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Visitors Laugh Away Troubles at the HaHaHouse Museum

Visitors Laugh Away Troubles at the HaHaHouse Museum

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A new museum of laughter in Croatia is offering to help people deal with the negativity of modern life.

Visitors to the Haha House in the Croatian capital Zagreb walk into a little cloud of

white smoke when they step inside.

Its purpose is to blow away their worries before they climb into a giant washing machine.

Then they move down a twisting slide into a space filled with little white balls where

their trip to a happier place starts.

Forty-three-year-old Andrea Golubic is the museum's creator.

Golubic said she got the idea during the COVID-19 pandemic.

At that time, many people were feeling down, depressed, and alone.

I realized that I had a mission—to heal people with laughter.

The idea came straight from the heart, Golubic told the French news agency AFP.

We had ideas for many of the museum elements in one day.

That's how the Haha House began.

Golubic said a picture of her when she was a seven-year-old inspired her.

I was constantly joking as a kid, she added.

Visitors press a button to be disinfected from negativity as soon as they step inside

the museum, which has eight interactive zones or areas.

One has rubber chickens singing cheerfully.

They sing songs like Abba's Dancing Queen.

There is a karaoke room with distorted voices and a sumo arena for wrestling in puffed-up clothes.

There is also some serious history of humor from ancient to modern times told through

theater, film, or the internet.

The museum also explains different kinds of humor.

These include wordplay, slapstick, dark humor, and satire.

Golubic said the Haha House is popular with everyone, from small children to older people.

Adults say it is a good excuse to act like a child.

All those who still feel a bit of childish joy and embrace their inner child will recharge themselves, she said.

Metairie Bruno Dadić told AFP he was pleased by his visit, as there is never enough humor in life.

Laughter is a medicine for the soul, he said.

Aleksandr Sukha celebrated his fifth birthday with a visit.

Visiting with his mother, the little boy said he liked lying on the bed of nails since they tickled him.

Singer Zorica Bucic from the coastal town of Split said the museum was just right for our times.

Entering here is like entering childhood, being relieved of all problems, she said.

Bucic added that if you could come to the museum often, you would not need to visit a psychologist.

Post-Peter Kraljevic told AFP that laughter is a kind of weapon which gives people strength to face their problems.

He said that if doctors could advise their patients to have three hours of laughter a

day, people would feel much better. I'm John Russell.