Laughter really is the best medicine
Jeffrey Briar may prove the old maxim that laughter is the best
medicine.
Briar has started the Laguna Laughter Club, a group that gathers
several mornings a week at the Heisler Park gazebo to practice
intentional laughter, a yoga exercise to relieve stress.
Fourteen people ranging from ages 17 to 80-plus gathered at the
gazebo at 7 a.m. last week to work out their laughter muscles.
Briar, a Laguna local, has studied and taught yoga since he was
18. He recently became interested in the art of laughter yoga, and
wanted to introduce it to Laguna Beach. He decided to start the club
after training in Switzerland with Dr. and Mrs. Madan Kataria, a
couple from India who invented Laughter Yoga.
“I concur with the Hindu philosophy that it is our nature to be
joyful and happy, and laughter is a really fast way to get there,”
Briar said.
The laughter yoga practices consists of breathing, stretching, and
laughing to release stress, become happier, as well as benefit other
parts of the body.
The club session starts with a series of stretches to loosen the
body. Breathing exercises follow, with some laughter connected to
different breathing forms. Next is the longest and most important
part of the session -- the laughter. Cool down breathing and
stretching exercises to finish the
session.
The laughing part starts with clapping and chanting
ho-ho-ha-ha-ha. The clap is a fingertip-to-fingertip, and
palm-to-palm clap, which stimulates trigger points in the hands.
Chanting “ho” and “ha” enthusiastically helps increase energy, Brair
says. “Ho-ho-ha-ha-ha” is chanted in between different kinds of
laughs.
There are three different categories of laughter, according to
Briar: Yogic, playful, and value-based. Yogic laughter is based on
different yoga poses; playful laughter encourages playfulness, which
helps get rid of shyness; and value-based laughter has special
meaning added to gestures while laughing.
Just learning about all the different kinds of laughing involved
in Laughter Yoga is enough to make one giggle.
Some of the different laughs used in the session are: the lion
laugh, greeting laugh, forgiveness laugh, un-payable bill laugh, Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde laugh, shaking hands laugh, and judgment laugh.
These laughs are conducted while performing different physical
motions and movements. For example, the judgment laugh is laughing
while shaking your finger at the person next to you.
Some laughs associated with their actions include high-pitched
laughs, or low-pitched “scary” laughs -- as with the Dr. Jekyll and
Mr. Hyde laugh -- and some are “normal” laughs. The reason for doing
more than one kind of laughter is to release the stress and tension
from different parts of your life and emotions, Briar says.
Laughter has become serious medicine, and doctors around the world
are studying its benefits.
Laughing and stretching have been proven to decrease blood
pressure, release endorphins and neuropeptides, decrease asthma
attacks, increase antibodies and serotonin, improves the immune
system, is an antidote for depression, and alleviates arthritic pain,
according to Briar.
A recent study done at the University of Graz, Austria by Dr.
Llona Papousek, has shown that laughter yoga is beneficial for stroke
patients because it lowers blood pressure. Another study by Thomas
Flindt used an Artificial Intelligence Respiratory
Psychophysiological Analysis System to test the difference in stress
levels before and after laughter yoga sessions. His study showed a
significant decrease in the stress level of the people who did
laughter yoga compared to the people who did not.
“It’s scientifically proven that if you put your body into the
movement of certain emotions, you will create all the physiological
affects of having that emotion,” Briar said. “So if you put your body
into happiness practices, you will have happiness. It may be hard to
believe, but just try it, and see how you feel.”
Briar first heard about laughter yoga from a student of his. For
the past four years, he has been teaching various classes at Irvine
Valley College including yoga, film appreciation, and creative
writing. He also teaches exercise classes for people who need to sit
or are in wheel chairs. He first got interested when he heard that
there were hundreds of people in India participating in laughter
yoga.
“One of my students told me there were these classes in India
where, in a park, 200 people laughed for an hour,” Briar said, “And
the neighbors didn’t really like it because they were being woken up
at six in the morning.
“Another student told me there was a documentary on the laughing
clubs of India. I found this documentary, it was called Laughter
Yoga, and I did a web search, and I found www.laughteryoga.org.
“I saw there were some training sessions, and workshops, so I
decided I wanted to learn this work.”
The Katarias, who invented laughter yoga, hold training sessions
all over the world. Briar wanted to attend one of these, so in April,
he went to Switzerland for a training session with the creators of
Laughter Yoga, Dr. Madan Kataria, and Mrs. Kataria. Briar also
trained with a man in Los Angeles who had trained with Dr. Kataria as
well.
During his training session with Dr. Kataria, Briar was struck by
two things he noticed about the variety of international people
training to become laughter yoga instructors.
“On the third day, all the prejudices between everyone
disappeared,” Briar said. “The Hebrew people from the Middle East
loved the Muslim people from the Middle East.
“On the fifth day, we got in touch with sadness and there was a
woman who asked if we would be sad with her, so we all started
crying, and then, it turned into laughter. It wasn’t like we forced
it, it was just beautiful.
“When you allow yourself to get into the experience of your
emotions, whatever the emotion is, it can evolve into what is our
nature, which is to be joyful and happy, and you release that energy,
and one way we release energy is through laughter.”
The Katarias have created an international network of laughter
yoga clubs. These clubs exist in many different countries around the
world from Iceland, to Egypt to Hong Kong, and many places in
between.
Briar is not just a yoga teacher and laughter yoga teacher. He is
also an accomplished pianist, actor, and composer. He has accompanied
many theatrical performances, and performed in chamber music
ensembles, theater orchestras, and solo concerts throughout Europe
and North America.
The Laguna Laughter Club meets every Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday
at 7 a.m. at the Heisler Park Gazebo. Information: (949) 376-1939
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