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Play and humor got our marriage through some hard times. Although I have to admit, when my husband is constantly making puns and jokes in the grocery store I do get a little aggravated 😂 you can only hear so many vegetable puns before you snap 🤣

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From my own experience, playfulness in romantic relationships translates to flirtatiousness and a sense of ease when with a romantic partner and building a relationship. Playfulness and humor could to be the construct in which those with these qualities/personalities value at the highest level, therefore actions and responses tend to promotes cooperation in order to retain the construct. This is all my own observations and experience having a spouse that has these qualities and my children, which naturally are playful (and amazing to observe!)

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I'm still working on letter #36 which folds into recent articles on the evolution of menopause & the "grandmother thesis."

.—Humans are characterized by metabolic, somatic and cultural flexibility. The human "mating game" (♡) also has wide variability and diversity. However, in crude terms:

♤ Men look for youthful faces, childbearing hips, and wit.

♧ Women look for stature (physical and hierarchical), pe$$onality, and wit.

◇ The shared feature is wit! And thus, paleolithic parietal art, dance, song, flutes and drums, poetry, ... ad nauseum ornamentation and elaboration.

.—IMHO humans fall somewhere in between bonobos and chimpanzees; and their social organization exhibits an incredible variability, —from matriarchy to patriarchy, male or female philopatry, gender ratios which can lead to polygamy or polyandry, etc..

.—Then there's violence, from interpersonal to war ...

.—Incredible hodge-podge of sociobiology not easily untangled, but in any case, my personal experience leads me to conclude that some women prefer gentle men, but some women settle for otherwise. There is no general thumbrule, although almost everyone enjoys a good laugh, but what's being laughed at?

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The theme of our wedding was "Love is Fun" -- we had custom dice made with "Amy & Brian" inscribed on one side and "Love is Fun" on the other, and gave them out in pairs in the party-favor satchels. We also made the wedding fun by playing up that whole "if anyone knows of any reason why these two should not be married..." thing: the best man and my sister both raised objections and demanded that each of us pass love-tests -- we knew it was coming, but we didn't know what the challenges would be -- it was hilarious and just a blast.

It's fair to say our relationship is built on play, humor, fun, and repartee -- my husband loves that I'm funny, and he loves that I make him laugh, and it's also vice-versa and very much feeling-is-mutual. Life is hard, and so you gotta laugh, that's our attitude. And our kids seem to be picking it up -- one of my daughters has been using the phrase "Prince Funny" as a replacement for "Prince Charming" since she was 6 years old. And the highest compliment you can pay her is that she's funny. She does a killer John Oliver impression. You haven't lived 'til you've seen 10-year-old-girl John Oliver rockin his accent and calling you a "baby bitch lawn dart" -- god I love my kids.

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Great story. Thank you.

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I find playfulness and humor work best in our marriage when well timed, otherwise for the moment, they seem to back fire. This feels specific to our relationship and how it flows with the ups and downs of our lives.

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Closely related, the late, great, Hitch https://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2007/01/hitchens200701

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The thing with abusive and violent men is that they are often very charming, playful and funny in the beginning, which is how they hook you into the cycle. So those attributes on their own definitely don’t reflect a non-violent personality, it just may take some time for the violence to be shown. Nobody goes on a first date with an outwardly abusive man and decides to stay.

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Good point, Emma. Thank you for adding this precaution.

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