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The
Laugh Factor: How
to Develop Your Own Unique Sense of Humor will
help you to:
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Examine
your past for clues to your own humor style.
ü
Analyze
your relationships for insights into what you consider
truly funny.
ü
Find
the humor in everyday situations that surrounds you.
ü
Discover
and develop the humor in your friends, family, and
business associates.
ü
Lighten
up a tense or dull situation in an appropriate manner.
ü
Use
humor to your social and political advantage.
ü
Develop
higher levels of communication with family and friends
through humor.
ü
Deepen
relationships using humor.
ü
Encourage
an atmosphere of joviality and fun.
ü
Differentiate
between helpful and harmful humor and always utilize
the helpful.
ü
Engage
in the subtleties and nuances of humor rather than the
cheesy, slapstick style that turns people off.
ü
Gauge
a situation as to the appropriateness of humor.
ü
Learn
to laugh at yourself, including your own failures.
ü
Tell
jokes the professional way.
ü
Get
past the "tough room".
ü
Use
humor to help dispel family problems.
ü
Raise
children properly using humor.
ü
Know
what parents are teaching their children that are
detrimental to the development of their kids’ sense
of humor.
ü
Discover
what adults can learn from babies in regards to humor.
ü
Know
why you should encourage your child’s sense of
humor.
ü
Use
humor to enhance your child’s social skills.
ü
Use
humor to save you from the drudgery of work.
ü
Know a
safe way to introduce humor at the workplace.
ü
Come
up with those inside jokes.
ü
Know
what jokes to avoid telling.
ü
Use
humor to communicate information more effectively to
your audience.
ü
Apply
humor so you can make messages easier to accept.
ü
Use
humor to live up public speaking.
ü
Be
humorous when the unexpected comes.
ü
Handle
the chatterboxes while giving your speech.
ü
Know
the simplest, most spontaneous, and contagious type of
communication ever devised.
ü
Know
the underlying reason why laughter is the best
medicine.
ü
True
story of how laughter saved a man from a
life-threatening illness.
and so much more |