Laughing matters are enjoyed
by both the young and old. But do they respond the same when they joke? Research on humor suggests that older adults
love humor more than young people, but they have more difficulty understanding
what certain jokes mean. Punch lines can be puzzling. Considering how much
language changes over the years, that makes perfect sense. After all, acronyms such
as “lol” meant “lots of love” back in the day, not “laughing out loud.” But
cognitive processes in older adults can also play an important role in their misunderstanding
humor.
What about the amount of
laughter that the young and old exhibit? Although older adults love humor more
than young people, the amount of laughter they display is less than the
laughter of young people. Some things seem less funny as they age. Older adults
also don’t like aggressive forms of humor as much as young people. They are
especially sensitive to jokes about old age. Can you blame them?
I wanted to conclude this
post with a few positive jokes about older adults or aging. Frankly, I had a
very hard time finding jokes that weren’t critical of aging and with an emphasis on
physical and mental decline. I would like to see more jokes in praise of aging
without all the stereotypes that even some older adults believe so much that
they have grown to become the stereotypes themselves. Now, new crops of young
people are perpetuating the same stereotypes and worse at numerous sites on the Internet. Eventually,
I found these two jokes to share.
Clever Hearing
An elderly gentleman had hearing problems for a number of years. He went to
the doctor and the doctor was able to have him fitted for a set of hearing aids
that allowed the gentleman to hear 100%. The elderly gentleman went back in a
month. The doctor said, "Your hearing is perfect. Your family must be
really pleased that you can hear again." The gentleman replied, "Oh,
I haven't told my family yet. I just sit around and listen to the
conversations. I've already changed my will three times!"
Best Thing
A
reporter was interviewing a 104-year-old woman.
"What do you think is the
best thing about being 104?" the reporter asked.
The
woman simply replied, "No peer pressure."
Frances Shani Parker,
Author
Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer
in Urban Nursing Homes is
available in paperback and e-book editions in America and other countries.
Hospice and
Nursing Homes Blog
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