The little lies starts when we're kids I guess. Little chestnuts shoot out of our mouths when we're trying to impress our mates. I was 7 when I told my new next door neighbours that I had a brother. (I didn’t) When they wanted to see him, I told them he was asleep. (He wasn't – because he didn’t exist). Apparently these two like to wake up people when they are unconscious. So low and behold, I told them to wait for five minutes. I ran to my bedroom and filled my bunk bed with my teddies galore under a duvet cover and ushered them in. I only allowed my guests to be in my room at a great distance from my bed. The 'fake body' was rather convincing, but not enough for my hopeful new friends. The lies continued - 'he sleeps a lot' and 'his birthday is next month' and when asked why his bedroom would be in a room of Care Bear wallpaper, I said 'oh we share a bedroom....we're really poor'. (The only truth I had made since 4pm that day).
I don’t think BigPinkHeart needs to really categorise the right and wrong lies here, or indeed build a list to which we can all refer to, but perhaps the most important thing here, is to find the skill, which we all have, to listen to our own conscience and ask if we really are lying to protect those we lie to, or to protect ourselves.
As a side note, if you don’t have a conscience at all, I doubt you’d be reading this in the first place.
Most affairs are hidden, to protect the culprit, not the innocent partner, and most people who have been cheated on will probably tell you, that although the cheating hurt like hell, it was the secrecy that hurt the most.
Lying is the biggest pet peeve for me, hence why I needed your help on Twitter to work out how you all felt about lying. My word, haven't you gone through the mill? People discovering their ex was gay, partners lying in catastrophic extremes (not just the dog ate your mobile phone), mothers and fathers never telling their children the truth of biological parents. Stuff that causes scars, not just bruises. I'm glad you helped, because I fear I'm a little tight on this subject and I let little slide when it comes to honesty. Because I’d rather hurt like hell and know the truth, than live in bliss and be ignorant. Others prefer to ‘not know’. So perhaps the decision as to whether we lie, depends on the person we’re talking to?
Also the scale of lie from white (saying you snogged someone, when you didn’t) to the heart-tearing lies (you finding out that you’re partner is living a whole different life with someone else without your knowledge) changes the gravitas. Sometimes great lies lead to a thousand small ones and vice versa. Do we really have the energy to keep it up, and if you do, where’s the respect for yourself, nevermind the one you’re lying to? The greater the lie, the longer it takes to get over. The kids who worked out I had stuffed teddies into my duvet cover didn't hold it against me, but they did forever think I was the strangest person they had ever met.. I can't say I blame them.
To focus on the aftermath might be the better bet, when the lie has been inexcusable and what happens to people once they’ve worked out the real truth. Of course trust is royally screwed, and the disappointment in the one that inflicted such a pain, but many feel like a mug for trusting that person in the first place. They can’t look back at anything between you and them in the same light, without that sinking feeling.
The time you’ve wasted lying and covering up any track, is actually not half as exhausting as the making up. The having to prove you can be trustworthy, the paranoia you’ve caused, or indeed you tell the truth, but people are no longer sure whether to believe you.
Although I hate to use the Apprentice for a blog post, there is no better example of seeing the damage lies can cause. So close to the final, Stuart Baggs was labeled intelligent, interesting and willing to do anything to work for Lord Sugar. His gift of blagging got him through many rounds. But when it came to the interrogation process, he was picked up on one line of his CV. ‘I own a licensed telecommunications company’. The license was for broadwidth, not telecommunications. He elaborated and essentially lied through a technicality. No one had picked this up, before now. Lord Sugar, was angry with himself for not seeing the signs of such blatant fabrications, but the chap couldn’t still admit that he had lied. The board were angry and were insulted that this 21 year old, thought he had managed to pull the wool over their eyes. It becomes patronizing to others, and I don’t think there’s a coincidence that Stuart’s firing, was the worst in the series.When people catch you lying Stuart, people get angry. We all do.
You see the problem is, once we begin to even white lie and ‘blag’, the severity of the lies feels less and less. The conscience gets used to excuses for cover ups, and slowly but surely, people are changing their lives, living as different identities and commtting fraud, without even thinking about it. I have a theory that the amygdala in your brain, the thing that tells you to fight or flight, becomes more accustomed to your actions, the more you do something, the more your amygdala gets used to the fear of doing it. So next time, it's never quite so 'wee in your pants' terrifying.. Maybe lets be careful of how much we deceive ourselves, never mind others..
To avoid the wasteless energy of the lies we’ve told, lets do our best to never start them in the first place. Because if you’ve been on the receiving end, you’ll work out the hurt, and how much harder it is to hand our trust into the reliable hands of people, that don’t deserve our skepticism.
So if you want to be on Santa’s ‘good list’ (ironic that I use a fabricated character that remains our biggest lie to date to children under 4 - oh but it's fun to keep them happy) just check over the past year and lets ask ourselves if we’ve really been the most truthful we could be. Because with truth, comes weightless pressures, closer relationships, outstanding love, and happiness that money can’t buy.
Do the BigPinkHearted thing, and ask if it’s you you’re protecting from getting into trouble because essentially the worst lies you can ever tell, are the ones you tell to yourself.