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In depth
Picture a room full of adults standing in a circle, clapping rhythmically, catching each other's gaze, and laughing — not at a joke, but on purpose. No punchline. No comedy routine. Just deliberate, full-bodied sound that starts out awkward and, within about ninety seconds, turns genuinely uncontrollable.
That's laughter yoga. It sounds absurd until you try it — and then it sounds absurd and you can't stop doing it.
What Is Laughter Yoga?
The method combines intentional laughing with yogic deep breathing (pranayama) and playful movement. The core premise: your body doesn't distinguish between a genuine belly laugh and one you initiate on purpose. Both activate the same physiological cascade — diaphragm engagement, oxygen intake surge, endorphin release, cortisol reduction.
You don't need jokes, comedy, or even a sense of humor. You start as a physical drill — forced, mechanical, and a little ridiculous. Within minutes, the simulated response shifts into something real, partly because looking at another person who's also faking it is inherently funny. The room's energy does most of the heavy lifting.
A typical gathering blends three elements: breathwork drawn from traditional yoga, structured laughing drills, and guided meditation. No mats, no poses, no flexibility required.
Where Laughter Yoga Came From (and Who Created It)
Dr. Madan Kataria, a Mumbai-based physician, launched the first club in 1995 with five people in a public park. His initial approach relied on shared jokes — whi...
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