Life
is a journey of personal transformation or at least it should be for both you
and me. In my transformation journey,
each step along the way should ascend to a higher level. One indication of my ascension to this higher
level is how I use my dry humor to make the world a better place for all of
us.
I’d
say my experience being a wise-guy has been in the humor I’ve directed at others, making them the ridicule of what I’ve uttered.
This
behavior has its origin going way back to my elementary school days and time on
the school playground during class recess.
It was rough and tough being a young boy surviving all the vocal
assaults that would come my way from fellow classmates in what can best be
described as normal adolescent young boy behavior.
It gave me thick skin at a very young age. It also gave me self-defense skills of being
able to dish it back out. I became a
Quick Draw Magraw character in my self-defense of quickly sending one back
after receiving one.
It
was so much easier doling it out, though, than being on the receiving end of
cruel humor and in the process of doing so, I became good at it. I thrived on the rush of being labeled as
“cool” and clever for the wise-guy stuff I said.
These
experiences formed me and so many others; we grew up to be purveyors of wise-guy comedic assaults that too often are delivered in bad taste, are cruel and disrespectful,
inconsiderate and rude to say the least.
Contrast
this Don Rickles’ type of humor to that of the late and great comedian Rodney
Dangerfield, whose humor was more self-deprecating in content; it evoked
delight and laughter among those listening.
Which
type is better for me to deliver in my continuing journey of wanting to be a
clever wise-guy capable of making life fun and jolly for those who are my
audience?
It
seems like it would be healthy trying something new and making me, rather than
someone else the butt of my dry humor.
Pax Domini sit semper vobiscum
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