This is the biggest bunch of BS I have ever heard. I can easily tickle myself, so can most ticklish people I know. If you can’t do it, you just aren’t trying hard enough.
The Cecil Adams column in question:
Despite your gift for autoticklification, most people find it more difficult to tickle themselves than it is for others to tickle them.
An experiment shown on a not-too-old episode of Scientific American Frontiers sheds a little bit of light on the phenomenon. The experiment had a feather connected by rods and levers to a small joystick. Whenever a subject moved the joystick, the feather moved in the same manner. They were to try to tickle themselves with this “remote-controlled” feather.
The result: People found it no easier to tickle themselves with this lever-controlled feather than it was to tickle themselves with their own fingers. But, it a short delay was added (so that the feather duplicated the movements of the control lever a second or two after-the-fact), then it was much easier for people to tickle themselves!
The theory that came out of this experiment: The mental tickle-cancelling mechanism that Cecil/Darwin talked about is not geared to the position of your tickle-fingers, but to the movement of your hand.
I have to go with <b>regbarkley</b> on this. Even though I’m not very ticklish it does sometimes cause me endless pleasure and frustration when the undersides of my feet are itchy. Really a Catch 22 situation: I want to scratch, but I can’t for long enough because the undersides of my feet are too ticklish…
-H
My experience is that when other people tickle me, I’m ticklish in a variety of spots (neck, feet, armpits, stomach, etc.), but the stomach is the only area where it is actually seriously painfully irritating. But when I tickle myself, only my stomach is ticklish, and then it’s just as ticklish as when other people tickle me.
Hence, I am more susceptible to tickling by others than myself … but in the one location I’m really super-ticklish, it doesn’t matter who or what is providing the stimulation – I hate it all equally.
Actually, there is a semi-medical reason for being ticklish. We have 2 types of tactile (touch) systems.
One is deep pressure aka the proprioceptive system which tends to calm things down. Ever bruise yourself then push on it to make the pain lesson? The deep pressure system in action. Hugs are a good example as well; look at the victims at a tragic incident…someone is usually hugging them while they cry/scream/etc in an attempt to calm them down.
Then there’s the discriminative system aka light touch (being able to find your keys in your pocket without looking for example). That one is also linked to the flight or fight response. People who have a hyperactive discriminative system tend to be very jumpy (tap one on the shoulder from behind and watch em hit the ceiling smirk) and also tend to be very ticklish.
My guess is tickling someone is triggering the flight or fight response, but since it is not necessarily a “danger” situation, the physical response is laughter…
I’m extremely ticklish, yet never have tickled myself. It just doesn’t work. (Thank goodness!)
Really? You need to get out more.
in regards to why are we ticklish. my guess is that laluna is on the right track. being ticklish is an evolutionary defense mechanism. thing of all the things (spiders and snakes) that can kill you in your sleep, or if your unaware of thier presence. being ticklish could warn you when you come into contact with these types of dangers.
Does make a nice theory…
Other forms of danger response seem to be consistent, watching a pratfall is only funny as long as there’s no blood and screaming (for most people anyway), parents pretending to drop children provokes laughter. If the same game was played by a stranger much tears and filled nappies (diapers).
Try the bottoms of your feet. I’m the same way: extremely ticklish, yet the only place I can tickle myself is the bottom of my feet.