When I Couldn’t Remember the Last Time I Laughed for Real
Laughter didn’t disappear — it just stopped reaching the place inside me where it used to land.
I still laughed. At memes. With coworkers. During awkward moments on shift.
But then one day, the question hit me: *When was the last time I really laughed — deep, uncontrollable, without effort?*
I couldn’t remember.
There’s a difference between laughing out loud and laughing from somewhere that still feels free.
I didn’t stop laughing — I just noticed it no longer came from a place that felt whole.
Why Laughter Started to Feel Distant
At work, humor becomes a kind of survival. Dark jokes, sarcasm, the quick wit that buffers against everything too hard to name.
But real laughter — the kind that catches you off guard — slowly faded into something I noticed missing only in hindsight.
Laughter didn’t vanish — it just shifted into something I used, not something I felt.
I didn’t lose my sense of humor — I lost access to the ease that used to come with it.
This inner shift echoes what I wrote in when I knew I wasn’t just tired.
How I Noticed the Absence
It wasn’t dramatic. Just a quiet moment where I heard someone else laugh — full-body, unfiltered — and realized I hadn’t done that in a long time.
My laughter had become brief, guarded, polite. The kind that follows a script, not sensation.
It hit me: I couldn’t remember the last time laughter surprised me.
Laughter used to rise on its own — now it had to be invited.
That same dulling of joy connects to what I described in when I stopped expecting things to get better.
What That Realization Meant
I didn’t need to fix it. I didn’t even feel panic about it.
But I did feel the weight of what it meant — that joy had quietly receded, and I’d been too occupied to notice its absence.
You can function without joy — but eventually, you notice how much effort that takes.
I didn’t want forced laughter anymore — I wanted something to feel genuinely light again.
This gentle longing parallels what I wrote in when my days off didn’t feel like mine.
FAQ
Did I stop enjoying things?
No — but my reactions changed. Enjoyment became quieter, more cerebral, less embodied.
Was I depressed?
Not in a clinical way. But I was emotionally flat in ways I only noticed when something was missing.
Did this realization change anything?
It didn’t fix anything. But it gave me language — and that, in itself, softened something inside.

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