Some
people are of the opinion that we should always tell the truth; or,
they at least think we should not lie (which means, of course, to
sometimes avoid telling the truth instead of lying - a form of
manipulation, however).
Would
that be right? Should we always tell the truth?
There
are reasons for acting so, and reasons against. Let's take a look at
it.
A
saying goes: "The truth always comes out sooner or later."
Not telling something we know to be true and of great importance to
another person (who trusts us), usually results in a big mess when,
finally, it comes out.
Possible
motives for not telling the truth are:
1)
We did something wrong, either by mistake or because at the time it
seemed the right thing to do, and we don't want the other person to
know about this; we fear it would destroy our image of being honest,
or even destroy our relationship. The other one might not understand
our acting and might not trust us anymore. In this case, it is clear
that our image does not match our acting: admitting our mistake would
be the honest thing to do, not hiding it. Besides, this way trust
could be built instead of destroyed. Any person who does not want or
is not able to understand our (mistakenly) wrong doing might not be
the right person for us to socialize with. Mistakes are normal; they
are what helps us learning not only in technical matters, but with
relationships as well. -- But if the mistake we made was so big as to
end our relationship, we should face that; by lying or avoiding the
truth, we will only make it worse. To tell our friend, or partner
about our acting as soon as we realize it as having been wrong might
be the only chance to save our relationship. (I leave parents out of
this generalization, because they are a more difficult matter; the
relation between parents and children is often messed up in a way
that makes the subject of telling the truth a matter of who has power
over whom.)
2)
We came to know something that would hurt the other person deeply,
and we don't want to tell it because we want to spare him/her the
hurting. Why do we want this? It is clear that we don't want to hurt
another one, at least I don't think anybody could want something like
this, unless it is out of revenge, or out of some need to hurt back
(which might nevertheless not be the right thing to do). But in this
case the hurt would be caused not by us, but by a third person.
Sparing our friend/partner/parent (whoever it is) to get hurt means
certainly, we don't consider him/her able to deal with it.
Let's
look at an example. Say, one of our old parents died. The other one
isn't able to live on his/her own, and we have to sort things out -
what can be kept, what has to be thrown away. Of course we come
across personal things, too. That is where we find some letters from
a love affair our dead parent had had some twenty years ago. We are
sure, the other one doesn't know about this; and our parents, as far
as we know, always had a kind and loving relationship. Are we going
to tell about this? It wouldn't even be possible to say, the dead one
was another person than we thought s/he was. There was just one part
of his/her life that we didn't know of, and we might be hurt
ourselves; but, would it alter his/her attitude towards us? Would it
change the kind of respect we got? And if we weren't respected - has
this anything to do with our remaining parent? What would s/he want?
Would s/he want to know? Especially under the condition that the
cheating person can't be confronted? -- These are all questions to be
considered, and there may be a lot more.
Let's
take another example: A good friend of mine lives in a partnership
with a man. One day I see this man (who isn't aware of me being
present) with another woman, holding hands and kissing. Am I going to
tell my friend, although she will be hurt very badly? Well, I don't
really know any context, although the woman certainly couldn't have
been the man's sister. I could though say to myself: it is none of my
business. Maybe it is not a long time he is together with a new woman
and he just waits for a "good" time to tell his partner he
wanted to leave her. He may not be looking forward to hurting her,
either; and sometimes, it takes time. Who am I to interfere? I could
make it worse. But then - he could be doing this some time already
and not having any intentions for deciding between the women.
Wouldn't my friend have the right to know this, then? But, if the man
can "handle" this without being neglectful to one of them,
would my telling probably do more harm than if I didn't tell? -- A
basic question to all of this seems to me: what do I think about my
friend? Do I consider her able to handle her life, which includes
being hurt? And, would I be really able to go on with our friendship
as if I really hadn't seen anything? What if she confides in me about
some problems she has with her man? Should I wait until something
like this happens, to tell her about his cheating? But then - if she
finds out, finally, and also finds out that I happened to know all
the time, the hurt I tried to spare her would be doubled because of
me. Our relationship would be messed up and maybe over. Am I willing
to take the risk? There is, of course, another way to handle this: I
could confront the man. Should he indeed be cheating on my friend, I
could give him the choice to tell my friend himself (he may, of
course, lie to me).
There
is one question we really have to ask ourselves: do we trust the
other one to be able to deal with their hurting? Why would we spare
them the reality of their own life? We may think children to be an
exception: They may sometimes be too young for handling reality. But
then again: Do we really think our child cannot deal with the fact,
say, that a beloved aunt is in the hospital because of a serious
illness she might die from? If the child is still too small to
understand the concept of dying; so be it. But not telling him/her or
acting as if nothing serious was the case although the atmosphere is
filled with fear and hurt can't be a good idea; the child gets mixed
feelings and doesn't know why, and we could only try to steal our way
out of their questions. How are children supposed to learn to deal
with hurt if not from real situations and circumstances?
But:
Sometimes telling the truth is not a good idea, especially when it
comes to administrational matters. There are unfair laws; and even if
a law makes it possible to act in a good way, the administrator in
charge can act otherwise. He or she may just be in a bad mood today,
or have a resentment against people like you, or whatever. Unfair may
not be any law as such, but the combination and/or the amount of laws
or regulations we are supposed to know about. We are bound to be
trapped someday because of that; does being punished for not having
known something give us more knowledge and/or make us a better
person? I doubt that. Instead, it could give us a feeling of
resentment and gradually alienate us from our law system. I do not
want to say we should disrespect laws we do not agree to; my point
is, we need a balance there, because in the main thing we need to be
able to stand for our law system as a whole. So it may be right to
lie; though it shouldn't be out of not wanting to take any
responsibility at all for what we've done. There is, after all, a
risk we take: being caught means punishment. (It one time happened to
me that I neglected a deadline I didn't know of, and because I came
too late the administrator suggested I should change the date on the
paper for not having to pay fine. We have a really weird edge of our
administrational system here, because seemingly this administrator
thought the rule he had to exercise on the people to be unfair. But
why is there no usual way of feedback for him to the people who make
those rules? I guess it was his own way of keeping the balance to
make people lie about a stupid, although in this case not totally
useless deadline.)
Why
is this all so difficult? Wouldn't it be much easier to just decide
to always tell the truth, no matter what? -- Two points to this: 1)
What we do, what we say, whom we talk to: our actions always have
consequences. Even telling the truth, although it may seem a good
thing to do, can bear very bad results. (The classical example of
telling the murderer where to find their potential victim is only the
most obvious one.) We might nevertheless decide to act upon this
principle, but there is no way out of our being responsible for the
consequences of what we do, at least not by argument. (Small children
and disabled persons evidently are sometimes not to be held
responsible for the results of their actions.) 2) The problems arise
because we take other people in consideration. We usually (let's
hope: almost everybody) don't throw slippery things on the pavement
because we are aware of the possiblity that if we do, someone might
fall and get hurt. Now, this is an easy example. The above mentioned
examples are difficult because we don't have hard facts we can rely
on, but must guess: Is it by telling or not telling that I worsen the
situation for my parent, or my friend? To not throw away a banana
peeling is staying on the safe side; but usually there is no such
side. We must live with the results of whatever we decide, and if we
don't know the right thing to do where other people are involved, we
need to carefully consider all the implications we can think of. Life
isn't an easy task; but then, most people are sensible and will only
get mad when we try to explain why they shouldn't hold us responsible
for what we've done. We may not have known better, at the time we
made our choice; but we are always responsible. Whatever we decide,
we need to be able to stand for it (and maybe that was the reason why
the above mentioned administrator wanted me to lie about the date: he
couldn't stand making me pay for what he didn't think to be right).
A
last example: My friend introduces me to a friend of her's she's very
fond of; but, at first sight, I do not like this woman. Should I tell
her about my dislike, or should I keep it to myself with the
intention of not hurting her feelings? This is the kind of truth that
is bound to come out, because if I don't tell her, she might think
just the opposite. When she arranges for the three of us to spend
time together, matters get complicated: I have to act as if I liked
the person, and sooner or later need to stall my way out of this. So
I invent excuses for not having to meet her; but my friend starts to
think that I withdraw from her as well. Bad idea from the beginning!
Here's the question: Why did I really do this? Did I really want to
spare my friend's feelings? Or was there another reason: Did I fear
she couldn't take my dislike of one of her friends? Or, do I think I
always have to like the friends of my friend? Do I feel myself to be
a bad person if I am or behave not like I am (seemingly) supposed to
be?
If,
when, under what circumstances, to whom, we tell the truth (or not)
is, after all, a matter of relationship: What kind of relationship to
another person (or even to our law system, our political system) do I
want to have? Do I want the other person to know me? Do I want them
to know only part of me? But then: do I really know myself? -- We
live, after all, in a society where lots of people, including
ourselves, live in denial about at least some of their traits;
sometimes it may be a good thing to be hurt by any truth, because
that's exactly what can make us sincere and stop our self-denial. But
it always remains our decision if we want to confront another person
with what we think to be their own blind spot or weakness.
At
least: The most important thing is to be sincere with ourselves. What
we do, we should do with utmost awareness of what our motives are; so
that we take the consequences that result from our action, and not
try to avoid just that. There is no recipe for our actions; but all
of them have consequences for other people we should think about
before acting. Rules and laws tell us what we can expect will be done
to us if we act in a way we're not supposed to act; but obeying them
won't keep responsibility from us. It may even sometimes be more
responsible to not follow a certain law.
There
is no principle to act upon, there are only guidelines - it depends
on how things are, it depends on the context, it depends on what we
want and how we want to relate to other people. We have to make our
decisions and then live with the consequences without trying to cheat
our way out. We learn a lot about ourselves in the process. This is
what growing up is all about, and what makes us an autonomous person.
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