- 47 followers
- 1450 posts
- 272 comments
- All Time: 2,781,900
- Today: 1,526 (13:01 UTC-7)
- Yesterday: 6,086
- This Month: 50,099
- Last Month: 180,662
Happy Thoughts Travel Fast (HTTF)
Humor is infectious. It lightens burdens, inspires hope, connects us to others, increases our insight, keeps us grounded, focused, alert, and happy. Laughter is a universal language that stimulates both sides of the brain. It allows us to get messages quicker and remember them longer. We all learn more when we are having fun. Writing this blog is a creative exploration in sharing thoughts that make us laugh, smile, or think. Welcome and have a nice day!
Monday, July 13, 2026
What Happens When You Seize The Day?
Saturday, July 11, 2026
What Is Your Play Signature?
People express play differently. Some create imaginary worlds. Some make puns. Some invent rituals. Some transform tension with one exquisitely timed sentence. Others conduct small domestic operations involving googly eyes, ransom notes, or the relocation of an object by two inches each day.
No one is always playful. That would be sheer hyperbole. Often enough is sufficient for a recognizable pattern.
These patterns are best understood as play signatures, rather than permanent personality types. A signature is recognizable without being fixed. It changes with trust, culture, age, stress, and relationship. You may play differently with a child, a partner, a sibling, a colleague, a friend, or a dog who has been appointed regional manager of the kitchen leftovers department. πΆ
Read the following descriptions and notice where you recognize yourself.
1. The Recognition Player
Recognition Players show affection by noticing.
They remember the expression you make before disagreeing politely. They know which phrase will make you laugh during a difficult conversation. They notice the salient detail everyone else omitted.
Their humor is specific. A generic joke has limited value to them. They prefer the joke that could only have been made for this person, within this relationship, at this moment.
Inside jokes belong here. To everyone else, the reference may remain illusive. To the two people in on the joke, the file is complete.
The loving message beneath Recognition Play is: I see the details that make you you.
This form of play is attention wearing a party hat. It is also one of the clearest expressions of a principle explored in the article “Humor is Love”: we love a person rather than a type of person, and the humor that reaches us most deeply is often equally specific.
2. The World-Maker
World-Makers express affection through imagination.
They give objects personalities. They invent histories for strangers seen across a restaurant. They create voices for animals and assign motives to malfunctioning appliances. A delayed flight becomes a territorial dispute between the airport and time itself.
The R46 Stick Figures live naturally in this field. A few lines and a heart create enough structure for an entire philosophical thought experiment. The reader supplies what the image deliberately leaves open.
A joke may also function as a seed without literally being one. Something said casually at breakfast may grow into a family character, a yearly tradition, or a story repeated for decades. The original moment disappears from view, while its form continues living elsewhere.
The World-Maker’s message is: Your imagination is a place I enjoy visiting.
World-Making Play loves by helping playfulness love on.
3. The Benevolent Mischief-Maker
Benevolent Mischief-Makers create safe surprise.
They hide a gift and leave clues. They put eyes on household products. They compose ransom notes for toys. They answer an ordinary question with something dramatically unnecessary.
In an early Raising Funny Kids essay, I described hiding my children’s toys and sending ransom notes because my son found the operation hilarious. The game worked because he understood its structure. The toy was safe. The parent was trustworthy. The apparent crisis existed entirely for shared amusement.
This is the ethical foundation of good mischief. Surprise creates excitement, while the relationship preserves security.
The Benevolent Mischief-Maker’s message is: I know where your boundaries are, and I know how to surprise you inside them.
This form of play depends upon timing, social perception, and restraint. Loving mischief protects dignity, welcomes refusal, and leaves everyone with a story worth keeping.
The finest prank increases affection and produces minimal paperwork.
4. The Reframer
Reframers help other people carry difficult moments.
They hear the strain in a conversation and find the one absurd detail that gives everyone room to breathe. They turn a frustrating experience into a story. They recognize that an event can remain serious while the people living through it retain permission to laugh.
When the first interpretation turns everyone to stone, the Reframer quietly supplies Plan B.
This capacity is central to the philosophy of Happy Thoughts Travel Fast. Humor changes our relation to a moment by restoring levity where thought has become rigid. It introduces another angle without erasing the underlying experience. It lightens burdens, inspires hope, and connects us to others by making more than one interpretation available.
The Reframer’s message is: You do not have to hold this alone or in only one way.
A difficult day can also contain a ridiculous email. Grief can coexist with a story that makes the whole family laugh. A failed plan can become the origin story of an unexpectedly good adventure.
Sometimes love rewrites The Night Before Christmas π and replaces all the characters with the ongoing jokes the family shared when they were playing poker ♥️ drunk as π¦¨
Reframing is affection expressed as regained perspective.
5. The Idea Player
Idea Players show love by inviting minds to move together.
They enjoy riddles, puns, philosophical questions, speculative scenarios, unusual comparisons, and arguments conducted with enough warmth that everyone still gets dessert. They may ask what Socrates would think of social media, whether a Wi-Fi password constitutes domestic intimacy, or whether Snow White’s dwarfs are separate individuals or competing dimensions of one consciousness.
For the Idea Player, thinking together is closeness.
They may prolong the game by asking for one more premise, followed by another, followed by a rule explaining why the previous premise applies. The conclusion waits patiently while the conversation continues. The delay is not necessarily resistance. Sometimes the path around the conclusion is where all the interesting things are located.
The same mind may be considered disruptive in a classroom, difficult in a seminar, and delightful over dinner. The activity has retained its origin while acquiring a different social function.
In “Fostering Playful Humor,” I wrote about playful forms requiring children to consider alternate modes of expression and combine ideas that ordinary categories keep apart. This is the intellectual movement behind Idea Play.
The Idea Player’s message is: Your mind interests me, and I want to see where it goes.
They are frequently accused of overthinking. They regard this as an opening proposition.
6. The Ritual Player
Ritual Players build affection through repetition.
They create the song sung every birthday, the phrase used before a family trip, the dance performed when dinner turns out well, the annual photograph, the recurring joke, the secret handshake, or the household rule that someone must announce “Release the hounds” before letting out one extremely small dog.
Repetition turns a playful act into shared history.
The Ritual Player’s message is: I remember us, and I intend to keep remembering.
These rituals often appear trivial to outsiders because outsiders lack the accumulated context. Within the relationship, they function as compressed memory. One phrase can retrieve an entire holiday, friendship, marriage, childhood, or chapter of family life.
The ritual may move from spoken words to a message, from a message to a drawing, from a drawing to a tradition. The forms are visibly different, yet a common structure remains.
Ritual Play gives continuity a recognizable sound.
Business As Play
I laughed when I found this photograph, mostly because it brought back good memories of hanging out in Jamaica with my brother on vacation.
Then I turned it over. On the back, one of our friends had written, “You couldn’t hide from that damn phone.” He was right. I remember that phone. It rang at breakfast, by the pool, in airports, and while I was trying to convince my friends that I was taking a vacation.
They used to say that meant I was a workaholic. I think I was playing. I was still working, of course. The contracts were real. Payroll was needed to be approved. Deadlines were very very real. Clients get snotty and demanding. Yet inside my head, business felt like a game I had been playing for years. Someone would hand me a problem and my brain would immediately begin moving the pieces around. What if we tried this? What happens if we move that over there? Who already solved part of this without realizing it?
I loved figuring things out. I loved walking into problems that had no obvious answer. I loved meeting people from different countries and learning how they thought. I loved negotiating, building, organizing, improving, and seeing a project on paper before it existed in the world. Business held my attention because it gave my mind somewhere novel to go.
I had played this game growing up. On a farm, there was always something to fix, build, check, move, or understand. Water had to reach the right place. Equipment had to work. Animals, trees, weather, timing, and people all had to be considered at once. Even the neighbors who never seemed to leave. I learned to see how one thing affected another long before I had language for any of it. I had a few jokes, but those usually resulted in time out. I was judicious using this technique. After a while they said I did it on purpose. I digress.
That may be why the phone never felt entirely like an interruption. It was often an invitation back into the game.
Children play by inventing situations and then figuring out what to do inside them. The floor becomes lava. The couch becomes a ship. A box becomes a house. The rules are made, tested, adjusted, and sometimes abandoned when a better idea appears. Adults do this too, although we usually give it more serious names.
I called mine business.
The scale changed as I grew older, and the consequences became larger, but the habit stayed the same. I remain curious. I keep moving pieces around. I keep asking what else might work. That kind of play gave my mind enough freedom to notice possibilities and enough discipline to build something from them.
My friend saw a young woman who could not hide from her phone. Looking at the photograph now, I see a woman who had found a game she loved and was still in the middle of it.
Take More Time To Play
I was thirty years old when this photograph was taken. We had returned to the United States so that I could work on the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory National Ignition Facility project, and my daughter was learning English.
The room tells most of the story. There are alphabet cards, pictures, books, a chalkboard, a globe, I’m wearing steel-toed boots π₯Ύ and my daughter smiling from behind a small desk with a FedEx packaged neatly tucked between building blocks and building minds. I am standing across the room, also smiling, which suggests that whatever lesson I had planned had already become something else.
That happened often. It still happens.
Children learn through repetition, but they also learn through movement, surprise, imitation, exaggeration, sound, and play. A word becomes easier to remember when it belongs to a story. A sentence becomes less intimidating when it is spoken by a puppet. A mistake becomes part of the game and therefore something we can examine, repeat, and laugh about together.
The play did more than make the lesson enjoyable. It gave her mind room to work out basic algebra equations using a scale, dice π² and toys π§Έ. Writing ✍️ equations came naturally, after we balanced the amount of cookies πͺ each got.
That is the part I want to explore next.
Play creates a temporary space in which the ordinary rules can be loosened. A cup can contain imaginary tea. A stuffed animal can answer a question. A familiar word can be stretched, repeated, mispronounced, and turned around until its shape becomes clear. The mind is still learning, but it is learning through possibilities rather than through a single required path.
That freedom is closely related to creativity.
A novel thought originates in a first draft. It begins as a connection between things that had previously remained separate. One idea brushes against another. Whoops! Excuse me π
A memory enters from somewhere else. A word suggests an image. An image changes the question. The mind follows the association for a while and discovers that it has arrived somewhere new.
Play gives that process time. π’
Moral of this post: Take more time to play.
Play As A Love Language
In my next article, I'll jump into what the brain is doing while we play, and describe the top six ways people play.
Friday, July 10, 2026
I Made Us A Fort π️ π π°
I made us a fort before the evening could grow too ordinary.
It stands beneath the blankets, warm with lantern light and soft enough to hold every thought you carried here. The pillows have been arranged around a little table where the teapot is waiting, though it has been known to pour more stories than tea. π«
The bear π» beside the entrance has promised to keep watch, but he is easily distracted by biscuits and may need help.
You may come in exactly as you are. There is no password. The fort knows you by the sound of your footsteps.
Inside, the rules of the day have loosened. The star-shaped pillow can hold a worry until morning. The books beside the lantern open to different pages depending on who is reading. The drawings on the floor sometimes change after midnight, and one of the rabbits has been trying for weeks to tell us where the missing crayons go. We have listened carefully, but rabbits have their own way of getting to the point. π°
Sit here beside me. The tea is nearly ready, and the cups are small because this is the sort of place where you can always ask for more. ☕️
When the lantern flickers π―️ we will each tell one impossible thing. It can be something we remember, something we hope for, or something that has never happened anywhere except here.
We will give it a name, dress it up, and see what it does next.
That is how the game begins. One person imagines a door, and another person agrees to walk through it. πͺ
Thursday, July 9, 2026
Prove that "Yes" means "No"
- A text-based ASR pipeline will tell you he thanked you
- Alden knows he’s actually sighing at your profound lack of perspective
- The words say yes, the waveforms say wretched
- Class Dismissed. :)




