02/26/2026
Most disconnected couples can trace it back to one moment: the last time they laughed together.
Research shows couples who laugh together (shared, unguarded laughter) report higher closeness and satisfaction. But you don’t need a study to feel this. You already know it.
Laughter isn’t about humor.
It’s about safety.
Real laughter only shows up when your nervous system isn’t bracing. When you’re not being evaluated, corrected, or quietly judged. It’s the body saying, I’m safe here.
When laughter fades, it’s rarely because anyone “lost their sense of humor.”
It’s because something underneath changed.
Tension crept in.
Resentment went unspoken.
Sarcasm replaced playfulness.
Being light started to feel risky.
You stop laughing long before you stop loving.
So when couples say, “We just don’t have fun anymore,” I don’t hear boredom. I hear a nervous system that hasn’t exhaled in a long time.
Laughter isn’t the reward of a healthy marriage.
It’s one of the structures that keeps a marriage healthy.
And not all humor heals. Sarcasm, eye-rolling jokes, and “just kidding” comments often mask resentment. That kind of laughter protects, but it doesn’t connect.
If laughter is gone, don’t try to be funnier. Get curious.
Ask:
When did it stop feeling safe to be light here?
What goes unsaid that laughter used to cover?
Because laughter returns when safety returns.
Here’s the real gut-check:
When was the last time you laughed freely with your partner and didn’t feel even a flicker of tension afterward?
If it’s been a while, that’s not failure.
It’s information.
Laughter is data. And when it disappears, something important is asking for attention.