Ways and methods of bringing more laughter into the world.

Monday, November 06, 2006

In the beginning there was laughter and I was born at a very young age, and already my life was a joke. Joke in the Webster’s Dictionary, has many meanings but the one that fits my life is the one that says, “a joke is something not to be taken seriously.” I have never taken my life seriously, even from the beginning. You see, I was only 4 pounds 12 ounces at birth, and everyone, mostly my family, and my friends, laughed at me. I looked like a bird, and a scrawny bird at that. The doctors should have treated me as a premature baby, but they wanted to see if I could live without that treatment.

I come from mixed parents, one mother and one father. I was so surprised at my birth that I didn’t speak for a year and a half. Right at the beginning I got the joke gene, “don’t take your life too seriously.” I realized that my life was a joke and a warning for other people. I smiled and laughed all the time, even though I was a sickly baby. When I was about a year old my parents took me to the hospital because I was very sick, the nurse looked at me and said “she doesn’t look sick,” whereupon I smiled and threw-up all over the nurse, and then really laughed. My life is a joke, and that’s how I want it. I don’t want to take my life or myself too seriously.

This is the start of a book that I have written entitled. "Laugh and Live Happier: P.L.A.Y.S for Live."

For information contract Jana Ruth at j.ruth@cox.net or 480-897-7268

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

What do you think might happen if one day every person in the world would just laugh for 15 minutes? Let me know what you think would happen.