Dying in Silence, Living Through Laughter

Michele DeMarco, PhD
7 min readJun 1, 2024

Research shows that humor can increase connectedness, hope, identity, and empowerment

Stuart Monroe / Unsplash

How comedy is helping veterans to heal the “invisible wounds” of war. (Originally published in Psychology Today)

“Should I kill myself or have a cup of coffee?” It is a quote often (and likely mistakenly) attributed to the 20th century French philosopher and writer Albert Camus; but it also perfectly captures the spirit of what he and his existentialist contemporaries sought to do in their plays known as Theatre of the Absurd: to shock its audience out of complacency and bring it face to face with the harsh realities of the human condition. For instance, that the world isn’t always fair or rational; that bad things happen to good people, and good things happen to bad people; that good and bad people do both good and bad; that while fate is out of our control, the future is our responsibility; that ultimately, our life is up to us — despite, at times, it seemingly being meaningless and absurd.

While the masses may need this kind of soul-stirring shock, veterans need hardly; “Deployment is the definition of absurdity,” as one Green Barret and former client once told me. War is a dizzying world of contradictions lived in the extremes far removed from “normal” life: thrilling highs and tedious and sometimes agonizing lows; the honor of…

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Michele DeMarco, PhD

Award-winning writer, therapist, clinical ethicist, and researcher specializing in moral injury. I talk about the stuff many won’t. micheledemarco.com