T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1236.1 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | sorry, I don't do crunchy | Thu Feb 13 1992 21:41 | 1 |
| Friends who lie don't bother me much, unless they lie about me.
|
1236.2 | | PEKING::SMITHS2 | | Fri Feb 14 1992 03:50 | 24 |
|
Well, you could be overreacting. After all, people are entitled to
change their mind about things, and that doesn't mean that the first
opinion was a lie. Also, why should it bother you what she did on
vacation with a female friend last year? Why were you asking? If she
felt she was getting the third-degree, she may not have wanted to tell
you everything she did, after all, it's really none of your business,
right?
On the other hand, if she is deliberately lying, you need to find out
why. Perhaps she feels the truth will hurt you, and therefore feels
that it is easier to lie? I don't advocate lying to anyone, especially
friends, but I can understand why some people do it sometimes. If you
want to tackle to problem, the only thing you can do is confront her
with it - not in an aggressive way, but just sort of "Hey, are you sure
that's right? The last time we spoke about this you said ...". You
can't really go around double-checking her stories behind her back,
that makes you as bad as her (if she is lying).
If you want to keep this friendship going you'll have to bring this out
in the open sooner or later.
Sam
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1236.3 | | MCIS5::BOURGAULT | | Fri Feb 14 1992 14:10 | 17 |
|
I can remember being in the friends shoes. I was not lying. What i
said was the truth considering where I was at at the time. The truth
could change as time and I changed.
Example: I can be angry at someone one day and a week later not be
angry with them. Does that make the fact I was angry one day a lie?
No, it means when I was angry I was telling the truth and later, when
I was no longer angry I was telling the truth. Feelings change. That
doesn't mean that either feelings are a lie.
As far as not telling you what she did, maybe she didn't attach as much
importance to the issue as you did. It may have been irrelevant to her
and she may not have realized it was important to you.
Just my thoughts.
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1236.4 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | To err is human, but feels divine. | Mon Feb 17 1992 05:13 | 16 |
| I have a female friend who routinely lies. She does it for two main
reasons, one is pride and the other is telling you what you want to
hear.
I am observant and thus lying to me becomes difficult, as you must
remain consistent to your initial lie and I have a nasty habit of
remembering. However I value her friendship and thus tolerate her lies.
Mind you I never trust her and independently verify anything that she
tells me if I am going to rely on it.
Assuming that the lies are not harmful then I think that, "How much
does our questioner value the friendship?" is the question that must be
asked here.
Jamie.
|
1236.5 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Feb 17 1992 12:36 | 6 |
| Someone who lies, I stay away from. Weither they are a braggart, or
trying to cover something. I see a person who has some problems. And if
they wish not to get help for it..... Relationship is terminated.
Last thing that you need is someone telling you one thing and feecies
is about to hit you hard in the back of the head over something else.
|
1236.6 | your expectations may be the problem | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Mon Feb 17 1992 17:25 | 26 |
| re .0 and some others
Truth telling is not a high priority in some cultures. Avoiding offense
is higher in two cultures I know.
It has been demonstrated that in the U.S. where the "questioner" seems to
be of higher status than the "answerer", the "answerer" will often adopt
a "tell them what they want to hear" strategy. This is a standard
protective mechanism which is not labeled "lying" by those who practice
it.
When invited to a party in Puerto Rico, you are expected to show delight
at the idea of being invited, even if you have a prior engagement that
will make it impossible to attend. RSVP is the exception here. It would
be grossly discourteous to say immediately that you can't make it. (But,
it's ok to call back later and warn the host.)
Everyone has the right to some privacy, including your friend. Why is it
any business of yours what she did on her vacation? If she shares it,
fine. But lay off the interrogations. Even in the context of marriage
they are resented and divisive. In a dating relationship its clearly out
of line, in my opinion.
fwiw,
Dick
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1236.7 | just forget it | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Tue Feb 18 1992 11:56 | 5 |
| just drop the person from your life, it he/she were a "friend" he\she
would not deceive you by lying...
Don't bother.
|
1236.8 | "Lite" reply.... | 2CRAZY::FLATHERS | Rooting for the underdog. | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:28 | 9 |
|
I heard a great line in a movie once;
"Women lie and men are idiots".
Sorry I couldn't resist....... :^)
|
1236.9 | happens all the time... | 2CRAZY::FLATHERS | Rooting for the underdog. | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:49 | 8 |
|
All kidding aside, ............ we all have lied before... and
all relationships are a risk. But if it becomes a habit, or the norm,
end it.
take care,
|
1236.10 | another point of view | RJAMES::WIECHMANN | Short to, long through. | Wed Feb 19 1992 13:44 | 19 |
|
How important are these lies to you? Are they destructive
lies about you, or are they misinformation that makes it
difficult to navigate the relationship?
I would never just "drop" a friendship, unless it was the
appropriate way of maintaining the friendship. Often,
friends have behaved in ways that I don't understand until
much later. If I "dropped" the friendship, I would have
lost the understanding and the friend.
Stay friends. Understand that the person may not always
tell the truth and has her reasons, even if the aren't
logical. Keep whatever distance you require, but don't
close doors.
Unless you need to.
-Jim
|
1236.11 | It's all a blur anyway... | TUNER::COCHRANE | Rack and Rune | Wed Feb 19 1992 22:38 | 13 |
| Do the human thing. Forgive as much as you can. We are all falible.
We lie to ourselves all the time, never mind people we are close to.
Sometimes people need a screen to hide behind. Should this person hurt
you constantly by a lack of truth, ask yourself if the friendship would
be worth *your* truthfulness in confronting her and asking "why"? If
her "lies" are simply the manifestation of someone who likes her private
life private, accept what friendship she can give, and perhaps in time she
can give you more. Openness is a gift not everyone has, and
the truth poorly used can be as evil a weapon as any lie ever was.
Mary-Michael
|
1236.12 | Yes, yes, yes. | LJOHUB::GODIN | PC Centric: The Natural Order | Thu Feb 20 1992 08:20 | 7 |
| re. -.11-- I love your last line, "truth poorly used can be as much a
weapon as a lie ever was." (May be a paraphrase--I haven't figured out
how to get into the previous note buffer from this PC and thus can't
see the exact words on my screen.)
Thanks.
Karen
|
1236.13 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Fri Mar 06 1992 12:22 | 6 |
| Your friend may be a compulsive liar. Imo, talking about it is
the only way to go. She may need a friend for support if she is a
compulsive liar and you might be that person. And it's not always easy
being a friend to someone with obsessive/compulsive disorders.
Capt. Scott
|
1236.14 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Collapsed lunge | Wed Mar 11 1992 14:22 | 18 |
| > Part of her problem too is that she's not very communicative or
> expressive.
I would imagine that people who have a hard time communicating are more
apt to express themselves inaccurately, or cut corners to avoid too
much explanation, or leave things out of narrative, or overstate vague
temporary feelings.
If anything, I'm overcommunicative, and I've still fallen into such
traps. Sometimes it seems like all communication is just one shade of
lie or another -- personalities are too complicated and unclear to
completely delineate with words.
Of course, some people distort stuff deliberately and with malice, but
it sounds like your friend might still be given the benefit of the
doubt.
Ray
|