>>1160491Something that in many senses can fare good, is trying to change your mindset to a more flexible/less mathlike point in as much as it is possible,
Getting some funne friends (you've gott'em!), youtube channels that feature witty marks, and so on, and start developing a kind of sense of humour that results of your liking.
Using the jokes and using resources is important too.
"-What do you call an anon that wants to learn how to make jokes?
That's a german!
-what do you call an anon aware of his wittiness to make jokes?
An american!
-what do you call an anon that makes funny jokes?
A-non existing."
This works because we know of international culture, and have a serie of internal references, and common codes of communication that trascends the words, as to get to the concepts.
If you work a comic, building up your own serie of internal jokes, and keeping expanding it is valuable.
Like:
"-Mom, I don't like Aspargus.
-It's called asperger, dummy! and the childs who have it don't pick whether to have it or not. Don't discriminate them.
Later on:
<kid stumbles on someone else and falls to the floor in the middle of a square>
Mother: -sorry, he's got Aspargus, it is a serious and impeding chronic illness."
The idea gets back later, and you can keep developing more references steming from there, and assign roles too, like for the mom be the agressive joker and the child the passive. Like when protagonists get beaten up, or you have a serious character to contrast the sillyness of situations.
Things can get as silly as you want.
"What has the british told the american?"
-hey, fella! Seems summet has fell off your hands to the ground
×Oh what is it?
-the market.
What did the american do in a ship?
He farted.
How many british are needed to beat an american?
They would never, they would immediatedly get leaded fart off.
Aren't these like best jokes evah?