What Is Laughter Yoga?
Laughter
Yoga is a deceptively simple, yet very powerful and potentially
life-changing form of exercise that anybody can do — anytime, anywhere.
Its core premise is that your body can and knows how to laugh,
regardless of what your mind has to say;
Laughter Yoga is a body-mind approach to laughter, not a mind-body approach. The distinction is very important. Here you do not need to have a sense of humor, know jokes, or even be happy. Laughter Yoga invites you to fake it until it becomes real.
Laughter Yoga is non-political, non-religious, non-threatening, and non-competitive. It comes with no strings attached. There are no jokes or comedy. There is no judging, because there is no mind, there is no ego, and no room for conflict or power struggles. Laughter is a universal language that transcends all barriers: language, age, gender, race and social background. It improves interpersonal relationships and enhances communication. It interrupts the power struggle and breaks down the instinctive barriers between people.
At a deeper level it proves that pain can be overcome and also that we can all live in peace together. It is now indisputable that laughter plays a role in healing, staying healthy, controlling stress and maintaining emotional balance. Laughter has been rediscovered as a powerful tool in the battle against many mental and physical diseases.
Laughter Yoga also teaches you emotional resilience: how to make happiness a choice and not a consequence, and how to respond positively even in the face of adversity.
Should you laugh every day? Yes, if you want to feel good.
“Laughter Yoga combines laughter with yogic breathing exercises. It is a perfect way to laugh and get exercise at the same time. It approaches laughter as a body exercise, so it’s easy to laugh even if you’re depressed or in a bad mood. I’ve tried it, and it works.” Oprah Winfrey
Everything Old Is New Again. The Laughter Yoga method of simulated laughter exercises adds a new dimension to all the good work and important ideas that humor activists have been teaching.
But Laughter Yoga is different. For the first time, there is an economical and highly practical application of these theories that can used every day.
Laughter Yoga is the only form of exercise that allows you to laugh heartily, engaging your diaphragm, for an extended period of time — Laughter Yoga classes last 30 to 60 minutes on average — for no reason whatsoever. It is the purest form of laughter there is because it is unconditional. It puts you in touch with the very essence of who you are: loving, open, playful and childlike. This is one of the many reasons that makes Laughter Yoga fun, and why it is becoming so popular worldwide: it encourages us to play with others, without judgment or competition.
Get Out of Your Mind Laughter Yoga eliminates the need for the kind of considerations that run in other yoga classes. Am I misinterpreting this? Am I being open-minded? Am I doing this correctly? Is my spine in effective alignment? Is this working? What is wrong with me that I do not like this? Do my arms look fat?
There really isn’t much room for that in a Laughter Yoga class. It’s too simple and too playful. All you have to do is laugh. It frees up a lot of potential within you to relax and be more open to connect to yourself and to others.
Neuroscience Confirms that our bodies respond to social connection. There is a lot that we don’t yet know about the neurological underpinnings of laughter, including why laughing feels so good. One recent study found evidence that stimulating the nucleus accumbens, one of the brain’s pleasure centers, triggers laughter. Some anecdotal and clinical evidence suggests that laughing makes you healthier by suppressing stress hormones and elevating immune system antibodies.
If you think of laughter as being basically a reaction to humor, the laughing-makes-you-healthier premise seems bizarre. Why would natural selection make our immune system respond to jokes? Dr. Robert Provine helped solve the mystery. By studying over 1200 natural occurrences of laughter, he found that our bodies aren’t responding to punch lines, they’re responding to social connection. And even if we don’t yet understand the neurological basis of the pleasure that laughing brings us, it makes sense that we should seek out the connectedness of infectious laughter. We are social animals, after all. And if that laughter often involves some pretty childish behavior, so be it. “This is why we’re not like lizards,” Provine says. “Lizards don’t play; they’re not social the way we are. When you start to see play, you’re starting to see mammals. So when we get together and have a good time and laugh, we’re going back to our roots. It’s ironic in a way: Some of the things that give us the most pleasure are really the most ancient.”
It is practiced daily in thousands of Worldwide Laughter Clubs, a thriving network of thousands of free social laughter clubs and many more professional Laughter Yoga classes on 5 continents. An estimated 1 million people laugh every day in Indian Laughter Clubs alone!
Laughter Yoga Clubs are gatherings of people who get together just to laugh. They are led by volunteers and are fully independent, not-for-profit, non-political, non-religious, and non-competitive groups where all are welcome regardless of gender, age, physical abilities, and social or economic backgrounds.
Laughter Yoga Classes are offered to interested groups of people (e.g. with seniors in a retirement community or with the staff at a business) and are usually not open to the general public. They usually require a fee and are led by trained Laughter Yoga professionals who love to laugh and share their passion with others.
The media has been highly influential in the growth of Laughter Yoga and Laughter Clubs globally. Major television networks, radio stations and newspapers worldwide regularly cover the Laughter Yoga movement.
Laughter Yoga is extremely media friendly because it provides great visuals, amazing audio and does not go against any established interests or personal beliefs.
Ultimate Goal? World Peace The ultimate goal of the worldwide Laughter Yoga movement is health, joy, and world peace through laughter.
The practice of Laughter Yoga causes the body to release high concentrations of chemicals and hormones related to feelings of happiness, warmth, unconditional love, bonding, tolerance, forgiveness, generosity and compassion. Let’s call this a joy cocktail. The presence of this joy cocktail of hormones and neuro-peptides precludes the production of other hormones and neuro-peptides that correspond with hatred, fear, violence, jealousy, aggression and the emotions associated with war and oppression.
By practicing Laughter Yoga in groups, the amount of the joy cocktail is raised to high concentrations through the multiplier effect. People leaving Laughter Yoga sessions go out and interact with many people who are in turn affected, in varying degrees, by this powerful emotional state of joy. They in turn ‘infect’ other people they come into contact with… and so on.
World peace first starts inside every one of us. We don’t laugh because we are happy. We are happy because we laugh.
Laughter Yoga is a body-mind approach to laughter, not a mind-body approach. The distinction is very important. Here you do not need to have a sense of humor, know jokes, or even be happy. Laughter Yoga invites you to fake it until it becomes real.
Laughter Yoga is non-political, non-religious, non-threatening, and non-competitive. It comes with no strings attached. There are no jokes or comedy. There is no judging, because there is no mind, there is no ego, and no room for conflict or power struggles. Laughter is a universal language that transcends all barriers: language, age, gender, race and social background. It improves interpersonal relationships and enhances communication. It interrupts the power struggle and breaks down the instinctive barriers between people.
At a deeper level it proves that pain can be overcome and also that we can all live in peace together. It is now indisputable that laughter plays a role in healing, staying healthy, controlling stress and maintaining emotional balance. Laughter has been rediscovered as a powerful tool in the battle against many mental and physical diseases.
Laughter Yoga also teaches you emotional resilience: how to make happiness a choice and not a consequence, and how to respond positively even in the face of adversity.
Should you laugh every day? Yes, if you want to feel good.
“Laughter Yoga combines laughter with yogic breathing exercises. It is a perfect way to laugh and get exercise at the same time. It approaches laughter as a body exercise, so it’s easy to laugh even if you’re depressed or in a bad mood. I’ve tried it, and it works.” Oprah Winfrey
Everything Old Is New Again. The Laughter Yoga method of simulated laughter exercises adds a new dimension to all the good work and important ideas that humor activists have been teaching.
But Laughter Yoga is different. For the first time, there is an economical and highly practical application of these theories that can used every day.
Laughter Yoga is the only form of exercise that allows you to laugh heartily, engaging your diaphragm, for an extended period of time — Laughter Yoga classes last 30 to 60 minutes on average — for no reason whatsoever. It is the purest form of laughter there is because it is unconditional. It puts you in touch with the very essence of who you are: loving, open, playful and childlike. This is one of the many reasons that makes Laughter Yoga fun, and why it is becoming so popular worldwide: it encourages us to play with others, without judgment or competition.
Get Out of Your Mind Laughter Yoga eliminates the need for the kind of considerations that run in other yoga classes. Am I misinterpreting this? Am I being open-minded? Am I doing this correctly? Is my spine in effective alignment? Is this working? What is wrong with me that I do not like this? Do my arms look fat?
There really isn’t much room for that in a Laughter Yoga class. It’s too simple and too playful. All you have to do is laugh. It frees up a lot of potential within you to relax and be more open to connect to yourself and to others.
Neuroscience Confirms that our bodies respond to social connection. There is a lot that we don’t yet know about the neurological underpinnings of laughter, including why laughing feels so good. One recent study found evidence that stimulating the nucleus accumbens, one of the brain’s pleasure centers, triggers laughter. Some anecdotal and clinical evidence suggests that laughing makes you healthier by suppressing stress hormones and elevating immune system antibodies.
If you think of laughter as being basically a reaction to humor, the laughing-makes-you-healthier premise seems bizarre. Why would natural selection make our immune system respond to jokes? Dr. Robert Provine helped solve the mystery. By studying over 1200 natural occurrences of laughter, he found that our bodies aren’t responding to punch lines, they’re responding to social connection. And even if we don’t yet understand the neurological basis of the pleasure that laughing brings us, it makes sense that we should seek out the connectedness of infectious laughter. We are social animals, after all. And if that laughter often involves some pretty childish behavior, so be it. “This is why we’re not like lizards,” Provine says. “Lizards don’t play; they’re not social the way we are. When you start to see play, you’re starting to see mammals. So when we get together and have a good time and laugh, we’re going back to our roots. It’s ironic in a way: Some of the things that give us the most pleasure are really the most ancient.”
It is practiced daily in thousands of Worldwide Laughter Clubs, a thriving network of thousands of free social laughter clubs and many more professional Laughter Yoga classes on 5 continents. An estimated 1 million people laugh every day in Indian Laughter Clubs alone!
Laughter Yoga Clubs are gatherings of people who get together just to laugh. They are led by volunteers and are fully independent, not-for-profit, non-political, non-religious, and non-competitive groups where all are welcome regardless of gender, age, physical abilities, and social or economic backgrounds.
Laughter Yoga Classes are offered to interested groups of people (e.g. with seniors in a retirement community or with the staff at a business) and are usually not open to the general public. They usually require a fee and are led by trained Laughter Yoga professionals who love to laugh and share their passion with others.
The media has been highly influential in the growth of Laughter Yoga and Laughter Clubs globally. Major television networks, radio stations and newspapers worldwide regularly cover the Laughter Yoga movement.
Laughter Yoga is extremely media friendly because it provides great visuals, amazing audio and does not go against any established interests or personal beliefs.
Ultimate Goal? World Peace The ultimate goal of the worldwide Laughter Yoga movement is health, joy, and world peace through laughter.
The practice of Laughter Yoga causes the body to release high concentrations of chemicals and hormones related to feelings of happiness, warmth, unconditional love, bonding, tolerance, forgiveness, generosity and compassion. Let’s call this a joy cocktail. The presence of this joy cocktail of hormones and neuro-peptides precludes the production of other hormones and neuro-peptides that correspond with hatred, fear, violence, jealousy, aggression and the emotions associated with war and oppression.
By practicing Laughter Yoga in groups, the amount of the joy cocktail is raised to high concentrations through the multiplier effect. People leaving Laughter Yoga sessions go out and interact with many people who are in turn affected, in varying degrees, by this powerful emotional state of joy. They in turn ‘infect’ other people they come into contact with… and so on.
World peace first starts inside every one of us. We don’t laugh because we are happy. We are happy because we laugh.
Source:laughteryogaamerica.com
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