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A lie is a statement that is believed to be false and is usually used to mislead someone. The practice of spreading falsehood is called lying. A person who tells lies can be called a liar. People lie for many different reasons. In this essay, I am going to consider the most typical of them.
Firstly, people tell lies to avoid punishment. I thought I was only going 55 miles an hour officer, claims the driver speeding at 70 mph. My wristwatch stopped, so I had no idea that I got home 2 hours after my curfew, says the teenager. Avoiding punishment is the most frequent reason people tell serious lies, regardless of their age, whether it be to avoid a speeding ticket or being grounded. In serious lies there is a threat of significant damage if the lie is discovered: loss of freedom, money, job, relationship, reputation, or even life itself.
Concealing a reward or benefit is another reason to lie. In serious lies, the falsehood is usually told to conceal the reward or benefit the liar obtained by breaking a rule or explicit expectation. The curfew violator was able to stay longer at the party, the speeding driver is rushing because he pushed the snooze button when the alarm went off, the husband claims the ringer on the telephone in his office must have been turned off when he was working late in a hotel room with his girlfriend will pay no price if his lie succeeds. In each of these examples, the rule breaker decides before breaking a rule that he or she will if questioned lie to cover the cheating. Sometimes the reward could have been achieved a high mark on an exam without cheating, but not as easily, it would have taken more effort (hours of study in this example).
Protecting someone else from harm is the next most important reason why people tell serious lies. You dont want your friend, your fellow worker, your sibling, your spouse, or anyone whom you care about to get punished, even if you dont agree with what the person you are protecting did that put him or her in danger. It is not certain whether society approves of these lies. When policemen refuse to testify against a fellow officer, they know has broken the law, we respect their motives, but many people believe they should be truthful. Yet the terms we use rat, fink, and snitch are derogatory.
To protect yourself from being harmed even when you have not broken any rule is still another motive. The child home alone who tells the stranger knocking on the door My father is taking a nap come back later has committed no misdeed that he or she is concealing; it is a self-protection lie.
Some lies are told to win the admiration of others. Boasting about something untrue is an obvious instance. It is common in children, some adolescents, and even adults.
Maintaining privacy, without asserting that right, is another reason why people may lie. A daughter answering her mothers question Who were you talking to on the phone just now by naming a girlfriend, not the boy who is asking her out on a date, is an example. It is only when there is a strong trusting relationship that a child would feel brave enough to say Thats private, announcing the right to have a secret.
Some people lie for the sheer thrill of getting away with it, testing their unsuspected power. Many children will at some point lie to their parents simply to see if they can do it. Some people do this all the time, enjoying the power they obtain in controlling the information available to the target.
Avoiding embarrassment is still another motive for some serious and many trivial lies. A child who claims that the wet seat was caused by a spilled glass of water and not because she wet her pants is an example of the child not fearing punishment for her failure, just embarrassment. Avoiding embarrassment is relevant to many less serious lies that come under the rubric of lies of everyday life. Very often people lie to get out of an awkward social situation. They may not know how to do it. Cant get a babysitter offered to avoid another dull evening and food. Sorry, I am on my way out the door, is an excuse given by people who do not feel brave enough to be truthful even to a totally unknown telephone solicitor.
And finally, there are the deceptions that are required by politeness. Thanks so much for the lovely party or That color really looks good on you. I don’t consider these to be lies, any more than bluffing in poker is a lie, acting in a play is lying, or the asking price not being the selling price. In all of these instances, the target does not expect to be told the truth, there is notification.
Summing up, there are many different reasons why people lie. However, of the most common motives for telling lies, avoiding punishment is the primary motivator for both children and adults. Other typical reasons include protecting ourselves or others from harm, maintaining privacy, and avoiding embarrassment, and others, discussed in this essay.
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