Dark humor provides safe container for grief and rage too large or dangerous to express through conventional emotional channels.
Grief, rage, and despair are often too vast for normal expression—they can overwhelm, alienate, or invite unwanted intervention. Dark humor about death, loss, or injustice functions as container: it permits the feeling to exist without requiring resolution or repair. We can hold profound sorrow and laugh simultaneously when dark humor provides the frame. The Hodja's tradition honors this—his stories permit simultaneous wisdom and foolishness, dignity and farce. For those examining their lives honestly, this containment becomes essential. Dark humor about our own mortality, our failures, or systemic cruelty allows these feelings to be present without consuming us entirely. The function here is alchemical: laughter does not eliminate the grief but transforms our relationship to it, making it bearable and even strangely companionable.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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