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While the benefits
of laughter were well known, a strong surge of emotions,
or a sad mood inhibited a refreshing belly laugh.
Intuition was the algorithmic process, which instantly
triggered those emotions in response to stressful
situations. Paul Ekman suggested that those emotional
responses were beyond your control. This article suggests
that a process, similar to Cough CPR, could still bring
calm.
WHEN LAUGHTER DOES NOT COME EASILY
The
surge of emotions. During the middle ages, the court
jester was often summoned to try and lift the monarch out
of an angry or melancholic mood. Emotional problems were
hardly the choice of the king. Uneasiness was an
inescapable load, borne by the crowned head. Neither did
this burden spare the citizen. In more recent times,
science has confirmed the subversive power of emotions,
emanating from a region called the limbic system, buried
deep within the brain. Being a more primitive part of the
brain, this region is reported to be the seat of
emotions. Electrical stimulation of neurons in this
region caused you to feel anger, fear, or shame. More
often than not, the wide range of feelings and emotions,
generated by this region, control our actions. Such
responses of the mind were reported to occur within a
bare 20 milliseconds.
A
spontaneous event. Paul Ekman, the famous emotions
scientist, reported that the evaluation that turned on an
emotion happened so quickly that people were not aware it
was occurring. "We become aware a quarter, or half
second after the emotion begins. I do not choose to have
an emotion, to become afraid, or to become angry. I am
suddenly angry. I can usually figure out later what
someone did that caused the emotion." The nervous
system processed all the available information and drove
us to anger, or despair, within just half a second.
Paul's window was fully open in half a second. Open to a
deluge. The book, The Intuitive Algorithm, describes
the speed and power of the intuitive process that opens
this emotional window.
The
stress response. "I was suddenly anxious."
The department was to be "restructured."
Termination notices. Rent payments. Overdue bills. The
churning had begun. Emotions had intimate links to the
body. Anxiety and stress triggered the production of the
adrenal hormone cortisol. Adrenaline supported bodily
functions designed to cope with the fight or flight
response, including increased heart rate. The production
of cortisol also initiated one of the most insidious
processes in nature. Its excess production was shown to
damage the immune system, arteries, and brain cells, and
cause premature aging. Across the ages, philosophers
sought to reduce the impact of this deadly cycle. Could
the anxiety be mitigated, so that the emerging crisis
could be evaluated calmly? Medieval medicine believed
that emotional imbalance could be corrected by the court
entertainers - the fool or jester. Laughter was believed
to be an excellent medicine.
Benefits
of laughter. Laughter is, more often than not,
triggered by a sudden release of tension. The door opens
slowly in a dark room. As you wait with baited breath, a
kitten walks in. You laugh. The system relaxes. There is
much recent evidence that laughter aids emotional well
being and health. A belly laugh is said to result in
muscle relaxation. The process is aerobic, providing a
workout for the diaphragm. The workout reduces the
hormones associated with the stress response. Decrease in
stress hormones relieve constricted blood vessels and
support immune activity. It is a wholly beneficial
response. Unfortunately, belly laughs are hardly the
response of normal people when faced with stressful
situations. Laughter is not exactly easy, when you are
seething with anger, or sweating in fear. Yet, you need a
response to stress, which you can produce naturally.
Cough
CPR. There is such a remedy. It is a simple
mechanical response, which can subdue the destructive
effects of emotional upheaval. One hint of this
possibility appeared in a procedure advocated by Dr.
Tadeusz Petelenz at a meeting of the European Society of
Cardiology to save the lives of people having a type of
heart attack brought on by rapid and erratic heart beat.
He suggested coughing vigorously until an ambulance
arrived. The technique, called cough CPR, forced blood to
the brain while the heart was beginning to fail and kept
patients conscious long enough to call for help. Other
experts said the concept was provocative, but unproven
and doubted whether it would have practical value. But,
could this process provide a clue to a response to
stressful situations?
A
simple response. The muscle movements involved in
coughing could also dissipate adrenaline. But, you could
hardly cough on receiving a dismissal notice. But, at the
first sign of an uneasy emotion, you could pump your
stomach. Repeatedly expel air by tightening stomach
muscles close to the pelvic area. Stomach pumping helps
spread the adrenaline in the system and subdues that
tension. It is a practice with endless benefits. When you
pump your stomach, the muscles that do not participate in
the process, relax. After you finish pumping, those
muscles involved also begin to relax. So, the action
takes place in two stages. Both beneficial. With habit,
it could be a simple, built in response to any stressful
event. Long after Paul's window had opened, this habit
could help still the unbidden turmoil of your mind.
Laughter is not easy. But pumping your stomach is. Even
if you find it difficult to laugh in the face of imminent
danger, you can still be calm and ready for battle.
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