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Glossary›Laughter Yoga

Glossary

Laughter Yoga

A practice combining self-induced group laughter exercises with yogic breathing techniques, developed in 1995 to deliver the health benefits of laughter without relying on humor or jokes.

What is Laughter Yoga?

Laughter Yoga (Hasya yoga) is a laughter exercise program which emphasizes three elements: laughter and playfulness, yogic breath-work, and mindfulness meditation. Unlike traditional comedy-based laughter, this method employs voluntary, self-initiated laughter in a group setting. The practice is based on a scientific fact that the body cannot differentiate between acted and genuine laughter and that both produce the same ‘happy chemistry’. Participants engage in structured laughter exercises combined with pranayama (yogic breathing) and gentle physical movements, creating conditions where simulated laughter often transforms into authentic, contagious laughter through social dynamics and eye contact.

Origins & Lineage

Laughter Yoga was introduced in Mumbai, India in 1995 by family physician Madan Kataria and his wife Madhuri. The exact inception occurred on the morning of March 13, 1995, in a public park in Mumbai. Dr. Madan Kataria, a medical doctor from Mumbai, started the first laughter club in March 1995 with just 5 people in a public park. The method emerged from Kataria’s research into the documented health benefits of laughter while writing an article titled “Laughter – The Best Medicine.”

In the beginning, the group resorted to jokes and funny stories but they soon ran out of them as the jokes started becoming negative and offensive. This crisis led to a methodological breakthrough. Dr. Kataria interspersed laughter exercises with deep breathing and stretching exercises from yoga, which proved to be a tool for good health and happiness. Kataria modernized some of the work of earlier laughter pioneers, who taught very similar concepts starting in the 1960s, in a more structured and a unique manner. This reference acknowledges predecessors in therapeutic laughter work, though Kataria’s structured integration with yogic breathing created a distinct modality.

World Laughter Day was established in 1998 and the first celebration was on 10 May 1998, in Mumbai, India, arranged by Dr. Madan Kataria. By the early 2000s, the movement had spread internationally through a network of certified leaders and trainers.

How It’s Practiced

A typical Laughter Yoga session begins with warm-up exercises designed to lower social inhibitions and build group rapport. Sessions begin with warm-up exercises like clapping, Ho Ho Ha Ha Ha chanting, followed by a variety of stimulated laughter exercises like greeting laughter, milkshake laughter, one meter laughter, lion laughter, etc. When we laugh in a group it turns into real laughter by making eye contact with other group members.

The practice does not require physical fitness, humor skills, or cognitive effort. Kataria created the 40 Foundation exercises, which are based on everyday situations, rather than on jokes or comedy. These exercises include gradient laughter (starting with a smile and escalating), greeting laughter (incorporating namaste or handshake gestures), appreciation laughter, and various themed scenarios. Sessions typically incorporate periods of deep breathing between laughter exercises, concluding with guided relaxation or laughter meditation—an extended period of unstructured, free-flowing laughter.

Sessions usually run 20–45 minutes and can be conducted in parks, workplaces, senior centers, yoga studios, or online platforms. The social and participatory nature is considered essential; most practitioners emphasize that Laughter Yoga functions best as a group experience rather than solitary practice.

Laughter Yoga Today

Laughter Yoga has evolved into a global wellness movement with an extensive infrastructure. The practice is now established in multiple formats: free public Laughter Clubs (typically meeting weekly in parks), workplace wellness programs, training courses for certified Laughter Yoga Leaders and Teachers, therapeutic applications in hospitals and mental health settings, and integration into senior care facilities.

Seekers encounter Laughter Yoga through local clubs listed on directories maintained by Laughter Yoga International, corporate wellness initiatives, health and yoga conferences, and increasingly through virtual sessions that became prominent during the COVID-19 pandemic. The method has been featured in mainstream media including TIME magazine, National Geographic, the Oprah Winfrey Show, and BBC documentaries, contributing to its visibility in the wellness landscape.

While exact participation numbers are difficult to verify independently, Laughter Yoga organizations report presence in over 100 countries. The practice has found particular traction in stress management programs, oncology support groups, dementia care settings, and as a complementary approach in integrative medicine contexts.

Common Misconceptions

Laughter Yoga is not a comedy class, stand-up training, or entertainment event. It does not require participants to be funny, tell jokes, or possess a sense of humor. The laughter is initially voluntary and often feels awkward or artificial—this is acknowledged as part of the process, with the expectation that self-consciousness diminishes through repetition and group dynamics.

The term “yoga” refers specifically to the incorporation of pranayama breathing techniques and, to a lesser extent, mindfulness elements. Laughter Yoga does not typically involve asanas (physical yoga postures), extensive meditation instruction, or the philosophical and spiritual frameworks of classical yoga traditions such as those outlined in Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras. Some practitioners within traditional yoga communities have questioned whether the practice constitutes “yoga” in a classical sense, given its primary focus on laughter exercises rather than the eight-limbed path.

Laughter Yoga is presented as a wellness practice and stress-reduction tool, not as medical treatment. While proponents cite research on the physiological benefits of laughter (including endorphin release, stress hormone reduction, and immune system effects), the practice itself has limited peer-reviewed clinical research specifically validating its therapeutic claims. Individuals with specific health conditions—particularly respiratory issues, recent surgeries, or severe mental health conditions—are generally advised to consult healthcare providers before participating.

How to Begin

The most accessible entry point is locating a free Laughter Club through the Laughter Yoga International website (laughteryoga.org) or similar directories, where clubs are listed by location. These clubs typically welcome drop-in participants without registration or fees.

For those interested in self-study, Dr. Madan Kataria’s book Laughter Yoga: Daily Laughter Practices for Health and Happiness provides detailed instruction on the method, exercises, and underlying concepts. Numerous instructional videos demonstrate the basic structure and foundational exercises, though these are considered supplementary to live group practice.

Individuals seeking to lead sessions can pursue formal certification through training programs offered by Laughter Yoga International and regional organizations, typically involving a two-day Certified Laughter Yoga Leader training or more extensive Teacher certification programs. These trainings cover exercise structure, group facilitation, safety considerations, and the evidence base for laughter’s health effects.

Some yoga studios, community centers, and wellness facilities offer Laughter Yoga as part of their class schedules, providing a structured introduction with trained facilitators. Online sessions via video platforms have become increasingly available, though opinions vary on whether virtual formats fully replicate the group dynamic central to the practice.

Related terms

kundalini osho meditationholotropic breathworkpranayama meditationbreath awareness meditationsomatic experiencingnonviolent communication
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