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Laugh and Live
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Title: Laugh and Live
Author: Douglas Fairbanks
Release Date: July 12, 2004 [EBook #12887]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LAUGH
AND LIVE ***
Produced by Steven desJardins and Distributed Proofreaders.
[ILLUSTRATION: _Laugh and Live_]
Laugh and Live
By DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS
ILLUSTRATED
NEW YORK BRITTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
1917
TO MY MOTHER
CONTENTS
I. "Whistle and Hoe--Sing As We Go"
II. Taking Stock of Ourselves
III. Advantages of an Early Start
IV. Profiting by Experience
V. Energy, Success and Laughter
VI. Building Up a Personality
VII. Honesty, the Character Builder
VIII. Cleanliness of Body and Mind
IX. Consideration for Others
X. Keeping Ourselves Democratic
XI. Self-Education by Good Reading
XII. Physical and Mental Preparedness
XIII. Self-indulgence and Failure
XIV. Living Beyond Our Means
XV. Initiative and Self-Reliance
XVI. Failure to Seize Opportunities
XVII. Assuming Responsibilities
XVIII. Wedlock in Time
XIX. Laugh and Live
XX. A "Close-Up" of Douglas Fairbanks
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Laugh and Live Do You Ever Laugh? Over the Hedge and on His Way
Preparing to Pair With the Prickly Pear A Little Spin Among the
Saplings Over the Hills and Far Away--Father and Son A Scene from
"His Picture in the Papers" A Scene from "The Americano"--Matching
Wits for Gold Taking on Local Color A Scene from "His Picture in the
Papers" Douglas Fairbanks in "The Good Bad-Man" Squaring Things
With Sister--From "The Habit of Happiness" A Scene from "In
Again--Out Again" Bungalowing in California Demonstrating the
Monk and the Hand-Organ to a Body of Psychologists "Wedlock in
Time"--The Fairbanks' Family Here's Hoping A Close-Up
LIVE AND LAUGH
CHAPTER I
"WHISTLE AND HOE--SING AS WE GO"
There is one thing in this good old world that is positively
sure--happiness is for all who strive to be happy--and those who laugh
are happy.
Everybody is eligible--you--me--the other fellow.
Happiness is fundamentally a state of mind--not a state of body.
And mind controls.
Indeed it is possible to stand with one foot on the inevitable "banana
peel" of life with both eyes peering into the Great Beyond, and still be
happy, comfortable, and serene--if we will even so much as smile.
It's all a state of mind, I tell you--and I'm sure of what I say. That's why
I have taken up my fountain pen. I want to talk to my friends--you
hosts of people who have written to me for my recipe. In moving
pictures all I can do is act my part and grin for you. What I say is a
matter of your own inference, but with my pen I have a means of
getting around the "silent drama" which prevents us from organizing a
"close-up" with one another.
In starting I'm going to ask you "foolish question number 1."--
Do you ever laugh?
I mean do you ever laugh right out--spontaneously--just as if the police
weren't listening with drawn clubs and a finger on the button
connecting with the "hurry-up" wagon? Well, if you don't, you should.
_Start off the morning with a laugh and you needn't worry about the
rest of the day._
I like to laugh. It is a tonic. It braces me up--makes me feel fine!--and
keeps me in prime mental condition. Laughter is a physiological
necessity. The nerve system requires it. The deep, forceful chest
movement in itself sets the blood to racing thereby livening up the
circulation--which is good for us. Perhaps you hadn't thought of that?
Perhaps you didn't realize that laughing automatically re-oxygenates
the blood--your blood--and keeps it red? It does all of that, and besides,
it relieves the tension from your brain.
_Laughter is more or less a habit._ To some it comes only with practice.
But what's to hinder practising? Laugh and live long--if you had a
thought of dying--laugh and grow well--if you're sick and
despondent--laugh and grow fat--if your tendency is towards the lean
and cadaverous--laugh and succeed--if you're glum and
"unlucky"--laugh and nothing can faze you--not even the Grim
Reaper--for the man who has laughed his way through life has nothing
to fear of the future. His conscience is clear.
Wherein lies this magic of laughter? For magic it is--a something that
manufactures a state of felicity out of any condition. We've got to admit
its charm; automatically and inevitably a laugh cheers us up. If we are
bored--nothing to do--just laugh--that's something
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