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Laughing through the chaos: The coping language of Gen Z

WHAT I’ve learned from being chronically online is that whenever a crisis appears in my otherwise uneventful life, the Internet has conditioned me into believing there are only two acceptable responses.

The first is crying dramatically in the shower while Avril Lavigne’s Complicated plays in the background.

The second is posting a meme that reads: “Currently fighting my demons, but God is with Gen Z.”

Naturally, most people my age choose the second option.

Not because we don’t take our problems seriously, but because humour has quietly become the coping mechanism of an entire generation.

Faced with burnout, heartbreak, awkward internships and the general exhaustion of existing in modern society, Gen Z has mastered the art of turning emotional chaos into content.

A failed situationship becomes a Spotify playlist. Financial stress becomes a “bank account jumpscare”. Internship burnout transforms into chaotic TikToks shared among friends at 2am.

Somewhere between irony and oversharing, humour has evolved into more than entertainment online. For many young people, it has become emotional survival.

SCIENCE BEHIND THE LAUGHTER

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Recent psychological research suggests that not all humour works the same way. Some forms genuinely help people cope, while others may quietly deepen emotional distress.

One study published by the National Library of Medicine, which examined 686 participants, found that what researchers call “benevolent humour” — light-hearted, good-natured humour that allows people to laugh at life’s imperfections — acted as a protective factor against depression, anxiety and stress.

In other words, humour that says, “Life is chaotic, but we’re surviving it together,” tends to help people emotionally far more than humour rooted in bitterness, cruelty or relentless sarcasm.

Researchers also found that playful humour and wit were associated with lower anxiety levels.

Meanwhile, darker humour styles — particularly cynicism and aggressive sarcasm — showed stronger links to emotional distress, including stress and depression.

LAUGHING WITH OTHERS, NOT AT THEM

For clarity’s sake, consider the emotional difference between these two sentences:

“I accidentally sent my supervisor the wrong attachment. This is my villain origin story.”

Versus:

“Nothing matters. Everyone is terrible and my existence is entirely meaningless.”

One leans towards playful emotional release. The other sounds like someone who urgently needs sleep, therapy and perhaps a bowl of soup made with love.

Psychologists describe benevolent humour as the kind that creates connection rather than destruction. The goal is to laugh with people, not at them. It softens difficult experiences without pretending they do not exist.

That probably explains why some of the funniest posts online can also feel unexpectedly tender.

A struggling student jokes about surviving on instant noodles. Friends turn internship burnout into chaotic TikTok memes. Young adults laugh about adulthood feeling like a video game that unlocks a new level of stress every month.

Beneath all the irony sits a quieter form of recognition: the understanding that everyone is trying, everyone is exhausted and nobody really knows what they’re doing.

WE’RE ALL BARELY COPING

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Researchers have found that humour helps people cognitively reframe stressful situations. Instead of experiencing stress as emotionally paralysing, humour introduces a layer of absurdity that makes difficult situations feel momentarily less threatening.

The Internet, in particular, has become a goldmine for turning emotional chaos into comedy.

A failed situationship becomes: “Thank you for the trauma. At least I got a playlist out of it.”

Opening your banking app after payday and immediately paying bills? “Financial horror movie jumpscare.”

Being asked to make phone calls at work? “I fear nothing. Except phone calls.”

Ridiculous? Absolutely. But psychologically, these small moments of levity matter.

Studies suggest that laughter can reduce stress responses in the body while helping people maintain a more positive emotional outlook. Even brief moments of humour can ease anxiety and make overwhelming emotions feel more manageable.

Because sometimes people are not laughing because life is funny. They are laughing because life feels too heavy to take seriously all the time.

LAUGHING SO WE DON’T BREAK

Psychology and communication researcher Victor Yocco once described humour as the thing that kept him emotionally afloat through divorce, grief and the loss of his father.

Joking through painful moments, he explained, did not erase the suffering. It simply gave him enough emotional breathing room to survive it.

That feeling resonates strongly online today, especially among younger generations raised in a culture where vulnerability is often disguised as humour.

A tweet that reads, “I’m one inconvenience away from becoming a psych patient,” may sound unserious on the surface. But beneath the irony often sits genuine exhaustion that people struggle to express directly.

Perhaps that is why these jokes spread so widely. They do more than entertain. They make people feel recognised.

Modern Internet humour is rarely just about getting laughs. More often, it acts as a quiet signal between people experiencing the same emotional chaos. It is subtle, but the message is there:

“I also have no idea what I’m doing. We’re all barely holding it together, but at least the memes are excellent.”

With that said, experts caution that humour has its limits. Researchers note that certain forms of humour can sometimes reinforce negative emotional patterns rather than ease them.

There’s a difference between coping through humour and disappearing into it.

Laughing at stress can be healthy; laughing at yourself so relentlessly that the underlying pain is no longer acknowledged is something else entirely. The Internet often reflects both tendencies at once.

It shows humour at its most comforting, and at its most isolating. Yet despite this tension, humour remains one of the most human ways of responding to hardship.

MORE THAN JUST MEMES

You can see these moments in hospital waiting rooms where people crack jokes to steady themselves, in nervous laughter that breaks out during moments of panic, or in families who still tease one another through tears at funerals.

Even in heartbreak, people can turn painful experiences into stories that eventually end in laughter. Not because suffering is funny, but because laughter is proof of survival. In a generation constantly pushed to perform, achieve and keep moving forward, humour offers something rare.

It reminds people that even in difficult times, connection can still be found in shared absurdity. In that sense, it may be one of the most human ways of keeping going through life’s heavier moments.

Sometimes, it might even be what carries people through them.

© New Straits Times Press (M) Bhd

المصدر: New Straits Times

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