Why do we Lie?
Oops, I just told a lie. It was a little white lie but still, I lied. Why did I lie? What an interesting thought: Why? After thinking about this most complex question I came up with a variety of reasons why people find justification in lying. Be mindful that most of my thoughts stem from books or articles I have read about the not so honest people living in society.I know someone who has made bad choices about life that directly affected people close to her and she told lies as a means to escape the reality of those bad choices. When I asked her why she chose to lie about something that impacted someone else in such a profound way, the response was, "Doesn't it make everything easier that my dad never finds out, I am sorry about what I did and I don't want to hurt anyone else." I am steadfast on my assumption that all lies trace back to the assumption that it will benefit the person who told the lie. Envision a scenario involving the compilation of your resume. Most people are tempted to lie about experience on their resumes to gain the benefits of a better job that they are not
I feel that some people really do lie to feel power. Delving into the question of: Why people lie?" is difficult to generalize because I feel the reasons that tempt us to lie are unique and personal. We lie sometimes simply because it so easy to say what someone else wants to hear, after we all are human and deep down seek the approval of our peers and superiors so why not help our cause in any way that we can? According to the Internet article "Why people Lie" by Mark Kendall These lies can start in private, among friends, then slip out of the liar's control, says Leonard Saxe, a psychologist who studies lying. I do however feel that the basis for all lies is to benefit us individually because once again, no one intentionally lies to hurt him or herself, only to benefit. They feed off the exhilaration of altering someone's perception of something by misguiding them, which is in essence what a lie is. "They're simply getting the kick out of lying, the risk of lying and being able to control the other person," Ekman says. "It just snowballed with a few people and it kept going and going," Dukes said. At the other end of the spectrum, a person may lie because psychologically he cannot acknowledge the truth -- even to himself. "They tell a lie about their past perhaps in private -- the equivalent of locker-room boasting -- and they never expect it to be made public. " He likens it to a teen-ager who tells his dad he saw a different movie than the one he actually saw, not for fear of getting in trouble, but just for fun. Some people lie because they have accustomed themselves to that and even they can't tell lie from reality sometimes. That led to unmasking an even bigger lie: She had faked the winning story.
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