We tell the truth. So much do we love the truth that we are
not prey to any illusions. We believe that good mental health involves
unflinching truth-telling. Nothing is worse than lying. Remember the mantra, “Bush
lied; people died.” Truth tellers repeated it so many times that everyone ended
up believing it. Even though it was a lie. It was a big lie… aka propaganda.
But, do you really always tell the truth? Aren’t we all
willing to tell a few little white lies if it helps us to avoid conflict or
even to hurt someone’s feelings? If a man tells his wife that she looks great,
even though he thinks that her latest frock looks like sewn-together rags, is
he rendering her a service or a disservice? If he were a fashion stylist he
would be within his rights to tell her the dress makes her look like (insert suitably offensive term)…., but as
a husband, his role is to show his love and affection for her. If he doesn’t
tell her that he likes the way she looks, she will take it as a reflection of
his feelings about her. Besides, her
dress might be eminently fashionable. Do you think that he really knows the
difference?
Of course, there are limits. If she goes out to a party or a function and is seriously overdressed or underdressed, she will not take too much consolation from the fact that her husband signed off on the outfit. So, there are limits to lying. If your lie sets your wife up for public ridicule she will not likely be consoled by the fact that you were saying it to show that you love her.
OK, that was an easy example. Ian Leslie offers up many more
in his Daily Mail article. In it he summarizes a new book wherein he argues that
being good at telling lies is a good thing.
Lies lubricate social commerce. Of
course, if you lie on the witness stand or tell the police that you know
nothing of the crime that you just witnessed, you will get yourself into some
very serious trouble.
Leslie limits himself to everyday social
interactions. He does not address himself to the criminal justice system,
because, when all is said and done, life is not a trial. Or, at least, it
shouldn’t be. If yours feels like a trial, then perhaps you do not lie enough.
You are too open and honest.
Leslie writes:
We lie
by saying: ‘I’m fine, thanks’ when we’re feeling miserable. We lie when we say:
‘What a beautiful baby’ while inwardly noting its resemblance to an alien. And
most of us have simulated anger, sadness, affection, or said: ‘I love you’ when
we don’t mean it.
We tell our children to smile and look grateful for the soap-on-a-rope grandma has given them for their birthday — and perhaps we add that if they don’t, Father Christmas won’t come this year.
Not
only do we make exceptions to the prohibition against lying, sometimes we
approve of it. If a doctor tells a bereaved husband his wife died instantly in
the crash, rather than the truth — that she spent her last hours in horrific
pain — we applaud the doctor’s compassion.
We call
the lies we like ‘white lies’, but asked to define what makes a lie white we
soon get lost in qualifications and contradictions. And while traditionally we
frown upon liars, I’d argue that lying is a basic human necessity.
Why do we lie? We do so in order to protect the feelings of
other people. Perhaps this is a foreign notion, but in an age where we are all
told that being truthful, about our feelings or our beliefs, puts us on the
road to mental health… regardless of who we offend or of which dramas we
provoke, it is worth saying:
Most of
us have, at some point, perhaps in a cab or around the canteen table, found
ourselves faced with a choice between pretending to agree with a political
statement in which we don’t believe, or being honest and risking an unpleasant
argument.
We have
to deal with conflicts between our desire to be truthful and our standing in
the community — and often we choose to do so by lying.
‘Yes,
that dress looks lovely on you.’ ‘I’m so sorry I’m busy that night.’ ‘Of course
I don’t mind!’ White lies are sticking plasters we put over everyday social
problems, they’re the way we avoid hurting people’s feelings.
Leslie explains that the much studied placebo effect is real
and is based on a lie. Also, when you compliment and flatter your spouse you
might be telling a lie, but you are also encouraging her or him to feel better
about him or herself. And you are affirming your commitment to your
relationships. Not a small matter that.
Visionaries, Leslie says, tend to be inveterate liars. They concoct plans
for unrealistic projects and pursue them until they fail or succeed. More often
than not they fail, but if we did not have visionaries, people whose
imagination had detached from reality, we would not know change. We would not
have made all of the wondrous technological advances that power our
civilization.
It feels like a stretch to call such people liars. They are
idealists, imagining the world as it might be rather than settling for the
world as it is.
Leslie continues:
We need
over-optimistic entrepreneurs who are prepared to take irresponsible risks.
Without people who are willing to ignore the prevailing wisdom and follow their
instincts, many of our biggest innovations and creative leaps forward wouldn’t
have happened.
Every
year, thousands of people with vaulting ambitions start new companies in full
awareness that the odds are against them achieving the kind of world-changing
success of which they dream.
Most
fail or settle for something less, but a few of those companies eventually
become Apple or Starbucks or Dyson.
At
every turn, it seems, life undermines any strict adherence to truth.
Like most good things, you can take lying too far. If you
continue to believe in an illusion even when reality has told you that it
cannot work, you are engaging in a higher form of self-deception. If you think
that the spouse who beats you will change you are harboring a dangerous
self-delusion. Like the business visionary who tries to do something that no
one said could be done, you should know how to test your self-deceptions
against reality. And you should always yield to the verdict of reality.
4 comments:
Not much to disagree. Lies of opinion or preference clear!y are the smallest, since these are changeable.
And a trickier lie is about predicting the future when you don't have control over outcomes - like you can keep your health plan.
And in general any promise about the future has unknown factors. Until death do us part is idealistic, but there are honorable ways to break a contract.
Shame is another trick place of lies. One idea is lying causes guilt, while denying dishonesty causes shame. Some lies may be performance when everyone knows the emperor has no clothes while everyone pretends he does, except the idiot child who has been firmly taught to never lie.
Ares, that "you can keep your health plan" statement? That's why the Dems wrote the whole thing, excluded the GOP, and Nancy Pelosi said "we have to pass it to find out what's in it".
I stand corrected.
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