|
Free Pain Relief Newsletter
Click
Here
|
Pain Relief Articles -
Heal With Laughter |
Exercise: A Natural
Reliever For Chronic Low Back Pain
4 Natural Home
Remedies to Ease the Pain of Sunburn
Getting A
Grip on Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Exercise Your
Way To Pain Relief
Benefits
of Alternative Medicine
Neck Pain Management
Migraines - Food
and Diet
Tendonitis Pain
Relief
Treating Arthritis - Naturally
Getting Well With Smell
Guided Imagery - The Healing Power of
Imagination
The Healing Power of Food
Healing With Herbs
Healing With Movement
Healing With Water
Self-Healing With Homeopathy
Laughter Is Good Medicine
Treat Your Own Back Pain
Healing With Your Mind
|
Laughter
Is Good Medicine |
By Gerri
Shapiro, MS Ed.
"The art of medicine consists of keeping the
patient amused
while nature heals the disease."
-Voltaire
You have probably noticed that you feel a lot better after a good
belly laugh. The problem is that your sense of humor generally
abandons you just when you need it the most - when you get sick.
New evidence suggests that you may want to consider laughter as part
of your comprehensive wellness program. It not only boosts your
mood, but it also revs up your immune system, protects your heart,
lowers blood pressure, reduces pain, improves lung capacity and
provides a general sense of well-being. A good belly laugh also
reduces stress hormones in your body.
Humor and Healing
The mere fact that you feel better after a good laugh should lead
you to conclude that humor must be good for you. But research now
confirms that your sense of humor promotes physical health. Clinical
studies over the last 20 years have demonstrated that laughter plays
an important role in healing. As a result, hospitals and health care
organizations are initiating a number of humor-related programs,
ranging from "laughter channels" on TV to visits by clowns.
Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital in Whittier, CA has trained 25
clowns with the mission of putting smiles on the faces of its
patients. "We have discovered that clown therapy works," says
hospital President and CEO Daniel F. Adams..
Immune System Enhancement
Whether or not you get sick depends on your body's ability to fight
off disease. Research has proven that positive emotions such as
laughter enhance your immune response.
According to Dr. Lee S Berk of Loma Linda University in California,
laughter helps increase the count of white cells and also raises the
antibody levels. After "laughter therapy" he noticed an increase in
antibodies in the nose and respiratory passages which are believed
to have a protective capacity against some viruses and bacteria.
In a BBC article about laughter and hospital treatment, researchers
found that the healing power of humor reduced pain and stimulated
immune function in children with cancer, AIDS and diabetes and in
children receiving organ transplants and bone marrow transplants.
High Blood Pressure and Heart Disease
Those who suffer from heart disease may discover that laughter can
improve their blood circulation and oxygen supply to their heart
muscles.
The most astonishing evidence of the power of laughter comes from a
1997 study of 48 heart-attack patients whose therapy included 30
minutes of laughter a day. After a year, ten patients in the control
group had suffered repeat heart attacks, compared to only two in the
group that watched comedies.
Another study demonstrated a drop of 10-20mm pressure after patients
participated for 20 minutes in a laughter session
Pain Reduction
Laughter increases the level of endorphins, which are natural pain
killers found in your body.
Norman Cousins drew the attention of the medical community to the
pain-reducing power of laughter in his book Anatomy of an Illness.
He discovered while watching comedy films that belly laughter eased
his pain and noted that ten minutes of belly laughter gave him two
hours of pain-free sleep. Over a dozen studies have now documented
that humor does have the power to reduce pain for many people.
In one study, people listening to Lily Tomlin joking about the phone
company were less sensitive to pain than those who listened to an
academic lecture. Another study showed that when elderly residents
in a long-term care facility watched funny movies, the level of pain
they experienced was reduced. In a third study of 35 patients in a
rehabilitation hospital, 74% agreed with the statement, "Sometimes
laughing works as well as a pain pill."
"A clown is like an aspirin, only he works twice as fast."
-Groucho Marx
Respiratory Relief
Laughter is one of the best exercises if you suffer from asthma and
bronchitis. It improves your lung capacity and oxygen levels in your
blood. Doctors often recommend chest physiotherapy to bring out
mucous from the respiratory passages, and blowing forcefully into an
instrument or blowing balloons is one of the common exercises given
to asthmatics. However, laughter does the same job, but more easily
and cheaply.
Stress Relief
When confronted with a threatening situation, animals have two
choices: they can fight or they can flee. You have a third choice:
you can laugh. Humor may be one of the best antidotes to stress. You
cannot laugh and worry at the same time!
Lee Berk, M.D., Ph.D., has conducted studies showing that laughter
can fend off many of the physiological effects of stress, including
those caused by the hormones cortisol and epinephrine, which can
trigger increased blood pressure, heart rate and blood sugar.
Prolonged and chronic stress can suppress your immune system,
increasing your risk for viral infections and even tumors. According
to Dr. Berk, the positive biological effects of a single one-hour
session of viewing a funny video can last from 12 to 24 hours.
"Laughter is a powerful antidote to stress," says Dr. Berk. Heart
disease patients are often given drugs called beta-blockers
specifically to block these hormones. "Laughter can do that same
thing," says Berk. "And it's a lot more fun."
What You Can Do
Your sense of humor is one of the most powerful healing tools you
have, and laughter may be one of the healthiest things you can do
for yourself. You may want to consider adding a hardy laugh to your
disease prevention program by
* Actively seeking out things that make you laugh;
* Taking in regular doses of funny movies, books and videos;
* Cutting out newspaper comics that make you laugh and posting them
on
your refrigerator;
* Finding a funny saying to repeat to yourself when things get
tough;
* Telling a joke;
* Laughing at yourself;
* Looking for the funny side of events;
* Trying to use humor to handle anxiety;
* Hanging out with happy people.
"The simple truth is that happy people generally don't get sick."
-
Bernie Siegel, M.D.
|