BABY MAMA April 2016 | Page 45

nd right ways to use humor—but there are ents need to know the difference.” Humor is also like glue, though, in that it can be toxic. There are right times and right places and right ways to use humor—but there are many more wrong ones, and parents need to know the difference. Teasing is warm and fun when it’s welcome and gentle and the teasing goes back and forth. But it’s cruel when it tips over into ridicule, or when one person is always the butt of the joke, or when a genuine weakness or insecurity is mocked. Teasing someone for always getting A’s is fine; mocking someone who’s struggling in a class isn’t. And using humor to air grievances or to attack someone is a nasty sport. I have relatives who’ll say absolutely horrible things to one another in a joking tone and then—adding insult to injury— accuse the victim of having “no sense of humor” if he justifiably feels hurt. Cruelty in a joking tone is still cruelty. And while sarcasm can be good clean fun between two people old enough and aware enough to volley mischievously with each other, I hate when people use it on or around little kids, who are usually bewildered by comments that make everyone else laugh for a reason they can’t understand. There’s something mean to me about misleading a child by using a tone that doesn’t match your words. Humor should be used to unify people, not exclude or hurt them. How do our April Fools’ Day jokes fit into that? Well, the kids and I certainly feel unified when we giggle and plot the day before to figure out how to affectionately “get” their dad. Plus Rob gets to enjoy the catharsis of relief when the sick child springs up perfectly healthy, the backpack appears in the car, the college major stays on course, and everyone is shouting a fond “April Fools’!” in his ear. I’m pretty sure he’s good with it. Pretty sure. Claire grew up in Newton, Massachusetts, went to Harvard and moved to LA. She has written five novels for adults, two YA novels, and co-wrote Overcoming Autism and Growing up on the Spectrum for young adults with autism and Asperger’s. She lives in the Pacific Palisades with her husband Rob, and her four kids.