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Developing Original Humor for Your Talk
Most humor in the real-world setting is unplanned. It just
happens. Learn three key principles for finding and creating
original humor.
Most humor in the business setting is unplanned. It just
happens. Spontaneous events with clients and co-workers create
the surprises and uncomfortable situations which call for humor
as a coping tool.
We all have differing abilities to recognize, appreciate and
create humor. How's your HQ (humor quotient)? Do you work with
people who are full of wit?
Regardless of where you are now, you can increase your humor
skills. When you study humor, it's obvious there's more to it
than just spontaneous laughs. There are times when you may want
to deliberately use humor, maybe even plan it in advance.
Perhaps you want to spice up a training session or a planning
meeting. Maybe you want to lighten up a sales presentation. You
can learn ways to administer a dose of laughter to help you
connect and communicate.
There are three elements which can help you understand and
structure your humor: surprise, tension and relationships.
First, humor is based on the element of surprise. Humor often
comes from something as simple as someone saying the unexpected.
The surprise twist creates the humor.
Because of the element of surprise, when we are deliberately
structuring a piece of humor (perhaps for a speech) we don't
want to telegraph the joke. A line like, "a funny thing happened
to me on the way over here," signals your listeners that a joke
is coming. This will lessen the element of surprise.
To enhance the surprise, it's best to place the punch line at
the end of the joke. And within the punch line, the punch word
is usually given last. The punch word is the word that makes the
humor work. It's the trigger that releases the surprise.
If your humor falls flat, do what professional humorists do.
Pretend you are serious. Since the listeners didn't realize you
were making a joke, you never need to apologize or explain it.
Turn your surprise into a secret.
It's no surprise to people who work in pressure-packed work
environments that humor is also based on this second principle:
release of tension. Laughter is a pressure valve which releases
muscle tension. Uncomfortable situations, fear and pain are all
tension builders that cry out for humor. We find ourselves
laughing at risqué humor and embarrassing situations because
they make us uncomfortable. We release the tension they create
with humor.
People who intentionally and frequently use humor know tension
can be used deliberately to heighten the impact of the humor. A
pause placed just before the punch line or the punch word builds
a sense of anticipation, a form of tension, which makes the joke
stronger.
In most jobs, daily challenges give you the opportunity to
purposely use tension in setting up your humor. Simply by
sharing a real life humorous situation, you can recreate the
spontaneous circumstances which generated the laughter in the
first place. Although there's nothing like "being there," you
can improve on the actual event by embellishing to create a
little more tension in the set up. You can structure the punch
line for maximum effect by putting the punch word last. And you
can pause to add impact.
As we plan our humor, we also notice that the third principle of
humor is relationships. Most humor is based on how things are
related and not related. We can create humorous twists when we
play with relationships.
Gary Larson's Far Side cartoons are well known for twisting
relationships. One of his frequent tools is giving animals human
characteristics. For example, the cartoon shows a car driving
down the road. Driving the car is a bull. Sitting next to the
bull is a cow. And in the back seat is a calf. They're driving
past a field with humans standing in the pasture.
The picture,
by itself, creates a funny picture by twisting the normally
expected relationships. The calf sticks his head out of the car
window and says "Yakity, Yakity, Yak!"
Understanding the principle of relationships, you are able to
create your own, original humor. You can create "shopping lists"
from which you search for humorous connections.
Let's say you had an idea for building some humor. We'll call
this idea a seed from which the humor can grow. Perhaps, on a
difficult shift at a hospital, someone made a comment that
working in a hospital was like working in a war zone. This is
the starting point for developing some humor.
You'll begin by creating two "shopping lists." On one list
you'll put "hospital things." And on the other, you'll list
"military things." It will work better if you choose "military"
rather than "war zone" because it's a broader category which
will give you more options when looking for relationships.
Your first step is to brainstorm by making the lists as long a
possible. The more items you have on each list, the more likely
you'll be able to make some humorous connections. As you make
your lists, you'll look for opportunities to branch out and
create sublists to multiply your chances of finding humor. For
example, if the idea "basic training" comes to mind, your
sublist should contain everything you can think of relating to
basic training: drill sergeants, marching, inspections.
The next step is to search for connections between your two
lists which might lead you to humor. Play with it. Then set it
aside and come back to it later. Once you find something with
humorous possibilities, you'll massage it to maximize the humor
impact.
To see what this exercise might produce:
"Why a Hospital is Like the Military."
1. In the military, soldiers take orders from people with silver
and gold on their shoulders. In a hospital, nurses take orders
from people with silver and gold in their wallets.
2. When discharged from the hospital after a Lower GI Series,
you get the GI bill.
3.,Nurses, like soldiers, see a lot of privates.
4.mWhen filling out a hospital shift report, you sometimes
resort to the policy of "Don't ask, don't tell."
5. Nurse training is like boot camp. Never before had you seen
so many bald body parts.
6. In the military, a fatigue is what you wear. In nursing, it's
what wears on you. 7. Soldiers get combat pay. Nurses
don't...but should.
Whether you're creating a list or a slogan to go on a poster,
looking for a monologue to open a speech or training session, or
just searching for one joke to make a point, you can use these
lists to create your humor. It works.
These three principles of humor are illustrated by the classic
slip on the banana peel. The slapstick spill illustrates
surprise because we weren't expecting someone to fall. We also
experience tension. When we see someone get hurt we get
startled, and react with tension. It also twists relationships.
Seeing a distinguished person sitting on the sidewalk is
something our of the ordinary. Surprise, tension,
relationships...we laugh!
Natural, spontaneous humor is one of your greatest tools for
coping with stress as you work. By understanding what makes the
humor tick, you can become better at planning and deliberately
using this powerful adjunct to your success arsenal.
About the author:
John Kinde is a humor specialist who has been in the training
and speaking business for over 30 years specializing in
teambuilding, customer service and stress management. Special
reports available: Show Me The Funny -- Tips for Adding Humor to
Your Presentations and When They Don't Laugh -- What To Do When
the Laughter Doesn't Come. Humor Power Tips newsletter and
articles are available at http://www.HumorPower.com.
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