What makes you laugh
What makes you laugh
Me Against Myself
Let’s talk about mental health.
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What Makes You Laugh? Why You Need To Be Laughing Every Day!
Laughter is a hugely underrated activity. A lot of us may do this often, but often a lot of us lose the ability to laugh when mental health issues are weighing down on us. At times, anxiety and depression can leave you gasping for air, let alone expelling excess air in a belly roaring laugh. So, what makes you laugh? And why is it important to try and do this each and everyday?
We All Have Different Laughter Triggers.
We all find different things funny. Write a list of your laughter triggers. Here’s mine:
Surround Yourself With The Right People.
People that spark joy and laughter are the best people to be around. Life is too short to be around those that are only interested in idle gossip and drama.
Make sure your circle of friends are the type that aren’t afraid to laugh at themselves and the ones that you often smile and laugh around. If they’re not, make sure you are finding company that loves a giggle too!
Laugh Each and Every Day.
It’s important to make laughter part of your every day life. Laughter releases happy endorphins, whilst reducing the levels of stress hormones such as cortisol and dopamine.
It provides a positive release of emotions, leaving you lighter and happier. It is good for you. But we, as adults, don’t do it enough.
Children laugh over 400 times a day, where as us adults laugh a lot less. Yet, we are the ones that need it the most. Try to find the laughter and humour in every day life. Look at your list, make sure you’re fitting one of these activities into your life each day.
Maybe it’s going on YouTube to watch funny videos? Or going for a drink with a friend?
Laughter connects us all, it takes away from the stresses and strains of every day life and gives us a work out with our stomach muscles! Get more laughter in your life.
You need to be laughing each and every day!
When Was The Last Time You Laughed?
If it wasn’t today, then make it your mission to have a laugh at something today! Try something from your list of laughter triggers, or go on YouTube to find a funny video compilation. Allow yourself time each and everyday to have a giggle.
Soon, you will feel the benefits of this simple, yet effective, human response.
What is a laughter trigger for you? Pop a comment below, I would love to hear from you.
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What Makes You Laugh? 5 Easy Ways to Laugh More
What’s the funniest thing you heard today, that made you lol? What makes you laugh? If you haven’t smiled or laughed today, you need these ways to laugh more.
Before the tips, a quip:
“I have six locks on my door all in a row. When I go out, I lock every other one. I figure no matter how long somebody stands there picking the locks, they are always locking three.”
See how easy it is to smile – or even laugh? Post your funniest one-liners where you can see them all the time. And, watch funny movies and comedians, such as Jeff Dunham’s Arguing With Myself. It got almost 800 five-star reviews on Amazon.com — people love that guy!
What Makes You Laugh?
The reason it’s SO important to know what makes you laugh – and to laugh often – is because of the proven health benefits of laughter. Laughing strengthens your immune system, creates better relationships, and even helps you lose weight.
Achieving your life goals or living to be 110 years old isn’t fun unless you’re happy…and laughter makes you happy!
5 Easy Ways to Laugh More
Find funny anecdotes or one-liners
Typically, anecdotes are short stories – but sometimes a one-liner is all you need. For instance, you may chuckle when you hear a 5 year old kid say, “Once I’m done with kindergarten, I’m going to find me a wife.” Plus, one-liners are easier to remember. To laugh more often, create a “laughter file” of anecdotes, jokes and comic strips. When life gets you down, read your file for a happier mood.
Funny one liners — kids’ thoughts on love:
Ask people what makes them laugh
Do you know what makes your loved ones laugh? Find out! And, remember that watching funny performances with others makes you laugh more than watching alone. Dr Sophie Scott at the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience found that laughter is contagious because of certain responses in the brain. Laughing together also builds strong bonds in groups.
So, if your family get-togethers tend to be tense, lighten things up by watching a comedian or funny video together. A bestselling comedy is Despicable Me — and I’m a huge fan of Date Night! Both movies star Steve Carell.
Be aware of the gender divide
Men and women find different types of jokes funny, says Dr Pierce J. Howard, author of The Owner’s Manual for the Brain. Men like slapstick humor more than traditional jokes (e.g., the Three Stooges or Tim Allen in Home Improvement). Dr Howard says that women enjoy jokes about relationships, the battle of the sexes, childbirth, and raising children – and they have a more “dry” sense of humor than men.
When you’re figuring out what makes your partner laugh, don’t forget these gender differences! They may be as important as the punch line.
Watch kittens, puppies, and baby humans scamper
Kittens, puppies, and babies are surefire ways to get the giggles going. Watching kittens wrestle, scamper, and hide in Kleenex boxes will tickle your funny bone – even just the thought of them makes you smile, doesn’t it? You don’t even have to spend time with “real” kids or animals to laugh more often; simply watching funny videos on YouTube is a great way to relax for a few minutes.
Don’t just ask for tickles — tickle people you love
Psychologist Randy Flanagan of Queen’s University says that you can’t tickle yourself, but if you want a good laugh you can enlist a loved one to awaken the nerves in your skin. Just make sure you’re caught by surprise, because anticipated tickles don’t usually get the giggles going. Tickles provide the additional benefit of human contact, so don’t be shy. Start a “tickle fight” with someone today!
If these tips for finding things that make you laugh don’t excite you, read Is Your Life Boring? 115 Things to Do When You’re Bored.
What makes you laugh? Comments, jokes, and one-liners welcome below!
What Makes You Laugh?
My recent post on interviewing do’s and don’ts reminded me of a peculiar question I fielded while interviewing for my last “traditional” job (i.e., pre-entrepreneurship, though I wouldn’t call any of my jobs traditional):
“What makes you laugh?”
The question caught me off guard and I fumbled for a minute trying to simultaneously assess what the interviewer was getting at and devise a suitably authentic, interesting response. Ultimately, I said what came to mind first:
You see, my sister Christina is possibly the most hilarious person on the planet. She is the only person who can have me doubled over in laughter in the most inappropriate of circumstances. She leaves me actually rolling on the floor with laughter, gasping for air — even now, on the precipice of 35 years old. Just a look from her can send me off the deep end.
But why is she so funny? What about her? What kind of humor makes me tick? This was, I presume, what the interviewer was after: how well do you know yourself?
For one thing, Christina is exceptionally quick-witted and part of her hilarity is the insane speed with which she can come up with the perfect retort. While I’m still digesting the prompt, she’s on round three of riposte. She also has a seemingly encyclopedic grasp of pop culture and personal allusion, so she’ll trot out the most obscure, perfectly-suited of references: “That’s Mr. Potato Head to you,” she’ll toss out to no one and everyone while cooking in the kitchen, a random allusion to Toy Story, or “OK, Midge,” she’ll say, off-the-cuff, referring to a Barbie we had when we were little that we classified as “uppity,” a “richie rich,” when I’ve said something snobby. It’s also her tone — unassuming and easy, though occasionally with a glint of wickedness in her eye. And she’s unintentionally or intentionally full of malapropisms that she delivers with casual conviction. Once, while cruising down Connecticut Avenue in D.C., mid-conversation, as if commenting on the weather, she saw a built muscleman running in a cropped gray hoodie:
“…Then we need to pick up the groceries. Oh look, Rocky Bullwinkle. Do you think we need more milk?”
I knew who she meant — Rocky Balboa — but for some reason her decision to make a deep cut reference to a cartoon from her childhood made me laugh so hard I almost drove the car off the road. There was also a time she told me I needed to “keep beating the horse til it was dead.” The gruesome image has stuck with me and left me giggling to myself at odd and inopportune moments, like during the consecration at Mass.
At heart, what makes me laugh in all of these instances, is her heart. Her idiosyncratic, skeptical, occasionally absurd, highly-observant way of watching and remarking upon the world, of interpreting the here-and-now through the prism of reference and memory.
And also, if I’d answered truthfully, her silliness makes me laugh. Slapstick humor. Inane, meaningless sounds — like when, on the eve of her wedding, Mr. Magpie’s knee bones crackled and popped as he climbed into a cab, and she said, in an Italian grandmother accent: “you have creaky bones” (“you hav-a da crick-eh bown-seh”) and then we spent the next 24 hours randomly blurting out “crickeh bownseh,” even just hours before she was about to tie the knot. I can be overly cerebral about things, but give me a well-timed tumble or a fatuous rejoinder, and I’m off to the races.
It’s easier for me to pinpoint what makes me cry: everything. But I am principally moved by softness in others. When I see someone do something kind, or express hurt or fear or pain, or otherwise demonstrate tenderness, I am a mush-y mess. There is something about the maskless admission of vulnerability that I find gutting, like when I saw the rabbit’s foot on Mr. Magpie’s phone. My father is not a crier, but he cannot get through the telling of a particular story that led him to dedicate the majority of his retirement years to the cause of ending veteran homelessness in Washington, D.C.: he was touring a housing facility and an amputee in a wheelchair needed assistance getting into a building on a cold, gray day, and he said: “Can somebody please help me?” As a devout Catholic, my father insists that this was the voice of God speaking directly to him. And I think this moves him. But more than that, I think it is the vision of someone desperate and in pain, admitting to his own vulnerability and need, that leaves him dabbing his eyes. The apple does not fall far from the tree. I can scarcely think of that moment or of my father’s retelling of it without my eyes welling up.
What about you? What makes you laugh? What makes you cry?
Post-Scripts: Classic Pieces.
One of you lovely Magpies (hi, Maria!) requested some additional “classic, timeless” pieces on the heels of the ones I shared in this post. I loved the provocation and thought I’d share my response in addition to a couple of other finds:
“I can tell you that I have a few shirtdresses in solids and stripes that I wear season after season. Another favorite is this J. Crew dress, which I own in the khaki color. I think it looks equally chic with pointed toe heels for a more business appropriate setting as it does with Superga sneakers for traipsing around Central Park — and even with loud, trendy mules for meeting up with friends!
Finally, if you’re looking specifically for a striped shirtdress similar to the one I shared in my original post, I also love this and this. Both are from brands whose quality I respect, and both are highly versatile. And for something timeless but maybe a bit more youthful, consider a fit-and-flare style in denim (I have a few denim dresses I wear constantly), a ladylike floral with a plunging vee, or a striped shirtdress with a slightly shorter hem.
A couple of additional “timeless” finds:
+Tweed blazer. Chic with jeans or a tailored skirt/dress.
+Classic trim pajamas. Will wear these from age 20-100.
+A sleek loafer in a neutral color.
+A pleated midi skirt. I’ve seen young women wear this sort of thing with GG sneaks and a leather jacket up here in NYC and look incredibly on-trend, and I’ve also seen older women wear these kinds of skirts with a cashmere crewneck and Chanel flats and look notably classy and refined.
+Chambray midi. This is another piece that feels a tiny bit retro in the most feminine, fetching of ways. This could be worn with lace-up slides and a white eyelet blouse for a classic early summer look — or with a silk button-down and heels for the office. I love love love a silhouette like this.
+Tortoise-shell headband. Have worn some variation on this headband since grammar school.
P.P.S. File under: random things that make me happy. I just ordered these little treat cups. I love using them when mini has playdates: I’ll cut up kiwi and berries and dole out goldfish and Bambas and put them all on a tray for the little ones to enjoy in the perfect little portions. In the past, I’ve bought them in stripes and polka dots, but how darling is the floral print?! It’s the little things, people.
P.P.P.S. I love the word skulduggery and was excited to use it here. What other words do you love (or hate)?
18 Comments
Chiming in late here, but I was reminded of that scene in The Holiday in which Jude Law’s character professes: “I am a major weeper” with the most charming British accent! Totally relate. I’ve cried reading greeting cards, watching TV commercials…
My brother never, EVER fails to make me laugh, and it’s the laugh-so-hard-till-your-belly-hurts kind of laugh. He can impersonate pretty much anyone and is so into goofy and physical comedy. My family members always know if I’m on the phone with him (we live on different continents now) because I’m always out of breath from laughing). Such a gift to have funny people in our lives! A great reminder to not take ourselves too seriously.
I have the J.Crew shirtdress in navy… totally agree that this style is so classic! I also have chambray and white linen shirtdresses (from different brands) that never feel dated.
Yes! There is just something about siblings…maybe it’s because they’ve been around us for so long that they intuitively understand what will set us off, or that we have such a deep font of shared references? Or that we think similar things are hilarious. I don’t know, but I agree that there is a uniquely uninhibited sense of humor I share with my siblings.
Love a good shirtdress, too! xx
Haha. Thanks for mentioning me. I just love your ideas and style choices. Classics are just an easy keep in my closet for those occasions. No Marie Kondo here for this purpose. So….getting the Jcrew shirt dress and trying Theory one. No chest here so Diane dresses just don’t look good 🙁
So love reading your blog.
ps. my kiddos boy 20 yo, girl 17 yo.
your college choice plans write up was great. My boy is at Harvard. We will see my daughters journey.
Thanks.
Hi Maria! So sweet of you to say; thanks for stopping by. And you must be one proud mom.
I too am deeply moved by kindness and vulnerability– which pretty much make Queer Eye impossible to watch without a box of tissues (DO NOT watch season three, episode three unless you’re emotionally prepared to cry on a level that rivals The English Patient or Flowers for Algernon). The first post I ever read of yours was the one on being a “crier”; I knew I’d found my people at that very moment.
I’m beginning to wonder if there’s a patron saint of criers (or people-who-sob-at-commericals). If so, I’m buying us matching medallions!
Matching medallions! I love that! 🙂
Oh Lord. Don’t tell me that about Queer Eye. I absolutely loved the last two rebooted seasons and cried through basically all of those episodes so I can’t imagine how much more I’ll be sobbing this go around…
I wish I could keep the funny women theme going but the funniest person I know is my husband. He knows movie quotes like I know my ABCs and will frequently throw one into conversation, incorporating the voice of the person saying the line. It helps that he is great at some impersonations. He often has me crying from laughter.
Also funny, I was recently laughing so hard that I had become silent and had just visual affects of laughter from something he said. Our dog ran over to me and proceeded to sniff and nose at me in order to check on me because he thought something was wrong, such a sweet thing that added a bit to the histrionics of it all.
HAHA!! OMG! I love the image of your dog freaking out over your noiseless laughter 🙂 Your husband sounds like a riot 🙂 Humor is such an attractive trait in a partner!
Like Anna, my mom makes me laugh so incredibly hard. She has a hilarious sense of humor and a penchant for coining terms and incorporating them throughout our conversations. One time when my aunt was going through a tough divorce, we passed a nursery named “Uncle ______’s” [i.e. the name of my aunt’s soon to be ex-husband, to me] and my mom and I nearly drove off the road in hysterical peals of laughter while making up evil-sounding names for some of the plants at the nursery. It sounds ridiculous when I type it out, but it was one of the funniest moments of my life!
My stepdaughter also has a keen sense of comic timing (at age 8!) and says/does things all the time that make me laugh so hard. I feel so blessed to have such a close relationship with her, filled with laughter.
I’d have to agree with Anna: it’s funny, in my life there are so many notably funny women and they’re the ones I think of first when asked, “what makes you laugh?”
I’m on the same page as you when it comes to what makes me cry: EVERYTHING. I’m a soft-hearted, emotional person! xo
Oh man, I am loving this funny woman theme! It sounds like you and your mom have such a special relationship, and that she is a lovely person. I can imagine the nursery jokes being hilarious, too 🙂
This reminds me of one of my favorite quotes from William Hazlitt- “Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps; for he is the only animal that is struck with the difference between what things are, and what they ought to be.”
Nothing could be more true!
WOWZA. Great quote! Thank you 🙂
I never laugh so hard as when I am reunited with my college best friends. Of the 5 of us, we each have a different sense of humor, but even a few hours with any of them has my abs hurting. In particular, one (a whip smart intellectual property lawyer) cannot keep metaphors straight and has used the phrase, “throw you under the table” on many occasion. Another has a penchant for being just ever so slightly on her own level of the world and at times not quite in tune with the rest of us – like the time she thought matzah balls were sporting equipment or when she inquired while writing deb ball thank you notes if it was wrong to call a demitasse spoon “exquisite”… this had me shooting a text off to our group this morning, counting down the days until our next reunion!
OMG, I love “throw you under the table!” Something my sister would say, too. So hilariously violent! HAHA! I’m laughing, too, right now 🙂
I love the idea of you surrounded by your best gal pals, all guards down, just having a good time. Beautiful.
Oh my goodness – that story about your father – I am blinking back tears.
Ugh, I know. Killer. I wish you knew my dad, too, because he is a tough, strong guy, so seeing how much this moment impacted him makes it even more tender. xxx
I think it’s ridiculous that there are so many men in the world who still try to claim that women aren’t funny when virtually every single woman I know is a straight-up comedian and I’ve met maybe 2 or 3 intentionally funny men. But to answer your question, I think my mom makes me laugh the hardest. She is so self-aware and SO good at laughing at herself- never afraid to make herself the butt of a joke. All she has to do is some silly little dance and I am rolling on the floor. I can only hope to be as light of heart as she is at at 65.
PS. I love the term “playing it fast and loose” and try to use it whenever possible, even in work emails. And I hate the word praxis. Just say practice. It doesn’t make someone sound smarter, it makes them sound pretentious.
What a lovely tribute to your mom. I love people who don’t take themselves too seriously — it’s infectious. It puts everyone at ease. Cheers to your mom today 🙂
And GREAT notes on words you hate/love. Going to use your choice phrase the next opportunity I have. I’ve never heard someone use the word “praxis” IRL — which is for the better, as you note.
What Makes You Laugh?
There’s an old saying,
Laugh and the world laughs with you. Cry and you
cry alone.
I don’t believe it. I know plenty of caring people who are quick to help people who are feeling down. I also know people who dismiss people who laugh a lot as being completely brainless.
And even when people do laugh that doesn’t mean they will laugh with you. As gaelikaa points out in her recent post on humor, people don’t always laugh at the same things. I’ve been lucky that way. I can still remember silly incidents from when I was a kid that my mother and I laughed about for years.
I also remember an incident that happened when my husband and I were first married. We were on a trip to England and the highlight was being able to see Hamlet played at Stratford-upon-Avon. I had loved Hamlet when I studied it in high school and couldn’t believe my luck…until I saw the performance. The acting was so poor it was funny, especially the gal who played Ophelia. A robot could have delivered her lines more convincingly.
Then when Ophelia was saying “Oh woe is me” a loud snicker rang through the room. I was thrilled…there was a kindred spirit who felt the way I did. Yeah, sure. Everyone in the room started staring at me… I had done the snickering. That made it even funnier. It was all I could do to wait until intermission to laugh. Andy shared it with me, then I went back to the hotel while he stayed for the rest of the performance. It was a family joke for years that I had to leave in disgrace. Even now if I start to feel sorry for myself it lifts my spirits to think of that wooden voice saying, “Oh woe is me.”
Many of the things that tickle our funny bone don’t make good stories. We often say, “You have to have been there.” I think it’s more than that. You also have to have seen the incident with the same quirky sense of humor. Humor is tricky because it’s so personal.
What about you? What makes you laugh? Do you still remember funny incidents years later?
21 Responses to What Makes You Laugh?
I can find humour in just about everything! It is a pity that my post on ‘humour’ has not yet appeared, but please wait a while and read it. You will see what I mean.
hehehehee Im blessed with a family that taught me laughter and humor.. and.. occasionally I get paid for it.. this.. is me
well, I suppose the only thing I could do today when something rather unusual occured with the cooked rice was to laugh!
yesterday, I cooked a cup of raw rice which makes aroundabout 4cups…I found a china type bowl (at my friends’ home, that I am housesitting) and put it all in the fridge for future use.
this morning, I was making my lunch which actually was enough but suddenly I remembered the rice and thought to bulk it out a bit (the lunch). I retrieved from fridge #2 and then discovered that is was completely frozen. NOTE: this was not the freezer section of the fridge!
Or course, it couldn’t be added 🙂 I was astounded as I had other things on that shelf in the fridge and none of them had frozen.
So I retrieved all of my food items from that fridge, juggled things around in the other smaller fridge etc…I have spent the rest of the day dealing with rice as it has slowly defrosted. As I speak 1/2 of it has made it to the smaller fridge
PG Wodehouse, especially the Bertie and Jeeves books. Peter Cook.
Jean, there has been so much talk about humour and laughter in the last few days on various interlinked blogs I am ready to cry. Please do pass me the tissues.
And then there are ‘the giggles’: Do you ever get those?
One observation, not to be taken lightly: The line between laughter and crying is a very fine one. Two sides of the same coin.
You say ‘cry and you cry alone’. Leaving aside that that is not my experience in life what’s wrong with being alone? It’s great.
To avoid confusion as to my last statement: “The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary” (which weighs a ton) will point out that ‘being alone’ is not to be confused with ‘being lonely’.
I am insufferable, I know.
U. You aren’t insufferable. You’re adorable!
Don’t know what’s funny to some, not to others. I know I see the humor later, after I was horrified when it happened.
Rummuser,
To me living without humor is like running a machine without oil. It doesn’t work as well and doesn’t last as long.
Yes, I will read your post when it comes out.
David,
Thank you! That’s my kind of humor. I looked at a couple of others and liked this one (about a party) even better: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ddZo9GEAUrg&NR=1
One of my Christmas presents to my daughter was Don’t Be Such a Scientist and this video about the party captured the idea perfectly. I’m sending the link to her.
Cathy,
That happened to me with pea soup in my refrigerator lately… for some reason it froze. Nothing else did. I tried lowering the thermostat but then my freezing compartment didn’t get cold enough. So I’m trying to notice what I put in that particular spot. I agree that laughing or getting curious is the best response.
Evan,
I don’t know why some things are so funny either. All I know is my mother and I were on the same wavelength and managed to crack one another up by saying/doing the simplest things.
gaelikaa,
That’s the sort of thing that would crack my mother and me up. I thought your post was right on, that’s why I wrote this one. I figure getting our funny bones tickled is a gift from the gods. We don’t have to analyze it, we can just accept it graciously and enjoy it.
Ursula,
I enjoy my alone time too. 🙂
The nice thing about the internet is we can’t and don’t have to read everything that passes our way. We can pick and choose. What would you rather read about?
“The line between laughter and crying is a very fine one. Two sides of the same coin.” Sure, both are emotional arousal. That’s why little kids can be deliriously happy one moment and in tears the next. Dogs are similar, enthusiastic play can easily turn into a fight. Wise adults tune into the emotional level and dial it down a notch if it looks like it’s getting too high. Unfortunately they haven’t solved the problem of how to avoid riots after highly charged sports events.
About the giggles. That’s what my mother and I used to do. Something small would trigger us off and we would giggle away. My sister was horrified and wouldn’t walk down the street with us. Presumably you would have kept far away too? 😉
bikehikebabe,
You pass on a lot of humorous e-mail messages. As I recall some people are occasionally offended even when other people think the joke is hilarious. Not all of them resonate with me but my life would be poorer without them. When Andy and I laugh out loud we pass them on to friends who might laugh too. Thank you!
Yes, Bike Hike Babe, how often do we say: “It wasn’t funny at the time …” only to then launch into telling a hilarious anecdote. As Ramana would put it “laughter with hindsight”.
One thing I have noticed that no one has yet covered the questionable “last laugh”.
What makes you laugh out loud?
coffeebelle
Registered
I love to laugh and many things just make me LOL. I often tell people how laughter is good for you. So I thought it would be fun to post things that make us laugh.
The following was sent to me by a friend and I laugh so hard every time I read it:
Why my wife won’t take me shopping
Posted on Mon Dec 14 2009 15:01:46 GMT-0700 (Mountain Standard Time) by Gopher Broke
Dear Mrs. UNOWHO,
Over the past six months, your husband has caused quite a commotion in our store. We cannot tolerate this behavior and have been forced to ban both of you from the store. Our complaints against your husband, Mr. Samuel, are listed below and are documented by our video surveillance cameras.
1. June 15: Took 24 boxes of condoms and randomly put them in other people’s carts when they weren’t looking.
2. July 2: Set all the alarm clocks in Housewares to go off at 5-minute intervals.
3. July 7: He made a trail of tomato juice on the floor leading to the restroom.
4. July 19: Walked up to an employee and told her in an official voice, ‘Code 3 in Housewares. Get on it right away’. This caused the employee to leave her assigned station and receive a reprimand from her Supervisor that in turn resulted with a union grievance, causing management to lose time and costing the company money.
5. August 4: Went to the Service Desk and tried to put a bag of M&Ms on layaway.
7. August 15: Set up a tent in the camping department and told the children shoppers he’d invite them in if they would bring pillows and blankets from the bedding department to which twenty children obliged.
8. August 23: When a clerk asked if they could help him he began crying and screamed, ‘Why can’t you people just leave me alone?’ EMTs were called.
9. September 4: Looked right into the security camera and used it as a mirror while he picked his nose.
10. September 10: While handling guns in the hunting department, he asked the clerk where the antidepressants were.
11. October 3: Darted around the store suspiciously while loudly humming the ‘Mission Impossible’ theme.
12. October 6: In the auto department, he practiced his ‘Madonna look’ by using different sizes of funnels.
13. October 18: Hid in a clothing rack and when people browsed through, yelled ‘PICK ME! PICK ME!’
14. October 21: When an announcement came over the loud speaker, he assumed a fetal position and screamed ‘OH NO! IT’S THOSE VOICES AGAIN!’
And last, but not least: 15. October 23: Went into a fitting room, shut the door, waited awhile, then yelled very loudly, ‘Hey! There’s no toilet paper in here.’ One of the clerks passed out.
Now its your turn have fun and enjoy the laughter.
«Go confidently in the direction of your dreams, live the life you always imagined.» Thoreau