Monday, July 1, 2013

Email Wit and Humor

Email Wit and HumorClick Image To Visit SiteAnd now to help you is "Email Wit and Humor" .. a huge collection of jokes, wit and humorous anecdotes.
Hi James£ยบ "How did you find some of these. Hysteri- cal. I’m about one-third of the way through your joke book and I am having a difficult time controlling my hysterical laughter and the pain in my side from laughing so much. It’s well worth the price. Keep us laughing – more please!!!!!" — Tomas R.

If you’d like a FREE mini version sample copy of "Email Wit and Humor"-the Net’s most fun ejoke book-with great color, graphics, sound, clip art and animation, but most of all FUN!- please enter your name and email below -
EMAIL WIT AND HUMOR is the perfect gift for friends, co-workers, old girlfriends, dumped boyfriends, those in your family, the garbage man for his night with beer and chatting, your famous book group members, and or anyone you know who needs the medicine of laughter.
But, if you prefer to read the jokes while on the john, print a copy for yourself. The heck with saving the tree.
And you don’t need an internet connection to enjoy ‘Email Wit and Humor’. You’ll get to avoid the irritating long delays in getting access especially if you have a slow dial-up connection.
"If you don’t laugh when you read EMAIL WIT AND HUMOR then other people are busy examining your last will and testament."
Lacking a sense of humor might not just be bad for your social life, it might also be harming your cardiovascular health. A new study shows that laughter actually increases blood flow in the body, proving right the old adage that laughter is the best medicine, at least when it comes to the heart. Cardiologist Michael Miller and colleagues at the University of Maryland tested blood flow in 20 healthy men and women after they watched 15-to-30-minute clips of the comedy movies Kingpin and There’s Something About Mary and a stressful film, the opening sequence of Saving Private Ryan. The researchers measured blood flow both before each viewing and one minute after it ended.
"We wanted to see whether laughter induced a vascular response," —Miller explains.
Prior research inspired the team to conduct the experiment. A series of questionnaires administered to sufferers of coronary heart disease by the cardiologists revealed that patients who had suffered a heart attack failed to find the humor in a situation, such as wearing the same outfit to a party, 40 percent more often than their healthy counterparts. "We didn’t know whether that was cause and effect or just part and parcel of having the disease," Miller says.
They decided to investigate the possible healthy effects of laughter by measuring vascular dilation after people chuckled at funny bits or reacted to intense images. In total, the researchers gathered 160 measurements of blood flow in the brachial artery, which connects the shoulder and elbow, from the 10 men and 10 women… Read more…

No comments:

Post a Comment