The Ways We Lie
an essay by Stephanie Ericsson
The bank called today, and I told them my deposit was in the
mail, even though I hadn't written a check yet. It'd been a rough day. The
baby I'm pregnant with decided to do aerobics on my lungs for two hours,
First, in Ericcson’s piece, carefully focus on repetition,
informal/colloquial language, logical fallacies (red
herring), quotations, allusions, and tone. Second,
reflect on your notes and thoughts; think aloud on paper;
reconsider your notes; ask questions; and think about your
thinking.
our three-year-old daughter painted the living-room couch with lipstick, the
IRS put me on hold for an hour, and I was late to a business meeting
because I was tired.
I told my client that traffic had been bad. When my partner came
home, his haggard face told me his day hadn't gone any better than mine,
so when he asked, "How was your day?" I said, "Oh, fine," knowing that
one more straw might break his back. A friend called and wanted to take
me to lunch. I said I was busy. Four lies in the course of a day, none of
which I felt the least bit guilty about.
We lie. We all do. We exaggerate, we minimize, we avoid
confrontation, we spare people's feelings, we conveniently forget, we keep
secrets, we justify lying to the big-guy institutions. Like most people, I
indulge in small falsehoods and still think of myself as an honest person.
Sure I lie, but it doesn't hurt anything. Or does it?
I once tried going a whole week without telling a lie, and it was
paralyzing. I discovered that telling the truth all the time is nearly
impossible. It means living with some serious consequences: The bank
charges me $60 in overdraft fees, my partner keels over when I tell him
about my travails, my client fires me for telling her I didn't feel like being
on time, and my friend takes it personally when I say I'm not hungry.
There must be some merit to lying.
But if I justify lying, what makes me any different from slick
politicians or the corporate robbers who raided the S&.L industry? Saying
it's okay to lie one way and not another is hedging. I cannot seem to
escape the voice deep inside me that tells me: When someone lies,
someone loses.
What far-reaching consequences will I, or others, pay as a result
of my lie? Will someone's trust be destroyed? Will someone else pay my
penance because I ducked out? We must consider the meaning of our
actions. Deception, lies, capital crimes, and misdemeanors all carry
meanings. Webster's definition of lie is specific:
1.
: a false statement or action especially made with the intent to
deceive;
2.
: anything that gives or is meant to give a false impression.
A definition like this implies that there are many, many ways to
tell a lie. Here are just a few.
The White Lie
A man who won't lie to a woman has very little consideration for her
feelings. — Bergen Evans
The white lie assumes that the truth will cause more damage than
a simple, harmless untruth. Telling a friend he looks great when he looks
like hell can be based on a decision that the friend needs a compliment
more than a frank opinion. But, in effect, it is the liar deciding what is best
for the lied to. Ultimately, it is a vote of no confidence. It is an act of subtle
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arrogance for anyone to decide what is best for someone else.
Yet not all circumstances are quite so cut-and-dried. Take, for
instance, the sergeant in Vietnam who knew one of his men was killed in
action but listed him as missing so that the man's family would receive
indefinite compensation instead of the lump-sum pittance the military gives
widows and children. His intent was honorable. Yet for twenty years this
family kept their hopes alive, unable to move on to a new life.
Facades
Et tu, Brute? —Caesar
We all put up facades to one degree or another. When I put on a
suit to go to see a client, I feel as though I am putting on another face,
obeying the expectation that serious businesspeople wear suits rather than
sweatpants. But I'm a writer. Normally, I get up, get the kid off to school,
and sit at my computer in my pajamas until four in the afternoon. When I
answer the phone, the caller thinks I'm wearing a suit (though the UPS
man knows better).
But facades can be destructive because they are used to seduce
others into an illusion. For instance, I recently realized that a former friend
was a liar. He presented himself with all the right looks and the right words
and offered lots of new consciousness theories, fabulous books to read, and
fascinating insights. Then I did some business with him, and the time came
for him to pay me. He turned out to be all talk and no walk. I heard a
plethora of reasonable excuses, including in-depth descriptions of the big
break around the corner. In six months of work, I saw less than a hundred
bucks. When I confronted him, he raised both eyebrows and tried to
convince-me that I'd heard him wrong, that he'd made no commitment to
me. A simple investigation into his past revealed a crowded graveyard of
disenchanted former friends.
Ignoring the Plain Facts
Well, you must understand that Father Porter is only human. —A
Massachusetts priest
In the '60s, the Catholic Church in Massachusetts began hearing
com- u plaints that Father James Porter was sexually molesting children.
Rather than relieving him of his duties, the ecclesiastical authorities simply
moved him from one parish to another between 1960 and 1967, actually
providing him with a fresh supply of unsuspecting families and innocent
children to abuse. After treatment in 1967 for pedophilia, he went back to
work, this time in Minnesota. The new diocese was aware of Father Porter's
obsession with children, but they needed priests and recklessly believed
treatment had cured him. More children were abused until he was relieved
of his duties a year later. By his own admission, Porter may have abused as
many as a hundred children.
Ignoring the facts may not in and of itself be a form of lying, but
consider the context of this situation. If a lie is a false action done with the
intent to deceive, then the Catholic Church's conscious covering for Porter
created irreparable consequences. The church became a co-perpetrator
with Porter.
Deflecting
When you have no basis for an argument, abuse the plaintiff. —Cicero
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I've discovered that I can keep anyone from seeing the true me
by being selectively blatant. I set a precedent of being up-front about
intimate issues, but I never bring up the things I truly want to hide; I just
let people assume I'm revealing everything. It's an effective way of hiding.
Any good liar knows that the way to perpetuate an untruth is to
deflect attention from it. When Clarence Thomas exploded with accusations
that the Senate hearings were a "high-tech lynching," he simply switched
the focus from a highly charged subject to a radioactive subject. Rather
than defending himself, he took the offensive and accused the country of
racism. It was a brilliant maneuver. Racism is now politically incorrect in
official circles—unlike sexual harassment, which still rewards those who can
get away with it.
Some of the most skilled deflectors are passive-aggressive people
who, when accused of inappropriate behavior, refuse to respond to the
accusations. This you-don't-exist stance infuriates the accuser, who,
understandably, screams something obscene out of frustration. The trap is
sprung and the act of de-.ilection successful, because now the
passive^aggressive person can indignantly say, "Who can talk to someone
as unreasonable as you?" The real issue is forgotten and the sins of the
original victim become the focus. Feeling guilty of name-calling, the victim
is fully tamed and crawls into a hole, ashamed. I have watched this fighting
technique work thousands of times in disputes between men and women,
and what I've learned is that the real culprit is not necessarily the one who
swears the loudest.
Omission
The cruelest lies are often told in silence. —R.L.Stevenson
Omission involves telling most of the truth minus one or two key
facts whose absence changes the story completely. You break a pair of
glasses that are guaranteed under normal use and get a new pair, without
mentioning that the first pair broke during a rowdy game of basketball.
Who hasn't tried something like that? But what about omission of
information that could make a difference in how a person lives his or her
life?
For instance, one day I found out that rabbinical legends tell of
another is woman in the Garden of Eden before Eve. I was stunned. The
omission of the Sumerian goddess Lilith from Genesis—as well as her
demonization by ancient misogynists as an embodiment of female evil—felt
like spiritual robbery. I felt like I'd just found out my mother was really my
stepmother. To take seriously the tradition that Adam was created out of
the same mud as his equal counterpart, Lilith, redefines all of JudeoChristian history.
Some renegade Catholic feminists introduced me to a view of
Lilith that had been suppressed during the many centuries when this strong
goddess was seen only as a spirit of evil. Lilith was a proud goddess who
defied Adam's need to control her, attempted negotiations, and when this
failed, said adios and left the Garden of Eden.
This omission of Lilith from the Bible was a patriarchal strategy to
keep women weak. Omitting the strong-woman archetype of Lilith from
Western religions and starting the story with Eve the Rib has helped keep
Christian and Jewish women believing they were the lesser sex for
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thousands of years.
Stereotypes and Clichés
Where opinion does not exist, the status quo becomes stereotyped and all
originality is discouraged. —Bertrand Russell
Stereotype and cliché serve a purpose as a form of shorthand.
Our need for vast amounts of information in nanoseconds has made the
stereotype vital to modern communication. Unfortunately, it often shuts
down original thinking, giving those hungry for the truth a candy bar of
misinformation instead of a balanced meal. The stereotype explains a
situation with just enough truth to seem unquestionable.
All the "isms"—racism, sexism, ageism, et al.—are founded on
and fueled by the stereotype and the cliche, which are lies of exaggeration,
omission, and ignorance. They are always dangerous. They take a single
tree and make it a landscape. They destroy curiosity. They close minds and
separate people. The single mother on welfare is assumed to be cheating.
Any black male could tell you how much of his identity is obliterated daily
by stereotypes. Fat people, ugly people, beautiful people, old people, largebreasted women, short men, the mentally ill, and the homeless all could
tell you how much more they are like us than we want to think. I once
admitted to a group of people that I had a mouth like a truck driver. Much
to my surprise, a man stood up and said, "I'm a truck driver, and I never
cuss." Needless to say, I was humbled.
Groupthink
Who is more foolish, the child afraid of the dark, or the man afraid of the
light? — Maurice Freehill
Irving Janis, in Victims of Group Think, defines this sort of lie as a
psychological phenomenon within decision-making groups in which loyalty
to the group has become more important than any other value, with the
result that dissent and the appraisal of alternatives are suppressed. If
you've ever worked on a committee or in a corporation, you've encountered
groupthink. It requires a combination of other forms of lying—ignoring
facts, selective memory, omission, and denial, to name a few.
The textbook example of groupthink came on December 7, 1941.
From as early as the fall of 1941, the warnings came in, one after another,
that Japan was preparing for a massive military operation. The navy
command in Hawaii assumed Pearl Harbor was invulnerable—the Japanese
weren't stupid enough to attack the United States' most important base. On
the other hand, racist stereotypes said the Japanese weren't smart enough
to invent a torpedo effective in less than 60 feet of water (the fleet was
docked in 30 feet); after all, US technology hadn't been able to do it.
On Friday, December 5, normal weekend leave was granted to all
the commanders at Pearl Harbor, even though the Japanese consulate in
Hawaii was busy burning papers. Within the tight, good-ole-boy
cohesiveness of the US command in Hawaii, the myth of invulnerability
stayed well entrenched. No one in the group considered the alternatives.
The rest is history.
Out-and-Out Lies
The only form of lying that is beyond reproach is lying for its own sake. —
Oscar Wilde
Of all the ways to lie, I like this one the best, probably because I
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get tired of trying to figure out the real meanings behind things. At least I
can trust the bald-faced lie. I once asked my five-year-old nephew, "Who
broke the fence?" (I had seen him do it.) He answered, "The murderers."
Who could argue?
At least when this sort of lie is told it can be easily confronted. As
the person who is lied to, I know where I stand. The bald-faced lie doesn't
toy with my perceptions — it argues with them. It doesn't try to refashion
reality, it tries to refute it. Read my lips.... No sleight of hand. No guessing.
If this were the only form of lying, there would be no such things as
floating anxiety or the adult-children-of-alcoholics movement.
Dismissal
Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain! I am the Great Oz! —The
Wizard of Oz
Dismissal is perhaps the slipperiest of all lies. Dismissing feelings,
perceptions, or even the raw facts of a situation ranks as a kind of lie that
can do as much damage to a person as any other kind of lie.
The roots of many mental disorders can be traced back to the
dismissal of reality. Imagine that a person is told from the time she is a tot
that her perceptions are inaccurate. "Mommy, I'm scared." "No you're not,
darling." "I don't like that man next door, he makes me feel icky." "Johnny,
that's a terrible thing to say, of course you like him. You go over there right
now and be nice to him."
I've often mused over the idea that madness is actually a sane
reaction to an insane world. Psychologist R. D. Laing supports this
hypothesis in Sanity, Madness and the Family, an account of his
investigation into the families of schizophrenics. The common thread that
ran through all of the families he studied was a deliberate, staunch
dismissal of the patient's perceptions from a very early age. Each of the
patients slatted out with an accurate grasp of reality, which, through
meticulous and methodical dismissal, was demolished until the only reality
the patient could trust was catatonia.
Dismissal runs the gamut. Mild dismissal can be quite handy for
forgiving the foibles of others in our day-to-day lives. Toddlers who have
just learned to manipulate their parents' attention sometimes are dismissed
out of necessity. Absolute attention from the parents would require so
much energy that no one would get to eat dinner. But we must be careful
and attentive about how far we take our "necessary" dismissals. Dismissal
is a dangerous tool, because it's nothing less than a lie.
Delusion
We lie loudest when we lie to ourselves. —Eric Hoffer
I could write the book on this one. Delusion, a cousin of dismissal,
is the tendency to see excuses as facts. It's a powerful lying tool because it
filters out information that contradicts what we want to believe. Alcoholics
who believe that the problems in their lives are legitimate reasons for
drinking rather than results of the drinking offer the classic example of
deluded thinking. Delusion uses the mind's ability to see things in myriad
ways to support what it wants to be the truth.
But delusion is also a survival mechanism we all use. If we were
to fully contemplate the consequences of our stockpiles of nuclear weapons
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or global warming, we could hardly function on a day-to-day level. We
don't want to incorporate that much reality into our lives because to do so
would be paralyzing.
Delusion acts as an adhesive to keep the status quo intact. It
shamelessly employs dismissal, omission, and amnesia, among other sorts
of lies. Its most cunning defense is that it cannot see itself.
The liar's punishment [. . .] is that he cannot believe anyone else.
—George Bernard Shaw
These are only a few of the ways we lie. Or are lied to. As I said
earlier, it's not easy to entirely eliminate lies from our lives. No matter how
pious we may try to be, we will still embellish, hedge, and omit to lubricate
the daily machinery of living. But there is a world of difference between
telling functional lies and living a lie. Martin Buber once said, "The lie is the
spirit committing treason against itself." Our acceptance of lies becomes a
cultural cancer that eventually shrouds and reorders reality until moral
garbage becomes as invisible to us as water is to a fish.
How -much do we tolerate before we become sick and tired of
being sick and tired? When will we stand up and declare our right to trust?
When do we stop accepting that the real truth is in the fine print? Whose
lips do we read this year when we vote for president? When will we stop
being so reticent about making judgments? When do we stop turning over
our personal power and responsibility to liars?
Maybe if I don't tell the bank the check's in the mail I'll be less
tolerant of the lies told me every day. A country song I once heard said it
all for me: "You've got to stand for something or you'll fall for anything."
Ericsson, Stephanie. “The Ways We Lie.” 1992. 4 Dec. 2005 .
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caliber. Consider this paper as an academic endeavor.
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Follow the MLA format guidelines for the first page of
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Follow the MLA format guidelines for your paper's
page numbers.
Provide a separate Works Cited list that conforms to
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should vary in types and not be one kind. (For
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background/summary of the essay 4)
argument/analysis/evaluation of essay** 5)
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Follow guidelines for quotes and paraphrases. Avoid
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Observe correct grammar and avoid spelling errors.
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Determine the focus of your topic. The
rhetorical mode to use for this research paper is
PREFERABLY argumentative or persuasive or a
combination of both(i.e., presents pros and cons),
it must develop an argument. Remember that
the research paper is not solely a report or
summary
b) Conduct your research: Visit the LAVC library
and seek the help of the Writing Center and its
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evidence.
d) Organize your evidence under individual body
paragraphs. Remember one supporting idea per
body paragraph.
e) Long Quotations (Block Quote): When a
quotation takes up more than 4 typed lines of
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text by indenting the entire quotation one inch
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The paper must be written in the person.
Observe correct grammar and avoid spelling errors.
THE RESEARCH PROCESS:
a)
Determine the focus of your topic. The
rhetorical mode to use for this research paper is
PREFERABLY argumentative or persuasive or a
combination of both(i.e., presents pros and cons),
it must develop an argument. Remember that
the research paper is not solely a report or
summary
b) Conduct your research: Visit the LAVC library
and seek the help of the Writing Center and its
Reference sections, refer to Library Orientation..
c) Manage and take notes on information: Keep a
working bibliography, which you will turn into your
Works Cited list for the final draft. Take notes
about your responses to the information you find.
Print out necessary pages from books and
articles and highlight portions you may use as
evidence.
d) Organize your evidence under individual body
paragraphs. Remember one supporting idea per
body paragraph.
e) Long Quotations (Block Quote): When a
quotation takes up more than 4 typed lines of
prose or three lines of verse, set it off from the
text by indenting the entire quotation one inch
(ten spaces) from both the left and right margins.
Use single-space for the long indented
quotation, and add extra space above and below
it. Quotation marks are not needed. See
example in "Writing Handbooks. No more than 2
long quotes allowed in this research paper. At
least 4-5 qoted statements are required (this
included the long quotations.
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the Works Cited page and specialized sources in
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