There is a family trope which I might have to listen to and change.
Mmm.
Not a family trope.
A grandmother trope.
There is a certain laughter that comes from me that frightens people, I would say. Or makes them wary. For sure they go on some kind of alert.
What happens is, I give a laugh, a good belly laugh, and then grandchildren who are around me are alerted that something has gone wrong somewhere and that I am laughing at it. Not wanting to be the grandchild who initiated the laugh, they ask, "What are you laughing at, Grandmother", but their tone is not questioning, but combatative.
I wouldn't have been able to articulate this, but I have been the object of this question (What are you laughing at, Grandmother?) as I have been visiting in Aylmer (from Rhiannon) and now in Montreal (from Hebe).
Ha ha.
If laughter keeps people alive, I am going to have many good years ahead of me.
Arta
Mmm.
Not a family trope.
A grandmother trope.
There is a certain laughter that comes from me that frightens people, I would say. Or makes them wary. For sure they go on some kind of alert.
What happens is, I give a laugh, a good belly laugh, and then grandchildren who are around me are alerted that something has gone wrong somewhere and that I am laughing at it. Not wanting to be the grandchild who initiated the laugh, they ask, "What are you laughing at, Grandmother", but their tone is not questioning, but combatative.
I wouldn't have been able to articulate this, but I have been the object of this question (What are you laughing at, Grandmother?) as I have been visiting in Aylmer (from Rhiannon) and now in Montreal (from Hebe).
Ha ha.
If laughter keeps people alive, I am going to have many good years ahead of me.
Arta
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