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Default Jan 11, 2020 at 11:26 PM
  #1
Would like to get different member's opinions.

Do you think people lie out of shame?
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Default Jan 11, 2020 at 11:51 PM
  #2
Open Eyes
I suppose sometimes people lie to cover up for their shame. I've heard that everyone lies at times. But if a person lies often I think it has become a habit or chronic. In that case lying is almost automatic. I've known people who lie for no apparent reason. They make up stories. They even believe their own lies. That's the worst to me. People who lie to themselves.

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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 03:55 AM
  #3
The more difficulty a person has managing their own shame, the more likely they are to lie, in my experience. shame-avoidance becomes a huge priority, in order to prevent the pain that accompanies it from fluporishing.

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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 04:01 AM
  #4
Shame and fear. Lies are usually a way to cover up the fear associated with telling the truth.

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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 11:12 AM
  #5
Thanks for the replies. Maybe it's not a simple question that boils down to one initial reason. I was thinking it is out of fear and shame too. Maybe it's core is about a person's deep need to avoid being "powerless" in some way. Maybe it is someone's need to figure out a way to create their own reality where they can give themselves more control then they experience in their reality. An effort to live a fantasy evolves and the person decides to make that happen even if they need to lie and exaggerate and manipulate.

Part of the reason I am asking this is because of how bad things got in the last years of my parent's lives. It turned out that my older sister had manipulated my parents into setting up their Will in a way that gave her all the power. She manipulated them when they were both mentally declining. I found out that my sister began taking money from them and they were not even aware she was doing so. When a judge demanded she present an accounting because both me and my brother wanted to know where all there money went, my sister listed all the withdrawls SHE and her daughter took and accused me of doing.

What I have been struggling with is not only disbelief but a lot of disappointment not only in her but myself for not seeing just how bad things were. I have expressed disbelief about how she can live with herself and how I myself could never do the things I have come to realize she chose to do. I even struggle with "how could I have loved and trusted someone that could do these things?".
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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 11:44 AM
  #6
Yes, people lie out of shame because the truth makes them feel inferior. But in your case, she lied out of shame because she got caught stealing and out of greed because she stole your inheritance. Plus, she’s not ashamed by her greedy behavior at all, or she’d make things right.

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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 11:52 AM
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They lie for different reasons....one is not to make someone upset another is to stay out of trouble after making a mistake.
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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 11:53 AM
  #8
Quote:
Originally Posted by Open Eyes View Post
Would like to get different member's opinions.

Do you think people lie out of shame?
not necessarily. most people I have encountered lie because...

its a learned behavior. children are taught to use their imaginations, play pretend and other games that include elements of hiding, having secrets,. even adults do it.. last month I went to a surprise party where we had to lie to the birthday person to get her to the location with out her knowing the true reason behind having to go there.

whats the most common element in an abusive situation …(child abuse, domestic violence, terrorism.....) the abusers code of conduct of "do not tell or else...." so again a person is in a situation where the childhood taught element of telling lies comes into it where the victim must use their imaginations and come up with a believe able story for the bruising and so forth and unwelcome questions about their life.

Whats the most common element in elementary, jr high and high school when a student doesn't want to do their homework or go to school....using their imaginations like they have in toddlerhood, preschool and kindergarten and so on... to come up with stories why their homework wasn't done or that they were sick and couldn't come to school.

in adult hood whats the most common thing that happens when someone doesn't want to go to work. do they call in and say "hi boss I just don't feel like coming in today, so Im staying home and watching Netflix and sit on facebook all day." no they use their imaginations like they have been taught to do in early childhood, call their boss and say "I have a sore throat.. I have a doctors appointment, I cant come in I have the flu..."

in fact its so normal and built into human existance to lie that even early documents on humans and animal kingdoms shows how early humans and animals naturally used the element of using ones imagination and lying for safety, fun and the preservation of the species.

though a very few that I know have used their natural brain activity and learned behavior of lying for crimes and so forth I find most that I encounter are doing so because that's just how they have been taught to do things.

if you are having a problem with telling lies heres what worked for someone else that I know... each time they told a lie they stopped their self, admitted they were lying (admitted either to their self or the one that they were lying to) wrote it down and then listed appropriate behaviors that they could do or say next time they are in the same situation.
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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 12:31 PM
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Some lies for self protection.

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Question: Do you think people lie out of shame?

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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 02:14 PM
  #10
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Yes, people lie out of shame because the truth makes them feel inferior. But in your case, she lied out of shame because she got caught stealing and out of greed because she stole your inheritance. Plus, she’s not ashamed by her greedy behavior at all, or she’d make things right.
Yes, that is what she did, she began taking money right away. She basically wiped out all the money my mother had she took thousands of dollars. I realize now why she made it a point to be so secretive and controlling. She set up a joint account just so she could do just that.
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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 03:12 PM
  #11
I am so sorry you have had to deal with this. In my state, what she did is very, extremely illegal. Is she facing legal consequences?

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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 04:19 PM
  #12
Thanks bpcyclist, what my sister did was she encouraged my parents to set their will up in a way that gave her all the power over them and their money should they be deemed incompetent. My father was beginning to decline and he really did not understand the kind of power he gave her and my mother was mentally decining and she really had no idea how my sister could abuse the power she was given. My mother and even my father would be absolutely livid to learn what my sister ended up doing. I KNOW my parents had no idea my sister was withdrawing money constantly from my mother's bank and liquidating all her investments so she could take that money as well. My sister and her daughter were even using my mother's credit card as if it was their own. My sister basically went through most of their money except for a few hundred dollars. Their home and personal property went into a Trust and she is Trustee and she has been liquidating their possessions and I also noticed things missing when I finally did get in their home.

I did hire a lawyer to take her to probate to get an accounting. She did not want to provide an accounting of the years she had been appointed POA. She only wanted to provide the last year of their lives. The judge did not like her at all and made her provide an accounting going all the way back and she decided that when she had to reveal all these withdrawls that she would blame them on me. That is even though she had set up a joint account where she could access my mother's money and I had no idea what bank my mother had an account in and I had never touched any of my mother's money. She accused me of taking my mother to the bank, I never did and then she accused me of taking my mother bank card. I had no idea there was a bank card. My sister had the bank card and her and her daughter used it when THEY needed money to pay their bills and god know what else. Most people THINK the person has to prove it, it's not like that, instead I had to prove I did NOT do those withdrawls. And to bring this to a trial it would literally eat up whatever there is left and I would have to pay the legal fees. This is because she covered that too in that the will states any effort to change what is written will cost the person questioning the will. Just to do what I did to get an accounting to at least find out what happened to their money cost me $5,000 in legal fees.

I could never do the kind of deceit and stealing and lying my sister has chosen to do.

I was just wanting to think about how does this lying evolve, from shame or just greed or what? Pretty much every discussion with her is manipulative and deceitful.
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Default Jan 12, 2020 at 07:09 PM
  #13
Here is a list of 30 reasons right off a PC blog

30 Reasons Why People Lie | The Exhausted Woman

From my own personal experience, my EX would lie about financial things, not out of shame, because he really didn't believe he did anything wrong so it wasn't a lie. Sometimes he thought the problem would just MAGICALLY go away. Sometimes he really didn't want me to know just how incompetent he was. Maybe an ego thing since I was the one with the Accounting & computer degree. Maybe he really didn't want me to get angry at him....but I always told him & my daughter I would not get mad if they told the truth but if I caught them in a lie....it would be much worse for them in the long run.

My ex, used the "If I don't actually say anything then it's not a lie" Not sure if that was the ASD literal thing or not or maybe just a learned behavior from his childhood. He truly believed that lies of omission were NOT lies. That really didn't go well with me since I was ALWAYS the one that had to clean up the financial messes he made.

Lots of different reasons people lie

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Default Jan 13, 2020 at 04:23 PM
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The more difficulty a person has managing their own shame, the more likely they are to lie, in my experience. shame-avoidance becomes a huge priority, in order to prevent the pain that accompanies it from fluporishing.
Good post, I think this is accurate. Many experience toxic shame from long term chronic abuse (or possibly in some cases ''personality issues'') and some lie as a means of (or attempt to) shame-avoidance. It obviously isn't a healthy ''coping'' mechanism. In many cases it causes other people pain or disappointment... as do other unhealthy ''coping'' techniques such as manipulation and control of others.. or pathological ignoring games and cliques even.... it boosts their own fragile egos.

Interesting question OE, I have recently been interacting (or non interacting) with a few people (not on pc) who I have now discovered are extreme and probably chronic liars. It is not a pleasant experience as they also appear to lack much (or any) empathy for others. They are also, apparently, very arrogant. Not a ''pleasant'' combination of traits (to a ''forced people pleaser''.. forced by abusive parental units).

Oh my.. did I really say all that I think I might have to delete it I have always had an adequate ability with words. But not ''adequate confidence'' that I would not be harshly punished for using them (no dig at anyone on pc or any online person)

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Default Jan 13, 2020 at 04:37 PM
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People don’t always want to be accountable for their behaviors. The lie could be due to shame or it could be due to manipulation. Either way, whatever the reason, the end result is the same.
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Default Jan 13, 2020 at 05:58 PM
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Good post, I think this is accurate. Many experience toxic shame from long term chronic abuse (or possibly in some cases ''personality issues'') and some lie as a means of (or attempt to) shame-avoidance. It obviously isn't a healthy ''coping'' mechanism. In many cases it causes other people pain or disappointment... as do other unhealthy ''coping'' techniques such as manipulation and control of others.. or pathological ignoring games and cliques even.... it boosts their own fragile egos.

Interesting question OE, I have recently been interacting (or non interacting) with a few people (not on pc) who I have now discovered are extreme and probably chronic liars. It is not a pleasant experience as they also appear to lack much (or any) empathy for others. They are also, apparently, very arrogant. Not a ''pleasant'' combination of traits (to a ''forced people pleaser''.. forced by abusive parental units).

Oh my.. did I really say all that I think I might have to delete it I have always had an adequate ability with words. But not ''adequate confidence'' that I would not be harshly punished for using them (no dig at anyone on pc or any online person)
Fuzzy......don't delete, your words are full of WISDOM that is important to share

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Default Jan 13, 2020 at 06:09 PM
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Fuzzy......don't delete, your words are full of WISDOM that is important to share

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Default Jan 16, 2020 at 04:06 AM
  #18
Open Eyes I am so sorry to read this. This was not only illegal but she tried to implicate you in a crime she did!!

In my opinion there may (or should) be shame involved but mostly she is probably lying to save her own skin and I am sad to say possibly spiteful towards you.

I am not from the U.S. I am not familiar with your laws. What I can say is in the UK POA does not give a person the right to use the person's money for the attorney's own gain - there are controls and limits.

In the UK this crime is called 'financial abuse' and as such the police would pursue it (without personal cost of a civil action). I don't know if this is the case in the U.S.

Hugs. It's hard enough coping with bereavement without this too.
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Default Jan 16, 2020 at 06:02 AM
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Open Eyes I am so sorry to read this. This was not only illegal but she tried to implicate you in a crime she did!!

In my opinion there may (or should) be shame involved but mostly she is probably lying to save her own skin and I am sad to say possibly spiteful towards you.

I am not from the U.S. I am not familiar with your laws. What I can say is in the UK POA does not give a person the right to use the person's money for the attorney's own gain - there are controls and limits.

In the UK this crime is called 'financial abuse' and as such the police would pursue it (without personal cost of a civil action). I don't know if this is the case in the U.S.

Hugs. It's hard enough coping with bereavement without this too.
Yes, financial abuse to elders is something the police & DA (district attorney) will handle as criminal, but they investigate & if they don't find enough proof (if it is just he said, she said) & they don't have enough PROOF to prosecute, they will NOT take the case.

In my case, if I had not stopped payment on the checks or the home care person had actually cashed them, the police said they would have had the evidence they needed. When there is no proof available to PROVE them guilty (even though we KNOW they are) it can never be won in a legal battle & money trying will just be thrown away

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Default Jan 16, 2020 at 06:53 AM
  #20
This must be so sad for you OE.

All I can say is she surely knows she is guilty of a crime against her own family. Maybe she will feel guilt and the burden of that. There again maybe she is not capable of that self awareness. You know her best.
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