Humor or cynicism – Roundtable 52

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Is laughter a priority for you? If we say we prefer sarcasm or cynicism over humor, likely we have never experienced laughter that benefits brains without taunting mental toxins.

Imagine a learning and leading circle not handcuffed to past sarcasms that exclude some, but freed with humor that benefits all! Build mental muscle that transforms sarcasm into humor that fosters learning and raises IQ for many!

People who enjoy sarcasm defend cynicism’s harsh, bitter derision as mere irony and an inevitable part of life. Many even admit to loving the zing that sarcasm snares. Some secondary schools seem to both celebrate and champion ridicule, while others crave less acute ways for wit than shocking people with sarcastic tone.

Do you favor jeers for jokes?

On one side you hear secondary faculty and students defending sharp taunts as the irony of intelligent talk. On the other side students and faculty alike run from sneering and cutting remarks that take others down in the name of sarcasm.

Like it or not – sarcasm impacts learning for entire communities, in that the human brain reshapes itself (and formats learning) one way for sardonic and another way for sincerity.

Sarcasm, some argue spikes levels and intensities of nastiness. In either case however, its use over time will numb secondary school brains to several side effects.

The Brain on Sarcasm

If you detect sarcasm in your tone or your teens, you’ll be especially interested in the far reaching mental impact of mocking, contemptuous tone, or ironic language used to convey scorn or insult. Let’s say a student arrives in class a few minutes late and the teacher stops and makes the comment, See you are here right on time again Jake! The sarcastic remark levels cortisol in Jake’s brain and in others – so that learning can literally shut down for those people.

Below are six areas of your brain that impact learning or leading in cultures that foster humor or sarcasm.

  1. BASAL GANGLIA storehouses in the brain stockpile sarcastic responses each time used. Over time, caustic humor becomes the norm in some secondary schools – in spite of its negative impact on learning and learners.
  2. SEROTONIN – The chemical for mental wellbeing decreases in the sarcastic brain, just as it increases in the generous brain.
  3. PLASTICITY – The brain’s ability to change itself – changes to take a more divisive approach to new situations – when sarcasm manifests.
  4. WORKING MEMORY (or the brain’s thimble sized capacity for new facts to resolve problems) stunts our ability to offer innovative solutions when it’s operating in sarcastic mode.
  5. CORTISOL – The dangerous toxin cortisol increases in the sarcastic brain. When irony pretends to praise a person, yet conceals sinister or scornful meanings, brains react with anger, anxiety, or disappointments. for many brains in the wake of sarcasm used, high cortisol levels literally shut out learning, lower the immune system and can even shrink the brain.
  6. AMYGDALA stores negative moods that accompany sarcasm that is directed against some. Since this seat of emotions is where you build emotional IQ with mental tools such as innovative risk-taking – it’s critical to build healthy moods that come from sincere appreciation of yourself and others.

On the other side of sarcasm’s tearing down of discovery or blocking the wonder of innovation lies sincere humor. Brain based learning cultures foster talent growth for all in a setting that can rely on trusted communication as genuine.

That’s why the Mita International Brain Center supports a brain based culture – built together – without sarcasm – and with possibilities of wonder evident for all.

Where does your secondary school culture lie on the sarcasm – sincerity scale?

See related secondary ready-to-go materials that foster humor that builds mental muscle for all,  prevent bullying, build a brain based culture at secondary, and teach tone to disagree while building goodwill with those who differ.

YOUR TURN! Join our Brain Based Circles! Would love to meet you at any of the following!

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Created by Ellen Weber, Brain Based Tasks for Growth Mindset

This tool is available on my TpT site

YOUR TURN! Join our Brain Based Circles! Would love to meet you at any of the following!

Brain Leaders and Learners Blog
Mita Brain Center Facebook
efweber on Pinterest
@ellenfweber on Twitter
ellenfweber on Instagram
Ellen Weber on Google+
Ellen Weber on LinkedIn