Principle – Humor can relieve the pressure of a tense moment, lift one from a depressing thought, and improve the atmosphere of a dreary room.
It was nearly impossible as a young man to grow up in a small farming community in Utah without being a hunter of some sort. It was nearly a right of passage to own a 22 rifle at age 12. The desert jack rabbits would increase in numbers to the point that hay fields and rangeland forage were threatened. For a period, populations were so heavy that rewards were offered for jack rabbit removal. As teens we took great pride in our marksmanship abilities. We could shoot a rabbit on a dead run as it darted in and out of sagebrush.
One day while my friend waited upstairs with Audrey, I went downstairs to the gun closet to get my 22 rifle. I thought I had a great joke to play on them. I lit a small firecracker that went off with a definite bang, and then I let out a loud moan. I stood at the base of the stairs with a broad grin on my face as I waited to see and hear the reaction. It came almost instantly. Both Audrey and Mike let out an “Oh No!” and appeared at the top of the stairs in flight to my rescue. It took far longer than I had imagined it would before they cold laugh and smile at my joke. I learned that not all practical jokes are practical and a joke.
There were three boys in our family. Lewis was just a year older than me, and Jim was two and half years younger. We had shared an upstairs bedroom for several years with three single beds lining the walls of the “L” shaped room. Mostly we got along fine, occasionally we bickered, and occasionally we plotted jocks to try out. One hot summer day things were particularly quite around the Quigley household. To liven things up a bit we hatched a scheme. We took Jim into the upstairs bathroom and soaked his head with water from the sink. Jim then started downstairs whooping it up a bit and yelling out “Momma, Momma.” Audrey met Jim in the front room as she quickly came from the kitchen. Jim, a pretty good actor, said, “Lewis and Tommy put my head in the toilet and think it’s funny.”
As you can imagine, Audrey did not think it was funny. Lewis and Tom were summoned to the kitchen table for a discussion. I suppose it is because Jim was such a good actor that it took us a while to convince Audrey that it was a joke and did not happen as Jim first described it.
Quig had a sense of humor that was very subtle and quick. He was quick to respond with a twist that was usually not expected. One day we were waiting in the doctor’s office because one of us was ill. The doctor’s assistant entered and said, “Do you want to follow me?” In classic Quig style the response was immediate, “It depends on where you are going. We came here to see the doctor.” He also had a memory that was uncanny. I’m not certain just where he picked up these rhymes, perhaps at the CCC camps he worked at after high school, but he could recite a poem or an Irish rhyme for many occasions. Some came as a tune he would sing and others as a poem or limerick. These invariably would break up a tense moment or lighten an otherwise dreary room.
Quig had a few sayings that get stuck in my head occasionally. If someone would ask him if he wanted some dessert or other food dish, his reply often times would be, “No thanks, I wouldn’t care for some, I just had any.” Or at the dinner table the words were often said, “Take all you want, even if it takes darn near all of it.” If something we were doing was going to take a long time to get done, he would say, “That will take a month of Sundays.” If he arrived at a picnic a little late you would likely hear him say, “I came here to eat, and I ain’t leav’n til I et.” When a family member would be raising their voice to another, you could hear Quig start to sing, “Let us oft speak kind words to each other, at home or where ‘er we may be.” These sayings had a way of bringing a smile to our face, no matter the setting or reason for discomfort.
I had an opportunity recently to read many of the letters that were sent to Quig at his retirement by colleagues. There were three themes that were repeated often: 1- Quig’s sense of humor, 2- his patience with all the trials that came his way, and 3) his commitment to those things he believed in including his care of natural resources.
I learned of the value of humor from many sources, family was just one.
Tom Mills was a serious kind of senior executive. We used to joke that if we were to see his garage and shop that every tool and bin would be labeled and in its proper place. I used to signal to fellow team members in the ICBEMP about how difficult Mills perceived the pending meeting by how many toothpicks he would line up next to his notebook. The meeting progressed he would move through the toothpicks from right to left. It turned out to be a good gauge for the difficulty of the meeting – it is a one toothpick meeting or a five toothpick meeting?
Mills’ office was always in order. Everything had a place and everything was in its place. When our Station Leadership Team was meeting around the conference table in his office, we would take turns with a little game. Whenever Mills would leave his office for a brief period, one of us would move 2 or 3 of his pens and pencils about 15 or 20 degrees – never too much – that would be too obvious. Mills was the boss, so he liked to lead most meetings. He was a also a pacer. He would traverse from one side of the room to the other as he would talk. We also feared that if he had to stop moving he would explode and we would reap the unpleasant rewards of body parts all over. As he would move near his desk, in an almost unconscience way, he would reach down and straighten the pencils and pens. The challenge was to see hhow long it would take him to discover the misaligned writing instruments. That little diversion provided just enough of a break from the pressure of new assignments to help us cope.
There are some people who seem gifted with the ability to contribute humor to a setting. Our oldest son, Damion, is one of these people. You simply cannot have an extended conversation with him without at least one story that brings laughter. As an extended family, we all plan on laughing until our sides hurt when Damion is around. If you ever get a chance to meet Damion, ask him to tell you one of his hunting stories. I can tell the same story and get smiles, while Damion tells the stories and gets side splitting laughs.
Does every family have one member who can entertain the crowd for hours? Jarold, Kerry’s father, was always ready with a joke and a story. Do you remember those laughing heads you could hang on the wall at a party? Any motion near the thing and it would let out a continuous belly roll laugh. Jarold had to have one of those. He would move it around the house to see who he could catch unware. He practices relentlessly until he could mimic the laughter of the laughing head. There is little doubt that Jarold got more laughs from the giggling head than from any other instrument purchased to cheer up the family.
There are storytellers that can make humore work in virtually any setting. I suppose those of us who are prone to storytelling keep trying to mimic the Jarold’s and Damion’s of the world. Occasionally, we succeed and maybe even get a little better at it.
Jarold and Peggy, Kerry’s mother and father, were members of a group of four or five young married couples who help parties at each other’s homes. The routines consisted of card games, storytelling, and desserts. Jarold and his brother Junior had been teasing each other for weeks about what the dessert would look like and consist of when they held the next party at a friends home. This friend owned a dairy but was noted for not having it cleaned very good. On more than one occasion they witnessed green stuff in the dairy barn milk. The joke was that when dessert would arrive that night it would have green whipped cream on the top. True to form, dessert arrived with green whipped cream on the top. Junior made a quick retreat to the bathroom trying hard to control his gagging reflex. Any gathering from that point forward for the family could bring out a sick look on Junior’s face with the introduction of green whipped cream. It helped provide the closing event for many a family gathering.
I suppose humor is one of those things that requires cultivation and a good dose of common sense. It can be easy to create a laugh from someone’s misfortune. It is also easy to misplace decency with the crude and crass. While I still hold that humor is a key ingredient in what matters most in life, I also believe it is essential to avoid having a laugh at someone else’s expense. Cultivate a healthy laugh, a kind of smile, and a sense of awareness to keep humor within appropriate bounds.
My younger brother, Jim travels more than me. I thought I was about maxed out at 50-75% of my time in travel status, but Jim exceeds even that. As the worldwide CEO of Deloitte, Touche, Tomatsu, Jim is latterly traveling the world. Recently Jim demonstrated that he retains his sense of humor. He was t the airport in Germany, and with just enough time available, he entered the hair place to get a hair cut. Jim was ushered into the ranks of the crowd with the extended shiny forehead a little before me. Jim told us he has a formula that works great – at least most of the time. The story is short, but it works. “Cut the side with a number 3 and the top with a number 5.” Jim does not speak German, so with a finger pointing to the side of his head just above the ear he said “three” and moving his finger to the top of his head he said “five.” The hair specialist nodded as Jim assumed she understood the universal haircut language. She understood okay, but instead of three meaning three eights of an inch and five meaning five eights of an inch, she knew Jim wanted three millimeters on the side and five millimeters on the top. So Jim arrived at Utah State University to give the commencement address with shorter hair than planned. Jim was able to share his story with students, faculty, and family alike. Remember don’t take yourself too seriously.
Kerry enjoys her Nissan Murano a lot. She likes the body style, the feel, the drive and even the fuel economy compared with some comparable cars. As we were driving recently to a meeting in Boise, Idaho, we were passed by a woman driving a Lexus. She seemed to have a difficult time deciding just how fast to drive. I suppose she was distracted and failed to set her cruise control – while we have never driven a Lexus, we can only assume it has one. This particular Lexus model looks a bit like Kerry’s Nissan Murano or is it that the Murano looks a bit like the Lexus? After the woman had passed us the third time, Kerry said, “Come on turn on your cruise control. I sure like the looks of my rear end more than hers.” All I could do was laugh and say, “Okay.” Kerry’s response was “Whatever I can do to brighten your day.” We have the vinyl letters in our rear window that reads “StoriesThatLift.com”. I told Kerry that I’m thinking of changing it to read “I sure like the looks of my rear end better than yours.”
In the early days of the ICBEMP we had a rather tense moment that I thought needed some humor. I had worked personally for Jack Ward Thomas for some 25 years before he was named Chief of the Forest Service. He was named Chief just after I was named to lead the ICBEMP science efforts and a colleague, Jeff Blackwood, was named to lead the management side of the effort. Within the pecking order of the Forest Service, the Regional Foresters are considered king of the roost for their region. The ICBEMP covered portions of several regions and was destined to be controversial. Jack would call me late at night at the office, because he knew I would be working still, and give me directions on what he wanted me to do the next day. This was not unusual for the relationship between us was quite close. There was something that had changed but neither Jack nor I had adjusted to it yet. Jack was the Chief – I was several steps down the ladder from that position and several steps down the ladder from a Regional Forester. That night Jack instructed me on what to say to two long-standing Regional Foresters – Grey Reynolds and Dave Jolley. The next day Jeff Blackwood and I met with the two regional foresters in a conference room with a rather large table in it. As we discussed the ICBEMP and how it might affect their regions, I began to explain what Jack, their boss and the Chief, wanted from them. This did not last long at all when Grey Reynolds pushed his chair back and slammed his fist on the table. He declared in a loud voice, “Just who do you think you are? Who is in charge here anyway?” With that he retreated to the back of the room. Then in similar fashion, Dave Jolley pushed his chair back, slapped an open hand on the table and said, “That’s right just who do you think you are?” He then retreated to the back of the room to join Grey. With that I tapped Jeff on the leg and said, “Hey buddy, the balls in your court.” It helped break up a tense moment. To finish the story, I refused to do Jack’s personal bidding after that. I told him he was going to get me killed and I was not ready to die for him just yet.
I have witnessed humor used really well to break the tension. I have seen humor unite people around a common story. I have seen humor lift people from a spiral that leads to nowhere good. I have also seen humor destroy relationships and create bad feelings. This particular principle of what really matters in life requires common sense and recognition of what is appropriate. Anyone who lacks common sense or is a poor judge of what is appropriate will find humor gets them in more trouble than it helps.
Bottom Line – It is important to not take ourselves too seriously. Humor has the ability to calm troubled nerves, unit a group, and lift the spirits of friends and family.