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Blogging at isthisthemiddle.blogspot.com while meandering the minefield of midlife. I read, write, teach, and laugh as much as possible. Not always i...
 
 
 
 

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Bring Back Silly! 7 Simple Steps

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Do you sometimes feel as though you’ve been an adult for WAY too long?

Are you tired of doing the laundry, cleaning the cat box, flossing your teeth, dragging through from day to day, always the good little worker bee, doing the nauseatingly right thing? Being responsible, paying the bills, clipping coupons, getting the tires rotated, and postponing gratification got you down? Does “fun” seem an abstract, amorphous term, a long-lost acquaintance vaguely recalled? 

Perhaps you need to get silly. The silly that is definitively NOT: steady, serious, sober, staid.

Silly is sheer delight. It’s free, mood boosting, burns calories, and lowers your carbon footprint (study results pending).

Alas, silliness, almost by definition, is hard to plan. We can’t program into our schedules: “Friday, 1:30-1:45 p.m. Get silly.”

One must get silly when the occasion arises. Carpe sillidum. I can even get silly by myself, if need be. I can chase my cats around the house, throwing cat toys, as their furry feet slip sideways, skittering around corners. I can dance my 50+ version of the robot to Cee Lo Green on Pandora. I can Tweet nonsense to the universe.

However, getting silly with others is still best. When the chance to be silly comes up while teaching a class of college students, I may take it. Learning can resume in a minute or two.

During first day of semester icebreaker interviews, a student explains that the young woman she interviewed has a tattoo of buttered toast. We went for it. The tattooed girl wriggled out of her cardigan sweater down to her sleeveless shell, and there, in full glory on her bicep, was a life-sized piece of toast with two pats of butter. I asked her if she could make it wiggle, so it would look like the butter was melting. We had a very fine silly moment. Ice was indeed broken, loudly, so much so that curious passersby peeked in the classroom door to see what they were missing.

Silliness is an art form, but it can be learned. The steps to silly:

1.       Be prepared; be alert. Silliness can happen at any time, anywhere. Silliness may even occur online, in blog posts and comments.

2.       Once a potential silly situation arises, quickly assess the value to risk quotient. Silliness in front of supervisors, mental health professionals, law officers, or pastors must be carefully weighed for potential damage to career, loss of freedom, or possible excommunication.

3.       Once cleared through the value/risk quotient, engage in silliness.  

4.        Stretch silliness to maximum length, but the short silly is typically preferable to the long silly. Leave the silly observers and participants wanting more, rather than feeling silly-sick-over-sated. Less is more for the silly scenario.

5.       Cell phone photography is encouraged, but if any video clips go viral, sharing of any royalties earned is encouraged and expected.

6.       Caution: extended sillies can cause elevated heart rate, facial flushing, or increase in eye rolling. Before silliness, check with your doctor if you have heart disease, glaucoma, or wear contact lenses.

7.       Once the silliness has subsided, resume normal adult behavior while scouting for the next silly opportunity.

The world needs more genuine silliness. Should you agree, come on! We’ll chase the rainbow of silliness together, flying our silliness flag high. We’ll face the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune all the better for having more silliness in our lives.

When was the last time you were silly?

Melanie

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SunbonnetSmart.com 670 pts

Hello there Melanie! Catching up on what I've missed the last week and this is a post I can use! I knew I had a problem, but I didn't understand I was bereft of silliness. Now it all makes sense....Thanks for a VERY creative post and a great prod toward enjoying the simple things that mean so much. I can do silly! Much Love, Fondly, Robin

elaineR.N. 566 pts

Love the silly state of being. Most of the time, I can jump onboard to someones silliness stat. The problem is never getting silly, it is getting silly when someone didn't think they were. Actually, love that too, even if someone's nose gets out of joint. Also, silliness at the wrong time or place is hard to control. Your post is a great testimonial to joy, as translated to silly. THANKS!!

HomeRearedChef 1671 pts

I have not been silly in over a month, but that is usually my tendency. I am the most silliest member int he family. That is probably why I consider myself "immature." But after reading your post here, Melanie, I think NOT! I am just a Happy Silly Individual, self-appointed, wanting nothing more than to make other laugh, even if at my expense. :)

GREAT POST, querida Amiga!

isthisthemiddle 1105 pts

There's a time and a place for seriousness, and silliness. Thanks, VV!

victorias_view 2125 pts moderator

I think about fifteen minutes ago ;) The world would be a very boring place if we didn't get a case of the sillies at least once a day!