"Laughter relieves us of superfluous energy, which, if it remained unused, might become negative, that is, poison. Laughter is the antidote"
About this Quote
Gurdjieff treats laughter less like a social nicety and more like a pressure valve in a sealed system. The phrasing is almost medical: “superfluous energy” sounds like a metabolic surplus, something the body and mind must metabolize or purge. That’s a classic Gurdjieff move, translating the messy theater of inner life into mechanics. You don’t debate whether steam should vent; you install the vent.
The subtext is his broader suspicion of unexamined emotion and wasted attention. In the Fourth Way universe, people leak energy constantly through automatic reactions, fantasies, and petty irritations. If that surplus doesn’t find a clean outlet, it doesn’t stay neutral; it curdles. Calling it “poison” frames negativity as an internal toxin rather than a moral failing. You’re not “bad” for being sour; you’re congested.
“Laughter is the antidote” sharpens the point: laughter isn’t escapism, it’s alchemy. It converts tense, unusable charge into release, restoring circulation. The line also quietly distinguishes between laughter that wakes you up and laughter that numbs you. Gurdjieff often prized a hard, self-recognizing humor - the kind that punctures vanity, loosens identifications, and interrupts the trance of taking yourself seriously. In that light, laughter becomes a small act of inner hygiene, a way to keep excess psychic fuel from combusting into resentment, cruelty, or despair.
Context matters: writing amid wars, displacement, and spiritual marketplaces, Gurdjieff’s “antidote” reads like a survival tactic. When the world supplies endless reasons to calcify, laughter is his insistence on staying metabolically alive.
The subtext is his broader suspicion of unexamined emotion and wasted attention. In the Fourth Way universe, people leak energy constantly through automatic reactions, fantasies, and petty irritations. If that surplus doesn’t find a clean outlet, it doesn’t stay neutral; it curdles. Calling it “poison” frames negativity as an internal toxin rather than a moral failing. You’re not “bad” for being sour; you’re congested.
“Laughter is the antidote” sharpens the point: laughter isn’t escapism, it’s alchemy. It converts tense, unusable charge into release, restoring circulation. The line also quietly distinguishes between laughter that wakes you up and laughter that numbs you. Gurdjieff often prized a hard, self-recognizing humor - the kind that punctures vanity, loosens identifications, and interrupts the trance of taking yourself seriously. In that light, laughter becomes a small act of inner hygiene, a way to keep excess psychic fuel from combusting into resentment, cruelty, or despair.
Context matters: writing amid wars, displacement, and spiritual marketplaces, Gurdjieff’s “antidote” reads like a survival tactic. When the world supplies endless reasons to calcify, laughter is his insistence on staying metabolically alive.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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