Today’s Solutions: April 09, 2025

Mary Desmond Pinkowish | August 2009 issue
The benefits of humor are obvious at the Gateway Café, a project of the University of Rhode Island for adults with traumatic brain injuries (TBI). The Gateway has an open-door policy for people with head injuries, who are invited to spend time and connect socially with others in the same situation. “People with TBI typically lose about 90 percent of their friends in the year after the TBI,” says Professor of Communicative Disorders Dana Kovarsky, who co-founded the program and runs it with the help of other faculty members and graduate students in the department. TBI patients become isolated because their disabilities often keep them from activities they enjoyed with their friends. The problem is compounded if they have trouble speaking.
Kovarsky is assessing how brain-injured people use laughter to connect with others. He found that laughter promotes both positive and negative public self-image, or “face.” Both types of face are important—and not just to people with TBI. Positive face is a measure of a person’s desire to be accepted by others; negative face is a measure of a person’s desire to be accepted on one’s own terms. “Both are important for people with brain injuries,” Kovarsky says. “And laughter builds both types of face, or public self-image” through the way it facilitates engagement. People with brain injuries want to be seen as equal to others and be as independent as possible.
This is demonstrated by teasing that goes on in these sessions. The patients with TBI in Kovarsky’s program are predominantly male, and many of the graduate students are female. As in any social situation involving men and women, teasing is common. For people with TBI, a willingness to tease and be teased is a sign that they want to be treated like anyone else. The joking, flirting and teasing triggers laughter, and laughter “promotes solidarity and face-building,” says Kovarsky.

Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Colombia sets precedent to protect uncontacted Indigenous communities and bio...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a landmark decision, Colombia created its first officially recognized territory dedicated to safeguarding Indigenous peoples living in ...

Read More

Effective stress management: trade in the ‘fight or flight’ response for ‘ten...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM When we experience stress, most of us are familiar with the fight-or-flight response. Our bodies prepare to face ...

Read More

3 ways to get the most benefits out of your daily walk

During the pandemic, walking has become many people's new workout? With fitness facilities closed, people got a little more creative with how to stay ...

Read More

New York Governor protects transgender youth’s right to transition-related care

New York Governor Kathy Hochul took an important step toward preserving the rights of transgender adolescents on Sunday, June 25th, by signing legislation to ...

Read More