
The truth about lying
All of us lie. Not necessarily with somebody, but to someone
sometimes. However, most of us lie in order to avoid embarrassing or
hurting others. Lying may refer to: lie - a deliberate untruth; or lying
a horizontal position with which we are not concerned at the moment,
however much it might be a tempting proposition.
Studies show that the average person lies several times a day. Some
of those are biggies like I've been faithful to you. Others are par for
the course: 'No, your new dress looks good.' Some forms of deception
aren't exactly lies: comb-overs like nodding when you're not listening.
And then there are lies we tell ourselves, as part of healthy
self-esteem maintenance or serious delusions. What all this means in the
end is: it appears that we can't handle the truth. Thus, deception
becomes rampant. The Truth About lying is that we tell the biggest lies
to those we love most. Lying has long been a part of everyday life. We
couldn't get through the day without being deceptive. Yet, until
recently, lying was almost entirely ignored by psychologists, leaving
serious discussion of the topic in the hands of ethicists and
theologians.
Decade
If, as the clich has it, the turn of the century brought about the
decade of greed; then the quintessential sin of the 2010s might be
lying. After all, think of the accusations of deceit levelled at
politicians, bureaucrats, businessmen, sports personalities, husbands,
wives, etcetera; and the fact that even Hollywood noticed our apparent
deception obsession: witness films like Quiz Show, True Lies, The
Crucible, Secrets & Lies, and Liar, Liar; and we realize that we are
truly into the decade of lying.
For starters, the work by Bella DePaulo, Ph.D., a psychologist at the
University of Virginia, confirms Nietzsche's assertion that the lie is a
condition of life. In a 1996 study, DePaulo and her colleagues had 147
people between the ages of 18 and 71 keep a diary of all the falsehoods
they told over the course of a week.
Most people, she found, lie once or twice a day - almost as often as
they snack from the refrigerator or brush their teeth. Both men and
women lie in approximately a fifth of their social exchanges lasting ten
or more minutes; over the course of a week they deceive about thirty
percent of those with whom they interact one-on-one. Furthermore, some
types of relationships, such as those between parents and teens, are
virtual magnets for deception: "College students lie to their mothers in
one out of two conversations," reports DePaulo. (Incidentally, when
researchers refer to lying, they don't include the mindless pleasantries
or polite equivocations we offer each other in passing, such as "I'm
fine, thanks" or "No trouble at all." An "official" lie actually
misleads, deliberately conveying a false impression. So complimenting a
friend's awful haircut or telling a creditor that the check is in the
mail both qualify.) Most of us receive conflicting messages about lying.
Although we're socialized from the time we can speak to believe that
it's always better to tell the truth, in reality society often
encourages and even rewards deception. Show up late for an early morning
meeting at work and it is best not to admit that you overslept. You're
punished far more than you would be if you lie and say you were stuck in
traffic.
Moreover, lying is integral to many occupations. Think how often we
see lawyers constructing far-fetched theories on behalf of their clients
or reporters misrepresenting themselves in order to gain access to good
stories or diplomats recreate the art of lying.
Romantics
Dishonesty also pervades our romantic relationships, as you might
expect from the titles of books like 101 Lies Men Tell Women (Harper
Collins), by Missouri psychologist Dory Hollander, Ph.D. Eighty-five
percent of the couples interviewed in a 1990 study of college students
in the United States of America reported that one or both partners had
lied about past relationships or recent indiscretions. And DePaulo finds
that dating couples lie to each other in about a third of their
interactions - perhaps even more often than they deceive other people.
Protection
Fortunately, marriage seems to offer some protection against
deception: Spouses lie to each other in "only" about 10 percent of their
major conversations. The bad news? That 10 percent just refers to the
typically minor lies of everyday life.
DePaulo recently began looking at the less frequent "big" lies that
involve deep betrayals of trust, and she's finding that the vast
majority of them occur between people in intimate relationships. "You
save your really big lies," she says, "for the person that you're
closest to." Though some lies produce interpersonal friction, others may
actually serve as a kind of harmless social lubricant.
"They make it easier for people to get along," says DePaulo, noting
that in the diary study one in every four of the participants' lies were
told solely for the benefit of another person.
In fact, "fake positive" lies - those in which people pretend to like
someone or something more than they actually do ("Your cakes are the
best ever") - are about 10 to 20 times more common than "false negative"
lies in which people pretend to like someone or something less ("That
two-faced rat will never get my vote").
Certain cultures may place special importance on these "kind" lies.
A survey of residents at 31 senior citizen centers in Los Angeles
recently revealed that only about half of elderly Korean Americans
believe that patients diagnosed with life-threatening cancer should be
told the truth about their condition. In contrast, nearly 90 percent of
Americans of European or African descent felt that the terminally ill
should be confronted with the truth.
Not surprisingly, research also confirms that the closer we are to
someone, the more likely it is that the lies we tell them will be
altruistic ones.
This is particularly true of women: Although the sexes, even while
lying together, lie with equal frequency; women are especially likely to
stretch the truth in order to protect someone else's feelings. Men, on
the other hand, are more prone to lying about themselves - the typical
conversation between two guys contains about eight times as many
self-oriented lies as it does falsehoods about other people. Men and
women may also differ in their ability to deceive their friends. In a
University of Virginia study, psychologists asked pairs of same-sex
friends to try to detect lies told by the other person. Six months later
the researchers repeated the experiment with the same participants.
While women had become slightly better at detecting their friend's lies
over time, men didn't show any improvement evidence, perhaps, that women
are particularly good at learning to read their friends more accurately
as a relationship deepens.
Studies reveal that frequent liars tend to be manipulative and
Machiavellian, not to mention overly concerned with the impression they
make on others. Still, DePaulo warns that liars "don't always fit the
stereotype of caring only about themselves.
Further research reveals that extroverted, sociable people are
slightly more likely to lie, and that some personality and physical
traits - notably self-confidence and physical attractiveness - have been
linked to an individual's skill at lying when under pressure.
On the other hand, the people least likely to lie are those who score
high on psychological scales of responsibility and those with meaningful
same-sex friendships. Research has also found that a certain amount of
self-delusion, basically lying to yourself, is essential to good mental
health. Thus, it seems that anyone under enough pressure, or given
enough incentive, will lie. Hence, until this day next week, and for the
rest of your life, keep lying, keep thinking, and keep laughing. It
seems that life is mostly about these three actions.
For views, reviews, encomiums and brick-bats :
|