I can start by asking the question: Are people who laugh, happy people?
It is said that laughter is the antidote to gloom and boredom. It dispels morbid ideas and is often the guarantee of good mental health.
These words that I like are from Eve Belisle whom I do not know.
I have already written two papers on boredom, perhaps I should attack the gloom?
Who doesn't like to laugh?
Better yet, to hear someone laugh?
We are talking about a sign of gaiety that is experienced through a movement of the mouth and facial muscles.
Curious! I doubt that anyone would have used this explanation, but the fact is there. What I like most are the words associated with laughter.
We laugh out loud, sometimes we laugh yellow, we giggle, we laugh like crazy. And it only reminds me that in my class, the teacher had the giggles. He could not stop laughing and the class was folded in two Sometimes we even have uncontrollable laughter. Remember, the more the merrier, right? Unfortunately, sometimes people laugh at him.
Proverbs and quotes, there are tons of them. Ideally, hearing them will make people laugh and that's the point from my point of view.
Since life is made up of ups and downs, of pleasant and unpleasant moments, then 'He who laughs on Friday, on Sunday will cry.' And if we easily go from laughter to tears, then it is John who laughs, Peter who cries.
If we speak seriously, then the famous poet, writer and physician François Rabelais will remind us that laughter is the essence of man. He will agree to remind us that in front of a deplorable situation where things go from bad to worse, we can say "it is better to laugh than to cry".
On the other hand, we must be careful because we can laugh at everything but not with anyone. Serge Gainsbourg had to say "It's better to cry about nothing than to laugh about everything. On the other hand, we like to hear children laughing heartily.
We have all known someone who is very easy to live with. He laughed all the time about everything and anything.
Sometimes we feel like laughing when we see a person playing ping pong badly, when he or she does it in a strange way.
Before I finish, I would like to mention an anecdote that happened in my Bachelor class. The teacher gave us an essay to do on the subject of Laughter.
I applied myself to it and in conclusion I wrote: And as La Bruyère said, ''Better to laugh before dying than to die without having laughed''.
While giving us back the results, the professor addresses me and says: Mister HADIDA, La Bruyère never said these words. It is more your style than his.
In other words: HE WHO LAUGHS LAST IS THE ONE WHO LAUGHS

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