Finding Humor in the Unscripted Moments

What makes you laugh?

It’s a simple question, isn’t it? The kind that feels like it should have an easy, ready-made answer. A list, perhaps. A few dependable go-tos. Something neat and repeatable.

But the truth is, laughter doesn’t really work like that.

For me, it’s rarely the obvious punchline. Rarely the polished joke. It’s not the thing that tries to be funny that gets me. It’s the moment that isn’t trying at all.

Mrs Bob, for instance.

Sometimes—very occasionally—she’s intentionally funny. A well-timed comment, a dry observation, the kind that lands clean and you have to give it to her. Those moments exist. I won’t deny them.

But more often, it’s not that.

It’s the in-between bits. The things she says without realising. The way a sentence comes out slightly sideways. The look that follows when she knows—just a second too late—what she’s said. That’s where the laughter lives.

And the strange part? You couldn’t script it if you tried.

That’s the thing about what makes us laugh. It’s not just the content—it’s the context. Timing. Familiarity. History. It’s knowing someone well enough that the smallest deviation from their “normal” becomes unexpectedly brilliant.

Laughter, I think, is recognition.

It’s that moment when something feels both surprising and completely true at the same time. When the world slips slightly out of alignment, just for a second, and you get to notice it.

And maybe that’s why it’s hard to manufacture.

Because the more you try to force it, the more it slips away. Real laughter tends to arrive uninvited. It shows up in the middle of ordinary moments. In conversations that weren’t meant to be funny. In people just being themselves.

Especially the ones you know best.

So what makes me laugh?

Not much, if we’re talking about the obvious stuff.

But also… quite a lot, if you know where to look.

Stay Safe

Bc

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About Bob W Christian

Bob W Christian has been writing poetry for more than 20 years. He started as a way to help to process his thoughts and emotions as an autistic man, and to address the impact of CPTSD. As he wrote, and slowly gained the confidence to share his poems, he was given incredibly positive feedback, which spurred him to write more. During that time, he has written six books, and had numerous guest publications in books and magazines around the world. His work has earned several accolades recently, including recognition in the Dark Poet’s Club 2025 competition. Alongside poetry, Bob enjoys photographing nature and birds, and is often praised for his keen eye behind the lens. A husband, father and grandfather, he regularly shares his observations, reflections and creative work through his personal blog, The Ramblings of Bob Christian.

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