RANDY ELROD

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Why Is It That Behind Every Laugh, There Lies A Tear?

Walt Disney once said “For every laugh, there should be a tear.”

One minute you are laughing with the seven dwarfs in the forest, the next you are crying as Snow White lies comatose from a poisoned apple. One minute Bambi and Thumper are laughing and playing on the “stiff water,” the next Bambi is crying over her mother’s death. One minute you are laughing and “expectorating” with Gaston in Beauty and the Beast, the next you are crying as Belle’s Dad languishes behind bars.

I describe it many ways. A happy sadness, a delicious agony, like licking honey off a razor’s edge. Life—and therefore art—is an endless cycle of paradox. Shakespeare created Falstaff (the height of all comic achievement in literature) and with the same pen he created the tragic hero Hamlet.

How can Van Gogh portray the jubilant yellows in his masterpiece Sunflowers, and only two years later tragically take his own life at the age of 37?

A laugh, a tear, a laugh, a tear… Many times when I am experiencing the adrenaline and joy of a new adventure or foreign land, I am moved to sadness, because my Mom cannot see the same. I savor the beauty of a magnificent sunset and perfect day, only to feel a tinge of sadness at the passing of it.

Henri Nouwen puts it this way in his wonderful book The Dance of Life, “Our life is a short time in expectation, a time in which sadness and joy kiss each other at every moment…In every satisfaction, there is an awareness of its limitations. In every success, there is a fear of jealousy. Behind every smile, there is a tear. In every embrace, there is loneliness. In every friendship, distance. And in all forms of light, there is knowledge of surrounding darkness.

Joy and sadness are as close to each other as the splendid colored leaves of a New England fall to the soberness of the barren trees…Joy and sadness are born at the same time, both arising from such deep places in your heart that you can’t find words to capture your complex emotions.”

Many of us experience this paradox of joy and sorrow throughout life without ever arousing words to verbalize it.

I think we should deal with it openly. I do not propose a solution to the paradox. I do not say that life is meaningful in spite of defeat and disappointment, nor do I point to despair and proclaim the worthlessness of our hopes. Rather I affirm the paradox and challenge you with it.

Why Is It That Behind Every Laugh, There Lies A Tear?

29 responses to “Why Is It That Behind Every Laugh, There Lies A Tear?”

  1. Navid Avatar

    Hey Randy,
    What a wonderful post! I’m not sure of the exact quote, but I always liked “the sweet won’t be as sweet without the bitter”.
    Keep up the great work.

  2. ChandraHester Avatar
    ChandraHester

    Why Is It That Behind Every Laugh, There Lies A Tear? I am trying to answer this question for myself. For right now, not having thought about it for many days , I say- It is because both emotions are powerful. If behind every laugh, there lies NO tear, we would have a very boring and meaningless life. One emotion behind the other is what helps balance the emotions and help us grow in life. One emotion by itself would be too strong to stand on it’s own. It alone would overwhelm us. That is why……. Behind Every Laugh, There Lies A Tear.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @ChandraHester, Thanks so much for joining the intriguing conversation, Chandra.

  3. Audrey Avatar
    Audrey

    Lewis is an adept commentator on this in The Weight of Glory.

    Sometimes the sadness we feel while beholding beautiful things is merely an ache to be one with what we find so glorious. The ache for oneness with beauty is a splinter of our God-given, human need to be one with our Maker.

    1. Randy Avatar

      @Audrey, Audrey, that rings so true. I have not read The Weight of Glory. Now I must.

      Thanks for joining the conversation.

  4. Melanie Avatar
    Melanie

    “Joy, which is the small publicity of the pagan is the gigantic secret of the Christian.” G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy http://goo.gl/RY7Gu Your piece reminded me of the last two pages of “Authority and the Adventurer” where Chesterton talks about Joy as juxtaposed with Sadness where he observes: “The mass of men have been forced to be gay about the little things, but sad about the big ones. Nevertheless (I offer my last dogma defiantly) it is not native to man to be so. Man is more himself, man is more manlike, when joy is the fundamental thing in him, and grief the superficial.” He asserts that this is because we have put heaven below us and the earth above. http://www.basicincome.com/bp/themassofmen.htm as I get older, I keep finding this is more and more the case. It isn’t because there are not reasons to reasonably grieve, there are, but that there are more reasons to be joyful. Yet as he ends Orthodoxy, he makes a profound observation about the Lord: “The tremendous figure which fills the Gospels towers in this respect, as in every other, above all the thinkers who ever thought themselves tall. His pathos was natural, almost casual. The Stoics, ancient and modern, were proud of concealing their tears. He never concealed His tears; He showed them plainly on His open face at any daily sight, such as the far sight of His native city. Yet He concealed something. Solemn supermen and imperial diplomatists are proud of restraining their anger. He never restrained His anger. He flung furniture down the front steps of the Temple, and asked men how they expected to escape the damnation of Hell. Yet He restrained something. I say it with reverence; there was in that shattering personality a thread that must be called shyness. There was something that He hid from all men when He went up a mountain to pray. There was something that He covered constantly by abrupt silence or impetuous isolation. There was some one thing that was too great for God to show us when He walked upon our earth; and I have sometimes fancied that it was His mirth.” He showed his tears but concealed his mirth. Perhaps its this internal paradox that rings true with us also in these trying days and we should never stop at the mask we see on others….or ourselves.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @Melanie, Melanie, I must read your comment again and again. Thanks so much. I love Chesterton and don’t recall ever reading these powerful and thought provoking words.

      Thanks so much for enriching this conversation.

      1. Melanie Avatar
        Melanie

        @Randy Elrod, Thank you for the post! A good interchange of ideas. I find myself going back to Orthodoxy often. And seeing connections like yours are a delightful moment in the day!

    2. Audrey Avatar
      Audrey

      @Melanie,
      This is moving my heart as I sit in the Motor Vehicle Department (which is in itself miraculous).

      I’ve often thought and tried to express to others in my life that there are some encounters with God so sweet, so intimate, so sacred, that only He and I are privy to them. Chesterton’s words and your thoughts shared here bolster my commitment to these secret joys.

      Thanks for sharing.

      1. Melanie Avatar
        Melanie

        @Audrey, That is wonderful!

      2. Randy Avatar
        Randy

        @Audrey, That that can happen at the MVD, is a proof text for this post. Ha!

  5. Jameson Avatar
    Jameson

    Once again, you have my mind churning this morning.

    I have always been intrigued by the “tinge of sadness” you described following a particularly joyful moment, as well as the occasionally the inkling of joy, as if to remind me of its presence, during times that seem overwhelmingly painful. To me, it’s as if these moments are a split second glimpse into the essence of true emotion. The most authentic joy and sadness I feel rarely visits without that moment of balance brought about by its opposite. I think the Henri Nouwen passage you included describes this perfectly. “In all forms of light, there is knowledge of surrounding darkness.”

    Great post!

    1. Randy Avatar

      @Jameson, Thanks so much, Jameson. I really believe it is a universal thing. But for some reason, very few of us talk about it.

  6. […] This post was mentioned on Twitter by TchrEric and others. TchrEric said: RT @randyelrod Why Is It That Behind Every Laugh, There Lies A Tear? http://bit.ly/fyXicj […]

  7. Julie Kolb Avatar
    Julie Kolb

    Ah, Randy, you touched on something very spiritual..One of your most profound posts to me, personally..I have only two verses to add to this..The rest I shall only ponder…

    Laughter can conceal a heavy heart; when the laughter ends, the grief remains ~ Proverbs 14:13

    There is a time for everything, a season for every activity under heaven. A time to cry and a time to laugh. ~ Ecclesiastes 3:1, 4

    1. Randy Avatar

      @Julie Kolb, Thanks, Julie. Powerful verses.

  8. Vince Avatar

    Great conversation to have! One truth most people don’t realize is that all laughter is because of pain. When I teach philosophy I start with this very discussion.

    The pain we may be laughing at could be real; it’s funny to watch someone trip and fall.

    The pain may be hypothetical in the form of a joke, but on some level we only laugh because of pain.

    1. Randy Avatar

      @Vince, Wow, Vince. I have never heard that statement “all laughter is because of pain.”

      It is going to take me some time to unpack that.

      Thanks for making my mind spin this morning.

      1. Vince Avatar

        @Randy, This is a conversation that needs to happen over a pint at the pub

        1. Randy Elrod Avatar

          @Vince, Yes, indeed. We need to make that happen!!

    2. alece Avatar

      @Vince,

      i’m with randy. gonna be thinking about that one for a long time!

      1. Vince Avatar

        @alece, I’ve found that it is an important concept to grasp to move into an understanding of why bad things happen to good people.

    3. Deana O'Hara Avatar

      @Vince, I get that — laughter can also be pain healed, meaning I know that I am healing when I can finally laugh at something that used to make me cry. Some of my best comedy friends have led tragic lives and they find the laughter as a coping mechinism. I’m learning how to do the same thing. I heard once that an artist can see something ugly and paints until they find the beauty. Emmett Kelly was the same way (I studied under one of his understudies) – everyone knows Emmett as this Hobo clown – but he didn’t used to be. He used to wear bright makeup and bright colors – until a fire stole the lives of countless children during one of thier shows. Even though he brought laughter and tears to people after that, he never wore a smile on stage again in memory of those children. It was an interesting paradox really – tragic yes, and interesting at the same time.

      Jesus both laughed and wept. Real laughter and tears release the very same endorphines – They aren’t as emotional as we think – they are healing mechinisms placed within us by God.

      Great post Randy. You are as artistic with words as you are a brush. Beautifully written.

      1. Randy Elrod Avatar

        @Deana O’Hara, Thanks, Deana. So true about comedians. They have to understand the dark side in order to help us laugh. Great analogy.

        1. Keith Jennings Avatar

          @Randy Elrod, and @Vince – what a great exchange. Believe it not the legendary comedian, Jerry Lewis, has some very engaging philosophical views on the relationship of pain and laughter. He has even lectured on this.

          So, it seems Walt got it backwards. The more accurate statement might be, “For every tear, there should be a laugh.”

          (Ironically, I just returned from a week at Disney and read while this catching up on my feeds. Nice post, Randy!)

  9. alece Avatar

    “joy and sadness are born at the same time”… i have sensed that more acutely in recent years. at times, it’s as though i feel both simultaneously. my heart doesn’t know quite how to deal with the juxtaposition of it all. but i’m starting to think that joy and sadness may not be in opposition to each other. not like i’ve always thought them to be. they may not be two extremes on the spectrum of deep heart emotions. they linger closely together, as though holding hands with interlocked fingers… until sometimes i can no longer tell which finger belongs to who.

    or maybe i’m just looking for that to be true to explain why sometimes i can’t tell if my tears are of joy-filled hope or heart-wrenching grief. because sometimes i honestly think i cry both at the same time.

    i’ve thought it crazy-making the way i can bounce from joy to sadness and back again on the drop of a dime. at the smallest of things — a familiar smell, a sight that takes my breath away, waking up on one side of the bed. but maybe it isn’t crazy after all. maybe it’s because both are there, wrapped up in that moment with me. i can sense both the joy-filled wonder and the grief-laden heartache, and my heart feels like bursting under the weight of the heavy duo.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @alece, Thanks, Alece, for joining the conversation and doing so eloquently and transparently.

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