Humor in Psychotherapy
>> Sunday, September 25, 2011
It is my belief, you cannot deal with the serious things in the world unless you understand the most amusing. – Winston Churchill
Humor is Helpful
According to the Association for Applied and Therapeutic Humor www.aath.org , humor is “any intervention that promotes health and wellness by stimulating a playful discovery, expression or appreciation of the absurdity or incongruity of life’s situations.” Goldin and Bordan, leaders in the counseling field, indicate they both plan to use humor as well as use it spontaneously.
Humor can be useful in therapy in two ways – as an assessment tool
- Strengthen the rapport between the client and counselor
- Facilitate communication, keep the client focused and make the counseling process more interesting
- Assess the client’s degree of psychological functioning
- Enable the client to change to a more useful perspective by seeing the world’s absurdities
- Offer the client a less painful perspective of a painful problem
- Add to the client’s social repertoire and coping tools
- Reduce stress and tension during the therapy session
“The only normal people are the ones you don’t know very well.” – Joe Ancis
Humor must be used properly to be most effective. If humor is used too soon, the counselor might be viewed as someone who is insensitive to the client’s concerns. Goldin and Bordan explain that humor can be inappropriate in counseling under certain conditions:
- When it is experienced as disrespectful or could offend the client
- When it makes a client feel they are not being taken seriously
- When it is used to frequently and becomes boring
- When the counselor uses it to avoid dealing with client anxieties
- When a client views it as irrelevant to his or her reasons for being in counseling
- When it is inappropriately timed
There are many ways to use humor in counseling without needing to be a comedian. One of the key ingredients for humor is the ability to be childlike (Godfrey, 2004). Specifically, a counselor, coach or other healing professional could:
- Ask your client, “How would an 8 year old see this situation?” to
help your client reframe the issue into a less troublesome perspective - Encourage your client to keep a humor journal every night or once a week recalling things that made them laugh or an amusing incident that happened that day
- Encourage your clients to watch funny films , read joke books and attend comedy shows
- Ask your clients to share an amusing anecdote or observation during the session
- Give the client a cartoon that touches on the problem in a more playful way
- Set up your office with humorous stimuli such as books, calendars, cartoons, props and posters to improve the wait and cheer up your clients
- Write a laughter prescription asking your client to read their favorite comic strip every morning with coffee
- Ask your client to develop a Humor First Aid Kit including things that make her laugh or bring a smile to her face
- Start a “smiles-to-go” jar filled with humorous quotes and anecdotes that clients can take when they arrive or leave your office
In order to share the lighter side of life with others, it helps if you actively seek out things that make you laugh.
References:
Association for Applied and Therapeutic Humor
Godfrey, J.R. (2004). Toward optimal health: The experts discuss therapeutic humor. Journal of Women’s Health, 13, 474-479.
Goldin, E. & Bordan, B. (1999). The use of humor in counseling: The laughing cure. Journal of Counseling & Development, 77, 405-410.
Goldin, E., Bordan, B., Araoz, D.L., Gladding, S.T., Kaplan, D., Krumboltz, J. & Lazarus, A. (2006). Humor in counseling: Leader perspectives. Journal of Counseling & Development, 84, 397-404.
McGuire, P. (1999). More psychologists are finding that discrete uses of humor promote healing in their patients. APA Monitor, 30 (3).
Reynes, R.L. & Allen, A. (1987). Humor in psychotherapy: A view. American Journal of Psychotherapy, 61, 260-270.








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