Most of my fav. stand-ups are probably introverts, fwiw.
For What It's Worth
spirilis, when I read your response, I had already forgotten that I asked that question and thought you were giving your opinion on the article I posted and just hadn't finished your sentence. Like...
spirilis: "For What It's Worth........"
<crickets chirping>
Fabulous wankers imbibe whiskey.
I think a sense of humor relies upon a joie de vivre
Actually it is extroverted people who are supposedly funnier than introverted people. That's the correlation I have seen, at least...
I haven't found that to be the case. Jokes by extroverts usually get the polite smile from me, or a polite chuckle if I'm feeling charitable. But jokes by introverts are usually dry and more original and half of the fun is seeing the subtle wit go way over the heads of all the extroverts in the room.
I haven't found that to be the case. Jokes by extroverts usually get the polite smile from me, or a polite chuckle if I'm feeling charitable. But jokes by introverts are usually dry and more original and half of the fun is seeing the subtle wit go way over the heads of all the extroverts in the room.
So, my question is, how do I develop a sense of humor? My parents were very serious, formal, no-nonsense kind of people so I never got it from them. I hate being a robot.
I know everyone will recommend spending time with funny people (I've been trying to find them among my circle of sarcastic scientists) and maybe watching sitcoms. Is that really going to help? What else can I do?
Part of it is that I just don't find a lot of things funny. Bodily humor, I don't enjoy. I don't really like sarcasm and I try not to use it myself, since I find it pessimistic. I mostly enjoy clean, smart jokes, and interesting word usage in unexpected situations (like Mad Libs). Maybe SJ humor was more prevalent pre-1960s; I find earlier TV and writing more funny than whatever's on TV these days.
I do enjoy some of the witty banter here on some of the lighter threads and wish that I could do that myself! If only I knew the right thing to say. I can never come up with a response fast enough, and I seem to think of responses too slowly.Maybe S humor and N humor are different?
I actually don't think any comedians are funny.
I thought R&J was a comedy.I prefer stand-up tragedians.
You know, the ones that start off, "Hey, great to be here, only because it lets me escape from my real life where I'm in love with a girl whose parents are trying to seperate us and I doubt we'll ever have the happiness that we in life crave."
I'll be the first to admit that I'm not entirely happy with the type I was born with. I'm overly serious, I take everything personally,
and I don't joke around with others. I admire people who can keep up witty repartee.
So, my question is, how do I develop a sense of humor? My parents were very serious, formal, no-nonsense kind of people so I never got it from them. I hate being a robot.
I know everyone will recommend spending time with funny people (I've been trying to find them among my circle of sarcastic scientists) and maybe watching sitcoms. Is that really going to help? What else can I do?
Part of it is that I just don't find a lot of things funny. Bodily humor, I don't enjoy. I don't really like sarcasm and I try not to use it myself, since I find it pessimistic. I mostly enjoy clean, smart jokes, and interesting word usage in unexpected situations (like Mad Libs). Maybe SJ humor was more prevalent pre-1960s; I find earlier TV and writing more funny than whatever's on TV these days.
I do enjoy some of the witty banter here on some of the lighter threads and wish that I could do that myself! If only I knew the right thing to say. I can never come up with a response fast enough, and I seem to think of responses too slowly.Maybe S humor and N humor are different?
I'll be the first to admit that I'm not entirely happy with the type I was born with.