@RussH I so get how you feel about people laughing at you. I have had people hurt me and then laugh at me because of the way I looked afterwards. The humiliation that is felt when people laugh at you is a sudden reaction that has terrible memories attached to it. In order for me to be spontaneous I have to literally be toasted so that I don't care what people think of me. Only thing is I don't remember what I did the next day. Which sets me up for more abuse. It's a never ending cycle.
You are right. People have robbed you of the ability to feel the joy of doing goofy things. They have robbed you of the ability to have a spontaneous sense of humor. I believe you can develop one by performing for yourself in the mirror when no one else is around...kind of like singing in the shower at the top of you voice when no one can hear you...
It could be a form of desensitizing yourself from the ridicule and humiliation that you feel when someone laughs at you. Almost like exposure therapy but without the therapist there...
You are right. People have robbed you of the ability to feel the joy of doing goofy things. They have robbed you of the ability to have a spontaneous sense of humor. I believe you can develop one by performing for yourself in the mirror when no one else is around...kind of like singing in the shower at the top of you voice when no one can hear you...
It could be a form of desensitizing yourself from the ridicule and humiliation that you feel when someone laughs at you. Almost like exposure therapy but without the therapist there...