Crack
Me Up
Humor
in relationships is touchy: Laughter can bring you closer,
or it can pack a cruel punch. How to avoid the pitfalls and
use humor to strengthen your bond. By :Polly Schulman
"The first time I ever slept with Jen, I said afterwards,
'So, do I get the job?' " says Steve Bartoo, 37, an information
technology specialist. Rather than throw him out, she laughed.
"I never thought I'd be comfortable enough with anybody
to be funny about that—where it's part of the magic,"
he says.
"For
years my friend Justin kept telling me, 'You've got to meet
Steve, he's hilarious,' " says Jennifer Pinkowski, 33,
a writer. "Turns out he was right. Steve is the funniest
person I know. That's a big reason why I married him."
Steve
and Jen fell in love by cracking each other up—an experience
we all seem to be searching for. When people list the qualities
they desire in a partner, sense of humor consistently shows
up near the top. Whether dating or married, the more a person
likes his or her partner's sense of humor, the more satisfied
he or she will be with the relationship. As the sultry cartoon
character Jessica Rabbit said when asked what she saw in her
husband, funny-bunny Roger: "He makes me laugh."
But a
sense of humor hardly solves all problems of the heart, cautions
Rod Martin, a psychologist at the University of Western Ontario.
On the contrary, humor in relationships can cut both ways.
Funny people, like babes and hunks, seem more attractive at
first. Over time, though, the thrill wears off. Besides, relying
on jokes to work through deep relationship dynamics can be
dangerous: Humor can pack a nasty punch.
Humor
As A Tool
"Humor
is a tool like any other," says Robert L. Weiss, a psychologist
at the University of Oregon who studies humor in relationships.
"People use humor in lots of different ways, including
some negative ones. It's not just one monolithic thing."
Almost every sweet, supportive way of using it has an evil
twin; an aggressive, selfish or manipulative version. And
like those teasing comments in the workplace that can just
as easily feel like flattery or an attack, the two sides of
humor are so intimately intertwined, it almost isn't funny.
We've
probably all had the experience of a partner who makes hostile
quips about our least favorite qualities—our klutziness,
shyness, love handles. Joking and goofing undermine intimacy
in subtler ways as well. If your partner makes a joke to change
the subject whenever you bring up finances, you might not
even notice that he's trying to be funny. You'll just wonder
why the two of you never seem to talk about the important
things you disagree about.
A joke's
basic structure—in which you say one thing and mean
another—is exactly what makes it such a useful tool
in human relationships. "Humor is inherently ambiguous.
That's how it works. You're saying more than one thing, and
it's never clear exactly what the message is," says Martin.
It allows us to put out ideas in a tentative way, and change
them if they're not well received. It's a flexible communication
strategy, a way of exploring the conversational terrain.
Elizabeth
Gifford, a physician, used that strategy to float the idea
of marriage mere weeks after she and her boyfriend began dating.
She knew as soon as they started going out that he was "the
one," she says, and she wanted to find out whether he
was thinking along the same lines—without freaking him
out. "Honey, should we have the wedding in Birmingham
or Brooklyn?" she asked. He played along with the joke,
signaling that he was open to discussing marriage. If he'd
reacted badly, she could have taken it back easily: "Scared
you there, didn't I?"
Humor
can bring lovers together, which is probably one of its clearest
benefits. Howard Markman, a psychologist who works with couples
in Colorado, likes to start his "Love Your Relationship"
retreats with a joke or funny video. "When people are
laughing together, they feel more positive toward each other.
They're more likely to give each other the benefit of the
doubt," he says. This may be the most unambiguously positive
use of humor. It's hard to see a downside, except maybe annoying
your friends with lovey-dovey in-jokes.
Sometimes
a well-timed joke can defuse a tense situation before it escalates.
Dianne Spoto, a teacher and horse trainer in the New York
Catskills, recalls a particularly heated argument with her
husband, Franco. Dianne, who is much smaller than he is, ran
up to him and licked his nose, stopping the fight dead in
its tracks.
Humor
also can change the mood or introduce another point of view.
"When I was in a state of yearlong depression and feeling
like the world was wiping its feet on me daily, my boyfriend
used to look at me very seriously and say, 'Nobody likes you.'
I found it hysterical," says Lizzie Skurnick, a blogger
in Baltimore. By exaggerating her dismal view of the world,
her boyfriend gently let her know that he thought it unrealistic,
and helped her get a bit of perspective on her depression.
But there's
a fine line between calming a partner down and blowing him
or her off. When a couple falls into a pattern of demand and
withdrawal, says Weiss, one partner—often the man—will
deploy a joke to avoid addressing problems or to let his partner
know he's not going to deal with her demands. A woman reminds
her partner to do the laundry, and he hums the NFL theme,
as if to say, "I have a football game to watch. No way
I'm doing laundry now." The joke is funny the first time,
but it gets old fast, points out Amy Bippus, a professor of
communications studies at California State University in Long
Beach.
Unfunny
jokes became a recurring problem for Sally Eckhoff, a painter
in Saratoga Springs, New York. "I finally convinced my
husband that I needed some help, goddamn it—I can't
do everything alone," she says. "So once in a while,
he'd hold the point of my elbow and steer me with it. And
he'd say, 'I'm helping you!' " The couple are now divorcing.
The ambiguity
of humor also allows people to express hostility without taking
responsibility. "Just kidding," they'll say, after
delivering a punch line that feels more like a sucker punch.
Often the very same comments can seem either supportive or
undermining, affiliative or hostile, depending on the context
and the dynamic. "Where you draw the line between healthy
and unhealthy uses is very unclear," says Martin.
The difference
is not just in what the speaker means to say, but in how the
listener takes it, argues Bippus. Good intentions aren't necessarily
enough to take the sting out of a mistimed joke—the
listener has to give the joker credit for good intentions.
Suppose
you're getting dressed to go out and your boyfriend says,
"You're wearing that? I'd better bring my sunglasses!"
You might take the comment as a light-hearted warning or as
an expression of hostility, says Bippus. If the comment is
hostile, it may be a signal that he wants to control your
wardrobe—or even worse, control you. In that case, you
won't think he's very funny. But, says Bippus, "if you
think that the person has a helpful motive for using humor,
that he's using it for your sake and not for his"—to
save you from public embarrassment, say—"you're
liable to give him the benefit of the doubt."
When Bippus
videotaped 50 couples discussing a conflict and asked them
to identify when they and their partner used humor during
the discussion, she found that humor seemed to be helpful:
The more the partners noticed it—and the funnier they
found it—the more progress they felt they had made with
the conflict. This seems to support the Roger Rabbit Effect.
However, Bippus cautions, it's hard to tease apart cause and
effect. Perhaps wagwits really are happier lovers. But it's
also possible that happy relationships put people in a laughing
mood. If you get along with your partner, you'll be less likely
to take offense when she teases you about losing your keys
for the third time this week.
He-Said,
She-Said
It may
start to sound like the same old he-said, she-said story,
but gender differences in humor aren't as predictable as they
might seem. In Bippus' study, for example, the men on average
perceived more humor in the couples' conversations, but the
women produced more humor, contradicting the stereotype that
men are the funnier sex.
Nonetheless,
a few themes emerge. Many women tend to use humor as a way
of enhancing the relationship, says Martin, while men may
use it to enhance their own persona. At a family dinner, for
example, a woman may retell a story of a comic moment they
all shared last Thanksgiving. A man might be more likely to
treat the guests as his audience and play for laughs. Along
these lines, Mary Crawford, a professor of psychology and
women's studies at the University of Connecticut, found that
men liked jokes and slapstick better than women, while women
tended to find more humor in collaborative storytelling.
"Sometimes
the way guys express closeness to other guys is through humor
that puts people down. When they try to use the same kind
of humor with the women in their lives, it doesn't come across
the same way," says Markman.
So, are
women from the Oxygen Network and men from Comedy Central?
Probably not, says Crawford—the differences are less
about testosterone and more about context. After all, men
still tend to have higher status in our society, and many
studies have shown that people with power use humor differently
than do their underlings. "You could say it's a way men
talk, but it may be a way that higher-status people talk,"
says Crawford. When the boss cracks a joke, everybody chuckles;
when his assistant wants to make a suggestion or offer criticism,
she tempers it with self-deprecating humor.
As anyone
who's worked with a jokester boss can attest, humor is very
much in the eye of the beholder, and what's intended as a
witty remark may fall miserably flat or even seem cruel in
the context of a difficult or imbalanced relationship. That's
true in romantic relationships too, agree psychologists: Trouble
with humor is more likely to be a symptom than a cause of
difficulty. It's all about, well, timing. If your significant
other can't take a joke, take a good look at your own motives
for making it. Were you really trying to be helpful? Perhaps
this isn't the right moment—or the right topic—for
humor.
Still,
says Bippus, humor is an important and very flexible communication
strategy, so don't shy away from it. It's also a big part
of what makes us human. "Once, when my sister put on
gorilla socks, the dog attacked her feet," says Bippus.
"A person would have laughed instead. We can see incongruity
as something other than threatening." When it's used
well, humor helps us to put ourselves in perspective, to see
past our fears and sorrows and to reach out to the people
we love with a light touch instead of a heavy hand. Maybe
Jessica Rabbit had the right idea after all.
Publication:
Psychology Today Magazine
Publication Date: Jul/Aug 2006
Last Reviewed: 27 Jun 2006
(Document ID: 4096)
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