Antecedents to Lying and Teaching the Truth
by Deborah Hage, MSW
If I listened long enough
to you,
I'd find a way to believe it was true.
Knowing that you lied, straight-faced while I cried.
Still I look to find a reason to believe.
Rod Stewart
The majority of adoptive parents have a moral code which precludes
lying as an acceptable behavior. They abhor it. They avoid it at all
costs. They admire integrity and honesty. With the huge mandate and
model in the home that telling the truth is essential and lying is forbidden,
why then do so many adoptees lie? When they lie, the children are subjected
to consequences and disciplined in various ways. Parents beg, implore
their children to tell the truth, even promising the consequence will
be lessened if they just come clean. Yet, the lying persists. Some children
lie when they want to not take responsibility for their behavior. Some
lie when they want something. Some lie to manipulate and triangulate
others around them. Some lie in the face of the truth - with frosting
on their face and fingers they will state, unequivocally, they did not
have a piece of cake. Some do all of the above and simply lie about
everything all the time. What internal workings of the brain tells children
that lying is an acceptable form of speech?
By looking at the workings of the brain, some answers can be obtained.
The first two years of life are pivotal to brain development and personality
growth. It is during these critical months foundations are laid which
determine, to a great extent, future patterns of behavior. The way a
child learns to think about life, himself, and others in these first
years will affect how he behaves during his life and the nature of the
relationships he establishes. He will learn to trust or not, love or
not, fear or not, think or not. tell the truth or not.
Babies learn to tell the truth or to lie with their first breaths.
During the first year of life a baby is a bundle of needs. He needs
to be fed, kept warm, comforted, held, rocked, cuddled and attended
to. He is totally dependent on others for his survival and emotional
growth. When that care is consistent with his needs he learns to trust.
When that care is not consistent with his needs he learns to not trust.
He begins to tell himself the first lies. The infant signals he is hungry
and no one comes. He cries and no one comes. He cries some more and
no one comes. He stops crying and the internal messages he must give
himself in order to survive are, "I am no longer hungry. I am not cold."
The internal lying messages continue, "I am not worthy of being kept
warm, comforted, held, cuddled, rocked. The world is unsafe. No one
cares" The lies enter his psyche and embed themselves in his brain.
The distinct line between truth and falsehood begins to blur.
During the second year of life a child begins to focus on wants in
addition to needs. He wants his mother to stay with him. He wants to
play with toys. He wants to laugh and giggle in the face of someone
who cares. Yet, despite his wants, his mother leaves, there are no toys
and no one giggles and coos in his face. He cries and no one comes.
He cries some more and no one comes. He stops crying and the internal
messages he must give himself in order to survive are, "I don't want
my mother to stay. It is OK she is gone." The internal lying messages
continue. "I don't want toys and stimulation. I don't want anyone to
coo and giggle in my face. Life is fine exactly the way it is. The difference
between the truth and the lies becomes even fuzzier. The pathway in
his brain gets deeper.
In subsequent years a child learns to distinguish feelings and emotions.
These are confirmed by those around him. His mother says, "I love you"
and follows that up with a safe home, nutritious food, and warm clothes.
It is not the words which convey a feeling of love, it is the actions
which give meaning to the words. Contrast that to the child whose mother
says, "I love you" and then proceeds to neglect him, perhaps beat him.
The actions make a lie of the words. The actions make a lie of the emotion.
The child questions, "If this is love, then why does it hurt so bad?
What is the truth here?" As a predictable, safe, caring world crumbles
about him he gets angry, enraged. However, such strong feelings in so
small a person is very frightening to him. In order to protect himself
from his own fear, grief and rage he must tell himself that he is a
strong little boy, capable of taking care of himself. He denies he is
angry, scared or grief stricken. To give himself permission to feel
these feelings, to even acknowledge their existence, is to make himself
vulnerable to an uncaring world. The lies he tells himself in order
to survive continue. "I am happy. I am not angry. I am not scared. I
am not sad." Truth becomes a taboo topic for him to consider. Truth
becomes irrelevant. Survival is all that matters. The rut in his brain
deepens and lying becomes habitual. It has no good or bad connotations.
Like the moon and the stars, it is just there.
The child enters a home where truth is very relevant. The concept is
so foreign to him it is rejected. The truth has never mattered before,
why should it suddenly become important? He has blocked out the difference
between truth and lies to the point where he does not even consider
it worth his while to pay attention to which is which. Parents and the
rest of society however, tend to feel differently so it must be addressed.
Central to helping a child deal with lying behaviors is a message which
runs counter to prevailing thought. Most people develop relationships
with people they can trust and have been known to say something like,
"I could never love someone I didn't trust." Obviously, that is not
the message a child who lies needs to hear. Parents can be extremely
therapeutic when they change that to, "I can love you even when I don't
trust you." And, "I am such a great mom that you are not going to keep
me from loving you just because you lie."
Another important concept when dealing with lying behaviors is to not
ask a child who lies a question when you know the answer, in hopes the
child will tell the truth. It is a set up for the child. He lies. You
pounce triumphantly on his lie. He feels betrayed. If you know the answer,
don't ask. By the same token, never ask when you don't know the answer
as the answer cannot be trusted anyway. In other words, never ask a
child who lies a question. It simply entrenches the lying and adds a
layer of guilt which further damages the relationship. Instead, act
on what you believe to be the truth and leave it go at that. A sample
conversation:
- Parent - Greg said you hit him.
- Child - Well, I didn't.
- P - What do you think I believe?
- C - You think I hit him.
- P - Right. You know you can't hit Greg so your consequence is....
- C - But I didn't.
- P - Would a jury of your peers convict you? Is the evidence there
to indicate you did? Did you have opportunity? Did you have motive?
Does Greg say you did?
- C - Greg lies.
- P - In this household, who tells the truth more? You or Greg?
- C - Greg. You never believe me. You don't trust me.
- P - Right. Fortunately I am such a great mom I can love a boy I
do not trust.
- C - But its not fair.
- P - Have you ever lied to me and not gotten caught?
- C - Yes.
- P - Well, then this makes up for it. Over the course of time it
will all work out.
- C - You don't love me as much as Greg.
- P - Nice try. Now scoot to (whatever the consequence is)
Parents abhor calling anyone, particularly their child, a liar. Far
better to say, "I don't believe you" and make an "I message" around
it. After all, there often truly is no way to determine if the child
is telling the truth. Saying, "I don't believe you" diminishes the controlling
effect a child has when he lies.
Lying becomes a way to take control. By distorting the truth the child
can cause the parents' world to spin. The child can then take the chaos
in his own brain and impose it on someone else. Children can also use
lying as a means to test the parent-child relationship. How truthful
are the parents being when they say this is a forever home? If the child's
behaviors are disruptive enough can they force the issue and contribute
to having the child moved? Maybe the child wants to be moved and is
using the lying as a means to push his parents away to the point where
they give up on him and ask that he be moved.
The old adage of, "You canít push a river upstream," can be applied
to lying. Parents cannot control lying. All they can control is whether
or not they believe the child and how to impose an appropriate consequence.
Several parenting techniques can be used with success. One is to predict
for the child when he is going to lie and then give permission for him
to do it. For many children lying is so habitual they lie before they
even think about what else they could say. A parent can say, "I want
to talk to you and I know you don't tend to tell the truth when I ask
you questions. So, I want you to know I expect you to come up with a
really good lie in answer to my question. Ready? (then ask the question)
This accomplishes several things. One, it gives a child time to make
a decision of whether to lie or not instead of letting the first words,
which are usually lies, fall unthinking out of his mouth. Two, it removes
lying from the control battle realm. Three, since the parent has given
the child permission to lie, it doesn't make sense to get angry or upset
about it. Just praise the child for a great lie and go on with life.
Or, if perchance the child happened to tell the truth, cover him with
glory. Pop a piece of candy in his mouth so he connects telling the
truth with sweet goodness. Remember, whenever a habit needs to be broken
it requires that the brain be "rewired" around the new behavior. "Treats"
accomplish that as well with children as with puppies. Parents can practice
with a child around the truth. Play a lying/truth game. Have the child
tell the answers to obvious questions which have no emotional content.
For example, "How old are you. What is your teacher's name. Etc." Everytime
the child tells the truth he gets a treat. Key to giving treats is it
must pass from the parent's hand to the child's mouth while they are
looking into each other's eyes. Do not let the child take the candy
and put it in his own mouth as part of the meaning becomes lost. The
connection must be clearly made that the parent is the source of all
goodness and light and pleasing the parent makes good things happen
for the child.
Because lying is often habitual for kids, parents can make an attempt
to get in touch with how difficult it is to change a habit by changing
one of their own. Explain to the child that everyone has habits, some
good and some bad. Changing a habit takes thought and effort. Do you
put on both your socks and then both your shoes or do you put on one
sock and shoe and then the other sock and shoe? Do you mix everything
up on your plate when you eat or eat one thing until it is gone and
then eat the next item? Parents can find something they do habitually
- even if it is something like storing the car keys in a different place
- and make a commitment to change it. Challenge the child to change
a habit, other than lying, and then compare notes as to each other's
progress. Sympathize with your child as he struggles to change an innocuous
habit so you can be sincerely appreciative of whatever efforts he makes
to change a deeply entrenched habit, like lying, that has emotional
overtones. Accept that changing any habit, particularly one that has
been so useful to survival, is going to take a long time. A very long
time. Years and years later parents will still be left wondering exactly
what of all their child said was the truth. Expecting it to change any
more quickly than that sets parents and child up for disappointment
and anger - two emotions which get in the way of instilling a sense
in the child that he is loved and cherished exactly as he is. The message
is that he needs to change his lying in order to make it in the world
- not to make him more lovable to his parents.
Have fun with the lying. For example, when you know a child habitually
lies ask him if wants a bowl of ice cream. When he says, "Yes", give
him a bowl of cold cereal. When he asks what happened to the ice cream,
happily remind him that since he always lies you never know what the
truth is. When he said he wanted ice cream you knew he never told the
truth so that must mean he doesnít want ice cream. Since you didn't
know what he really wanted you just guessed and thought cold cereal
would be OK. This works well in restaurants when you lightly order something
other than what he said he wanted and in clothing stores when you smilingly
buy him a different shirt than the one he indicated was his favorite.
Parents can look for other ways to confound the child's thinking about
the value of his lying. One way is to lie to the child. The child asks
to go to the movies and the parent says, "Yes". Later, the parent does
not take the child to the movies and when the child asks why the parent
lightly says, "Oh, I thought the truth didn't matter. It was easier
to tell you yes at the time, but I really didn't mean it. I thought
that was how you wanted us to talk to each other in this family. Are
you telling me it is important for me to tell the truth, but it is not
important for you to tell the truth? Is that fair?"
The goal in dealing with lying is to put the child in conflict about
his lying. When a child lies and the parents get upset and angry then
they are in conflict about the childís lying and the child is not. The
child says to himself, "No point in both of us getting upset about this,"
and continues lying. When parents get emotionally involved with the
lying the child gets the message that says, "When I lie my parents are
hurt. When I lie others suffer." When a child does not have a conscience
around lying, knowing that others are hurt may be irrelevant or even
please the child. The lying behaviors will not change until the child
sees, in non-angry situations, that the lying is not working for him.
He needs to see that he is the one who suffers when he lies. It is not
getting him what he wants. Alcoholics do not cease acting out their
alcoholic behaviors because they think it through and decide it is rational
for them to change. They stop drinking when they see their lives are
going down the tubes because of it. They have an emotional connection
to the negative results of their behavior and then have to act themselves
into a new way of thinking. They don't think their way into a new way
of acting. In the same way, a child must feel and experience the negative
results of his behavior in the presence of non-angry and non-emotionally
involved people. Thinking about how lying doesn't work for him doesn't
work. Experiencing the results and feeling the pain is the only way
to drive home that he, not anyone else, is the one who suffers the most
when he lies.
Many parents can handle the lying at home by applying the mentioned
techniques, however, they are at a loss when the child lies outside
the home and is believed. Commonly children who are habitual liars lie
to their therapists and caseworkers. It is imperative that lying children
not be seen alone by either. Parents should not take their child to
any therapist who insists on seeing the child alone. The potential for
triangulation and manipulation are too great. Additionally, it is too
easy for a child who lies to divert attention away from the therapeutic
issues which need to be addressed and focus attention on an issue which
is irrelevant. Too often it is a waste of parent time, energy and money
when they are not present to keep the therapy on track and focused on
the behaviors which the child is exhibiting which are dangerous or anti-social.
When therapists let the child direct the therapy and choose the topic
it is too easy for the time to be wasted and the child empowered in
blaming his parents or others for his behaviors. The situation becomes
even dangerous for the parents when a lying child uses his private time
with the therapist or caseworker to lodge accusations of abuse and the
parents are not there to counter them.
The most insidious lie occurs when a child falsely accuses his parents
of abuse. Society and public policy are often supportive of the child
when he does it. A child can have a file three inches thick detailing
his anti-social, pathological behaviors, while the parents do not have
so much as a traffic ticket on their record, and a well meaning caseworker
can still be suckered. One way to turn the tables when confronted by
an official is to state, "If the child is telling the truth, he is not
safe with me. If the child is lying then I am not safe with him. Either
way it is not in anyone's best interest for him to come home." Then,
have him placed outside of the home while the legal processes wrangle.
To do less is to compromise the entire family's well being and to send
home the message to the child that there are no limits to the lies he
can get away with. Loving a child and living with a child may not always
be possible at the same time. Sometimes you have to feed a child with
a long handled spoon.
Lying at school and in other situations can also be problematic for
parents. Taking to heart the adage, "It takes a village to raise a child"
many people outside of the home believe a lying child and rush to rescue
and save. It is imperative that the treatment team stand behind the
parents and defend them to the world if the placement is to not disrupt.
Lying can be addressed in meaningful ways, both by the parents and
by professionals outside of the home. However, it takes a unified effort
to get a child who lies in conflict about his behavior. If he is not
in conflict, if he is not feeling the pain, if he thinks others are
more in pain over his behavior than he is, he will not change. Regardless
of whether or not the child lies, he must grow up knowing he is loved
and cared for, even when he can't be trusted. Life has a way of imposing
natural consequences on those who are habitual liars. Sometimes the
best parents can do is take care of themselves so they are not hurt
by the lies, give it their best shot and leave the rest to the universe.
Deborah Hage's Biography:
Deborah Hage remains happily married after 28 years and 14 children
to Paul Hage. During the last 23 years of being parents they have given
birth to two children, adopted seven children and have been therapeutic
foster parents to five other children. Most of the children have been
physically, emotionally, behaviorally and/or intellectually challenged.
They have dealt extensively with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, educational
and legal issues. At one point in time 10 of the children were teenagers
at once! Their oldest children are now in the throes of emancipation,
with several seeking out and finding birth parents and others finding
that the surest way to leave home is to go to jail.
In her Deborah shares how they have stayed sane through the trials and
triumphs of parenting their children, most of whom entered their lives
with emotional scars due to abuse and neglect. She lectures nationwide
and in Canada on bonding and attachment as well as techniques which,
when added to normal parenting styles, have a positive effect on children
who are behaviorally problematic. Her presentations include information
on how to make it more fun to be a parent and children more fun to be
around, as well as when to hang on and when to let go. Interventions
which are appropriate at home for children who are a danger to themselves,
their family and/or their community are addressed.
Deborah has contributed chapters and articles on therapeutic parenting
to several books and publications. She has compiled some of the information
from her lectures into a booklet titled, Therapeutic Parenting, It's
A Matter of Attitude! It is available by mailorder. Another article
on Holding
Therapies: Harmful or Rather, Beneficial! is also available. She
is in private practice and is available for lectures, workshops, andintensive
child and family therapy interventions.
For more information contact:
Deborah Hage, MSW
P.O. Box 42
Silverthorne, CO 80498
970-262-2998
e-mail
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