In this article, discover the joy of riddles for car rides. Find out how riddles go beyond basic jokes and can entertain, build connections, encourage learning, and promote cognitive benefits.
Car rides can be long and tiring, physically and mentally. Riddles can be short and engaging, the very opposite of car rides. Car rides can produce tense relationships. Riddles for car rides can promote connections and create bonds of shared humor. Car rides can be boring. Riddles can be intellectually stimulating. Car rides often require gear and accessories. Riddles require no prep and provide low maintenance engagement.
The Cambridge Dictionary defines riddles as “a type of question that describes something in a difficult and confusing way and has a clever or funny answer, often asked as a game.” Riddles create humorous word plays that insist that the recipient(s) must think in different ways to figure out the answer. Riddles use humorous and challenging problems to confuse the listener and make the answer less than obvious. Some riddles use opposites to create a contrasting joke, resulting in a witty answer. For example: What is the difference between a lion with a toothache and a rainy day? Answer: One roars with pain and the other pours with rain. These word puzzles allow the brain to find satisfaction in the sharp and stimulating humor.
There are several ways that riddles are beneficial. They are useful tools for promoting creative thinking, creating bonds over shared humor, and providing learning engagement and cognitive benefits. Using humor to cultivate all these results is simple and useful.
What kind of coat is made without buttons and put on wet? Answer: A coat of paint.
Riddles are an excellent source of humorous creativity. The riddle above makes you think, it makes you laugh, it might even make you groan, and it makes you think twice about the sentences you just heard. Naturally, in English we refer to paint on the wall as a coat. But thinking of paint in the same category as outerwear with buttons and protective material is not natural. And yet, it creates a smile because the play on the word coat is simultaneously obvious, funny, and completely absurd. Riddles make us consider double meanings of words, puns, unusual usages for language, humorous contexts, and not-so-obvious scenarios that might be so plausible we dismiss them.
When parents and children share riddles for car rides, they create a shared connection. The bond of humor that develops as they travel creates jokes and memories that last beyond the car ride. An “inside joke” is a popular term for shared humor. While riddles are typically more elevated than a simple joke, the concept is applicable. Humor enables pleasant relationships to form and grow. Children feel safe when they share humor with adults in power positions. Adults build relationships of trust when they allow younger family and friends to indulge in humor and together share in its positive results.
A riddle such as, What bone keeps getting longer and shorter? Answer: A trombone is an excellent example of a riddle that promotes learning and is likely to keep children engaged and laughing. As noted, two dissimilar items are being considered in this riddle, a bone, and a musical instrument. Telling a riddle such as this one creates an opportunity to think about bones when trying to solve the riddle. Once the answer is released, the recipient is likely to consider how musical instruments are played, what sounds they make, and how funny it is that the word bone is in the body and in the name of an instrument. While thoughts like these might be rapid, there is the possibility that questions will surface, and discussion will follow.
Riddles also require no physical preparation or accessories that must travel with you. Your brain and your language go where you go. Using them to encourage learning requires no prep, just a few riddles and off you go. Skip Are we there yet? and go for giggles and good-natured groans on your next road trip. Use the following brain teasers to encourage creative thinking.
Because riddles require thought to solve, there is a cognitive benefit to sharing riddles. The recipient of a riddle must not only think in a variety of ways to construct the answer, but they often must attempt to think in the same manner as the person who shares the riddle. Parents and teachers of small children often find themselves the recipients of silly riddles and answers. They must try and answer a sometimes “creatively” crafted joke by thinking like a child. In the same way, when children must find answers to adults’ riddles, their thought processes expand, and their brains exercise creative options. This cognitive benefit is even more successful when riddles are practiced in a non-threatening environment and rooted in fun. As children grow, they take delight in the way language can play tricks and in stumping the adults in their lives. They are given a feeling of power when they hold the answer to a riddle that requires an adult to use mental energy to find the answer. Riddles for car rides are excellent ways to exercise brains and develop new cognitive pathways. Find more portable conversation starters in Free Spirit’s In a Jar® series.
The boredom and brain blahs on car rides can be broken up with riddles. Riddles for car rides provide an outlet of creative humor, connection, and low prep mental engagement that lends cognitive benefits. Enjoy the ride by keeping everyone’s brains entertained and sharp with witty riddles.