by Harriet Hairston
Embellishments…exaggerations…stretching the truth…whatever you want to call it, if it’s not the truth, it has no place within the confines of a marriage or any lasting relationship. In fact, I would venture to say that secrets and lies are the two hidden horsemen that spell out doom for a relationship once the funk hits the fan.
Dishonesty shows itself in so many forms. Gary Richmond and Lisa Bode outlined most of those forms in their book, “An Ounce of Prevention: Divorce Proofing Your Marriage.” They effectively remove from individuals any excuses they might have to continue lying to anyone…even themselves:
1. Extreme exaggeration: this warps perspective. It makes something larger or smaller; more or less important than it ought to be.
2. Delusions of grandeur: feeling the need to say something about yourself that’s not true in order to gain equal footing. Many people find themselves doing this to get a job.
3. Cover up: co-conspiracy…when someone you know asks you to co-sign with a lie they’ve told.
4. White lies: the first step in a downward spiral.
5. Lying for profit: i.e. on taxes
6. Promises, promises: not keeping your word.
The bottom line is that we’ve all been guilty of one or more of these types of lies at some point in our lives. If you say you haven’t, then you’re lying now. LOL
My former pastor from when I was stationed in Fort Walton Beach, FL used to always make the following statement:
“Any misrepresentation of the truth in WORD or DEED is a LIE.” ~ Pastor Larry Boldin.
That pretty much removes from all of us whatever excuses (which should be added to the above list as a form of a lie, because we use them to express an inability to do something we’re quite capable of doing) we come up with to justify our misrepresentation of the buck naked truth.
Tad Williams once said, “We tell lies when we are afraid…afraid of what we don’t know, of what others will think, afraid of what will be found out about us. But every time we tell a lie, the thing that we fear grows stronger.”
Especially in our intimate relationships, why should we be afraid of what we don’t know? Of what our spouse will think? And why in the world would we do something that would give cause for alarm if our spouse found out about it? We have to stop multiplying the strength of our fears and tell the honest to God truth…to both ourselves and our loved ones.
BMWK, how have “misrepresentations of the truth” affected your relationships?
God bless!
Harriet