Laughter is certainly good for the soul and giggling could be a good indicator that your relationship might last.
According to Tanya Basu of Time, study after study has shown that laughing is good for the soul. But now we know something else: sharing giggles with a romantic partner keeps the lovey-dovey feelings going, according to a study published in the journal Personal Relationships.
Laura Kurtz, a social psychologist from the University of North Carolina, has long been fascinated by the idea of shared laughter in romantic relationships. âWe can all think of a time when we were laughing and the person next to us just sat there totally silent,â she says. âAll of a sudden that one moment takes a nosedive. We wonder why the other person isnât laughing, whatâs wrong with them, or maybe whatâs wrong with us, and what might that mean for our relationship.â
Kurtz set out to figure out the laugh-love connection by collecting 77 heterosexual pairs (154 people total) who had been in a relationship for an average of 4 years. She and her team did video recordings of them recalling how they first met. Meanwhile, her team counted instances of spontaneous laughing, measured when the couple laughed together as well as how long that instant lasted. Each couple also completed a survey about their relational closeness.
âIn general, couples who laugh more together tend to have higher-quality relationships,â she says. âWe can refer to shared laughter as an indicator of greater relationship quality.â
It seems common sense that people who laugh together are likely happier couples, and that happier couples would have a longer, healthier, more vital relationshipâbut the role that laughter plays isnât often center stage. âDespite how intuitive this distinction may seem, thereâs very little research out there on laughterâs relational influence within a social context,â Kurtz says. âMost of the existing work documents laughterâs relevance to individual outcomes or neglects to take the surrounding social context into account.â
Kurtz noted that some gender patterns emerged that have been reported by previous studies. âWomen laughed more than males,â she notes. âAnd menâs laughs are more contagious: When men laugh, they are 1.73 times more likely to make their partner laugh.â
Thereâs also evidence that laughing together is a supportive activity. âParticipants who laughed more with their partners during a recorded conversation in the lab tended to also report feeling closer to and more supported by their partners,â she says. On the flip side, awkward chuckles, stunted grins and fake guffaws all are flags that there may be something amiss.
This harkens back to a classic psychological experiment conducted in 1992, where 52 couples were recorded telling their personal, shared histories. The team noted whether the couples were positive and effusive or were more withdrawn and tired in telling these stories, then checked in with the couples three years later. They saw a correlation in how couples told stories about their past and the success of their partnership: the more giddy the couple was about a story, the more likely they remained together; the less enthusiastic the couple was, the more likely the coupleâs partnership had crumbled.
While there are cultural differences in laughter displayâKurtz says that Eastern cultures tend to display appreciation with close-mouthed smiles, not the heartier, toothy laughs that are more Westernâthereâs no question that laughter is important. âMoments of shared laughter are potent for a relationship,â she says. âThey bring a couple closer together.â