After that the professor returns, together with his entourage, to
his German hometown. Soon after the arrival, Atlanta
wants to marry her friend on deck of the same ship - -named ATLANTA – where many years ago Prof Nägler had married his wife, Atlanta’s mother. But this time it is not
possible because new investigations had made clear that this ship was 27 cm too small to be
legally suitable to serve as a place for marriage! Therefore, the professor
had lived “in sin” since 20 years and all his 12 children were
illegitimate!
On you.
1. Why are you
a psychotherapist?
As a student I have
been interested in the theoretical aspects of psychopathology, especially
in research on schizophrenia. In the frame of my dissertation I have
constructed for measuring schizophrenic thinking disorders which is still
useful. By chance, I read Alfred Adler’s book “Understanding Human Nature”.
This inspired my interest for psychotherapy and was a sort of booster for
may later biography.
2. Have you been able to accomplish your purposes as a
psychotherapist or has something prevented that realization?
I am satisfied in any
respect.
3. Do you have unpublished work?
Currently, I am writing a text dealing with gelotophobic
aspects in post-modern society.
4. Who has been your
best critic?
My daughter Miriam who
is a graduated sociologist and expert in communication theory.
5. What are your
projects?
To make
the best out of every day.
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