Thank you for your wonderfully magical keynote . . . Your insightful grasp of our profession and its challenges underscores your professionalism in taking the time to research and understand our field.
Ever hear of a "Jollytologist"? Well meet the world's one and only--Allen Klein. Through his books and his presentations, Klein shows people worldwide how to deal with everything from traffic jams to tragedies.
Klein got into this unusual line of work after his wife died of a rare liver disease at the age of 34. He saw how humor helped her, and those around her, cope. He also saw how humor helped him get through that loss. He now teaches others how to find some in trying times. Those audiences include people in 48 states as well as Israel and Australia, and clients from IBM to the IRS.
Klein is the 2005-2006 President of The Association for Applied and Therapeutic Humor, an international organization with nearly 600 members whose purpose is to advance the understanding and application of humor and laughter for their positive benefits.
Klein is also an award-winning speaker and best-selling author as well as the recipient of a Toastmasters Communication and Leadership Award and a Certified Speaking Professional designation from the National Speakers Association. (Less than 800 of its 4,000 members have this honor.)
He is also a 2007 inductee into New York City's Hunter College Hall of Fame Only about a dozen people are selected from the thousands of the past graduates for this distinction.
Klein's first book, The Healing Power of Humor, is now in a 31st printing and eighth foreign language translation.
It shows readers how to use humor to deal with everyday trials and tribulations. His second book, The Courage to Laugh: Humor, Hope, and Healing in the Face of Death and Dying, documents how people have used humor to triumph over tragedy.
He has also authored thirteen other books, including Quotations to Cheer You Up, Up Words for Down Days, The Change-Your-Life Quote Book, WorkLaughs, ParentLaughs, and TeacherLaughs. And his writing has appeared in four Chicken Soup for the Soul books.
Klein has a master's degree in humor (from St. Mary's College in Minnesota--and that's no joke!) And he is well suited to his subject. Years before becoming a "Jollytologist", Klein was nicknamed the "King of Whimsy" because he designed all the children shows at CBS television in New York City. Among those productions was one you probably remember--the Captain Kangaroo show.
Although no longer working in the light-hearted world of children, Klein still believes that adults need to take a lesson from them and lighten up. To help adults do this, Klein is both the editor or The Mid-Month Mirth Memo e-zine and founder of International Mirth Month (every March).
Comedian Jerry Lewis has said that Klein is "a noble and vital force watching over the human condition."
With laughter, lecture, and interactive exercises, this presentation will demonstrate how a sense of humor can help you face the changes and challenges in both the workplace and in your life. You will learn tools, tips and techniques for using humor to reduce stress and for dealing with not-so-funny stuff. You will also leave with a smile on your face and a fun-filled gift to help you remember to lighten up long after this program has ended.
This presentation demonstrates and documents the therapeutic benefits of humor. With laughter, lecture and playful exercises, you will learn tools, tips, and techniques to help you deal with changes, challenges and life's not-so-funny stuff.
With heartwarming, and often hilarious, stories from those who have had the courage to laugh in spite of their prognosis, this program validates George Bernard Shaw's statement that “Life does not cease to be funny when people die, any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh.
In addtion, this workshop will demonstrate how a sense of humor can help you deal with the changes and challenges of hospice work.. With laughter (yuk, yuk) lecture (yak, yak), and playful exercises (yahoo!), you will learn tools, tips and techniques for using humor to deal with not-so-funny stuff.
“We live in an ironic society where even play is turned into work,” says theologian Conrad Hyers. “But the highest existence is not work; the highest level of existence is play.” This program will demonstrate with audience-interactive exercises how play can help do three things: solve problems, foster creativity and reframe stress in new ways.