#025 HUMOUR

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e4/Eduard_von_Gr%C3%BCtzner_Falstaff.jpg

Here’s your DFQ #025:

What is quite funny about this?

Use humour today to change your mood or your reaction to a difficult situation.

Post your result.

 

Good humour is one of the best articles of dress one can wear in society.”

William Makepeace Thackeray


 

 

311 thoughts on “#025 HUMOUR

  1. The funny thing about doing medical research is that the statistics are mindboggling and often you become the most confused in the very subject you research

  2. my humor is used to change my mood when thinking about a broken relationship especially of kindness. This helps me stop being sad and gave me a new perspective on things I learned from the others.

  3. For me, true humor involves the capacity to first laugh at one’s self. At pretensions, at attachment to outcomes, appearances, and self. What is often called humor- scarcasm, is really the utilization of language to diminish and/hurt others in the guise of “humor”. I remember someone sharing with me that if both parties are not laughing, then it is truly not funny- it is laughter at the expense of another. Over time, I have moved from sarcasm to humor which celebrates a shared humanity. I find more joy, more kindness, and more unity there

  4. Humour does help, at work. It eases the tension and gives a boost to think differently. I am known for using humour in my discussions and presentations.

  5. Humor is a good way to start, close or simply move on any kind of human relation.

    Agree what the introduction sees about humor. Is the key to open doors, to invite to flexibility, to attract attention, to change moods, to make friends.

    Smile is contagious.

  6. The subject is smiling unlike most other subjects in paintings. Humor can save our lives. Laughter is even therapeutic.

  7. Humor is paramount to our mental and physical well-being.
    If everyone laughed at least once a day the world be a better place.

  8. I think the best kind of humour is found in the absurd. Perhaps the artist has just told the smiling gentleman an absurd story. His broad smile certainly invites a smiling response.
    I have a small black and white framed photograph of three toddlers sitting on a step, the central boy is kissing the lass on his right. The little girl on his left is staring at him with an unholy scowl on her face. Not exactly ‘Love thy neighbour.’ It is called Il Bacio. Every time I look at it I chuckle.
    That’s the kind of funny story that can change my mood instantly, and what a clever artist to set it up.

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