Current:Home > NewsPeople are sharing their 'funny trauma' on TikTok. Why experts aren't convinced. -Excel Money Vision
People are sharing their 'funny trauma' on TikTok. Why experts aren't convinced.
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:26:48
Kaitlin Shepard will never forget her childhood bus ride from hell.
The one where the second she climbed those few steps up, someone in the back screamed: "Yo, somebody get me a harpoon! I see a whale!" It wasn't the "whale" part that bothered the now 22-year-old of Nashville. Her public school classmates' taunts weren't uncommon. She just didn't know what a harpoon was and had to Google it – realizing mid-ride this student effectively threatened to kill her and everyone giggled and guffawed.
But as Shepard recounted this seemingly traumatic story in a recent TikTok, she was laughing, too. A recent viral video on the platform – which has inspired many replies, or stitches – invited users to reveal their funny traumas, and Shepard joined in on the trend with her bus story.
Many in the comments, though, didn't find the story all that funny. "Girl this is trauma," one user commented. "I’m glad you can talk about it because…man something like this would have wrecked me as a child." And another: "I’m not laughing I’m legit crying. This made me so angry but so sad."
Some people cope with trauma through humor, but mental health experts caution sharing stories publicly in this manner may not be worth a quick laugh.
"Sharing trauma on TikTok can unmask the prevalence of trauma in our culture, but it can also have a dampening effect of making trauma appear more ubiquitous and less alarming," says Alice Shepard, clinical psychologist and the owner of Mirielle Therapy Practice.
'It's OK to laugh about it'
Shepard makes videos to help people feel less alone – and laugh at herself in the process. "It's OK to laugh about it, it's OK to make light in something that did cause you trauma or did cause you a lot of stress at the time," she says.
It's a way to take back a narrative, a sense of control. Plus, "humor is associated with improving communication, reducing stress and anxiety, it can relieve tension, even improve recovery in general if you have experienced something negative," says T.M. Robinson-Mosley, counseling psychologist.
In other words: Laughter can be the best medicine, according to experts. "There is a time and place and season in our healing journey where humor is appropriate and sometimes even needed," says Cecille Ahrens, a licensed clinical social worker. "The ability to laugh with ourselves, as opposed to at ourselves can be a sign of one's healing."
Of course, humor is likely not the sole antidote to healing. "If humor is being used to avoid processing or dealing with painful events, and the avoidance is causing significant impairment or issues in one's life, then professional support should be considered," Ahrens says.
Robinson-Mosley adds: "There's always a chance that trying to find humor in everything could possibly backfire or create discomfort."
To read:The Kardashians, body image and social media: Why parents should stop filtering their photos
'We don't know how someone will respond'
Keep in mind that not everyone who comes across these videos while scrolling TikTok will be cackling and cracking up. "We don't know how someone will respond to someone posting their 'funny trauma,'" says Laura Petiford, a licensed marriage and family therapist. "Social media can be incredibly powerful. A vulnerable person who doesn't have the emotional resources to handle either the feedback they receive or the content they are viewing could be harmed."
If you're perusing these videos on your TikTok feed – and in an emotionally stable spot to watch them – make sure you're laughing along with the person posting, not necessarily at them. "Some minor trauma might be seen as funny, but this needs to be determined by the person affected," Alice Shepard says.
To that end, it's probably not someone's best bet to unpack significant trauma like violence or death on the platform.
"We don't see much sharing of the stuff that leaves a more indelible mark such as parental neglect, a really bad accident, or an abusive spouse," says Maryanne Fisher, a psychology professor at St. Mary's University in Canada. "What someone might label 'trauma' might be what others of us would consider a bad day or a crummy interaction. Perhaps it's not traumatic at all, but rather embarrassing or humiliating."
People talk about 'complex trauma':What does it mean?
'It can be great to laugh'
Generally, someone posting about their past should be prepared for people to bring it up again and again and again. So users should prepare accordingly. "Rather than working through the experience, it could become part of a running joke that followers bring up, or in the future, when someone might want to simply forget the experience ever happened, it resurfaces," Fisher says.
So, sure, post away. Give yourself and your followers a laugh if you're comfortable. Just think carefully before you open that can of woeful worms.
As Fisher says: "It can be great to laugh at something, as so long as it really is fully in the past."
veryGood! (76)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Netflix, not football, is on menu for Alabama coach Nick Saban after Rose Bowl loss to Michigan
- NBA power rankings: Are the Clippers and Suns ready to contend in the West?
- Voter challenges in Georgia before 2021 runoff didn’t violate Voting Rights Act, judge says
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- New Hampshire luxury resort linked to 2 cases of Legionnaires' disease, DPHS investigating
- Ready to mark your calendar for 2024? Dates for holidays, events and games to plan ahead for
- $39 Lululemon Leggings, 70% off Spanx Leggings & More Activewear Finds To Reach Your 2024 Fitness Goals
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Arkansas family identified in house explosion that killed 4 in Michigan
Ranking
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Tamales, 12 grapes, king cake: See how different cultures ring in the new year with food
- Prosecutors accuse Sen. Bob Menendez of introducing Qatari royal family member to aid NJ businessman
- Suburbs put the brakes on migrant bus arrivals after crackdowns in Chicago and New York
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- CFP 1.0 changed college football, not all for better, and was necessary step in postseason evolution
- 2023-24 NFL playoffs: Everything we know (and don't know) ahead of the NFL Week 18 finale
- Kentucky secretary of state calls for a ‘tolerant and welcoming society’ as he starts his 2nd term
Recommendation
'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
'He was just a great player. A great teammate': Former Green Bay Packers center Ken Bowman dies at 81
Fiery Rochester crash appears intentional, but no evidence of terrorism, officials say
Gypsy Rose Blanchard is free, reflects on prison term for conspiring to kill her abusive mother
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
'You Are What You Eat': Meet the twins making changes to their diet in Netflix experiment
Cause still undetermined for house fire that left 5 children dead in Arizona, authorities say
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. qualifies for presidential ballot in Utah, the first state to grant him access