Kahil Gibran the Persian author of The Prophet, wrote, “Your joy is your sorrow unmasked. And the selfsame well from which your laughter rises was oftentimes filled with your tears.”
Mel Brooks had a slightly different take, “Tragedy is when I get a papercut. Comedy is when you fall into an open manhole.”
William Shakespeare in Hamlet refers to it: “There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so.”
Or this: “Life is a tragedy to those who feel, and a comedy to those who think.” from Jean de la Bruyere
And this formula from Carol Burnet: “Comedy is tragedy plus time.”
A good friend of mine, Gail DeLay, who passed away a few years ago, was a gifted cartoonist and a humorous speaker. She and I nearly got thrown out of a session at the National Speakers Association convention one year because the speaker was promoting “leave behinds.” Items, like handouts, that you “left behind” after a speech. These helped people remember you, remember your message, and could perhaps lead to other bookings…
I mentioned it first to her, but she drew the cartoon… a table at the door to a room piled high with butts. And a sign above that said: Leave Behinds.
OK. I admit, this wasn’t and isn’t hilarious, but after two full days of people talking about the “serious” and “important” business of speaking… we were primed to giggle at anything. This definitely falls into the YHBT category of humor (You Had To Be There.) But illustrates Gail’s gift, of cutting through to the funny.
One of my favorite cartoons by Gail showed a man standing before St Peter at the pearly Gates of Heaven. St Peter is reviewing the man’s file and says “Hmm… a professional speaker and humorist?… Gee! It’s too bad you died. It would have made a great story.”
Richard Pryor created some of his funniest material out of the pain of drug addiction. After he recovered from setting himself on fire while freebasing cocaine, he added this to his act: “If you are running down the street with your face on fire, people will get out of your way.”
I am not suggesting that you have to get addicted to drugs, almost kill yourself or survive some peril in order to be funny. In fact, most people who survive these events don’t make anything humorous out of the experience at all.
But if you look at what you laugh at now, at the things that happened way back then. If you look at what is funny at class reunions. And at what gets brought up at family holiday get-togethers. At one time some of it was painful.
So give yourself a little time, as Carol Burnet suggests. Look within the pain as Kahlil Gibran reminds us. And we all can’t be Shakespeare, but his advice holds: good or bad - thinking makes it so.
More about mining your past next time.
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and in honor of Gail DeLay, leave your behinds at the door!
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