Is there anything you can do that no matter how often you do it, you suffer absolutely no negative effects?
I was going to originally say living and learning but when I think about it some more, those don't count either.ToastiestZombie said:Uhh....
Uhmmm....
I'm gonna go with...
I got nothing. You've really stumped me with that. Gonna go think some more.
The more you live the closer you come to deathProfessor James said:I was going to originally say living and learning but when I think about it some more, those don't count either.ToastiestZombie said:Uhh....
Uhmmm....
I'm gonna go with...
I got nothing. You've really stumped me with that. Gonna go think some more.
Laughing, assuming you take breaks to eat and drink. It releases endorphines, increases bloodflow, strengthens the abdominal muscles and diaphragm, and brings everyone around you to a good mood (and if it doesn't, you're too busy laughing to care anyways).Professor James said:Is there anything you can do that no matter how often you do it, you suffer absolutely no negative effects?
My sister's friend had a grandfather who died from a heart attack while laughing. So there's that.SciMal said:Laughing, assuming you take breaks to eat and drink. It releases endorphines, increases bloodflow, strengthens the abdominal muscles and diaphragm, and brings everyone around you to a good mood (and if it doesn't, you're too busy laughing to care anyways).Professor James said:Is there anything you can do that no matter how often you do it, you suffer absolutely no negative effects?
If you include social side-effects, I suppose if you have a job that requires some social graces you could get in hot water for laughing at the wrong times (a surgeon after an operation where the patient died, for instance) - but other than that, you can't laugh too often.
Breathing as well, I guess. Sure you could hyperventilate and pass out (I think those are more neutral than negative since no physical harm is done), but unless you breathe like a twat all loud and annoying in someone's face it's hard to get too much of good ol' air.
WHILE laughing, not BECAUSE of laughing?JRCB said:My sister's friend had a grandfather who died from a heart attack while laughing. So there's that.SciMal said:Laughing, assuming you take breaks to eat and drink. It releases endorphines, increases bloodflow, strengthens the abdominal muscles and diaphragm, and brings everyone around you to a good mood (and if it doesn't, you're too busy laughing to care anyways).Professor James said:Is there anything you can do that no matter how often you do it, you suffer absolutely no negative effects?
If you include social side-effects, I suppose if you have a job that requires some social graces you could get in hot water for laughing at the wrong times (a surgeon after an operation where the patient died, for instance) - but other than that, you can't laugh too often.
Breathing as well, I guess. Sure you could hyperventilate and pass out (I think those are more neutral than negative since no physical harm is done), but unless you breathe like a twat all loud and annoying in someone's face it's hard to get too much of good ol' air.
My answer? Buying and owning underwear. You can never have too much underwear.
But what about artritis!?Easton Dark said:You can crack your fingers and knuckles as much as you like.
excess by definition means doing something until you cause a problem, so your question is a paradox that cannot be answered by standard logical reasoningProfessor James said:Is there anything you can do that no matter how often you do it, you suffer absolutely no negative effects?