
We all lie. If you say you donât, youâre lying right now. While lying is typically associated with something negative, itâs not always a negative thing. Most of us lie in a manner that seems positive. We lie to protect others and to make them feel more comfortable. We lie about how people look when they ask us if we think their awful new haircut is amazing. We lie about how someoneâs cooking tastes when itâs really awful and we donât like it. For the most part, we lie to spare feelings. Itâs not intended to come across as negative, but a lie is a lie and itâs teaching our kids to become liars, too. We spend so much time encouraging our kids not to lie to us that we fail to see that we are actually teaching them to do just that. Itâs not our intention, of course, but itâs what happens. We teach our kids to be liars and weâre here to tell you how youâre doing this and how to stop.
âItâs Our Little Secret,â Wink, Wink
Your kids have a bowl of ice cream before dinner and you tell them that they are going to have to keep that your little secret. Seems fun and harmless, right? Wrong; youâre teaching your kids to lie by not allowing them to tell their other parent. They see theyâre doing something âwrongâ and being told to keep it a secret, and that encourages lying.
Setting a Bad Example
Your kids hear you on the phone telling your mother-in-law you canât make it to dinner tonight because someone in the house is not feeling well, even though everyone is fine. This doesnât seem like a big deal, but it shows kids that they can get what they want by lying.
Being Honest Later
Sometimes you tell your kids something and they you tell them the truth later on, or they see this. Itâs called delayed dishonesty and itâs going to teach your kids that sometimes lying now and âfessing up later is okay when itâs not.
You Use Your Kids
Sometimes parents use their kids to get what they want by lying. They say their youngest is a year younger to board a plane without a ticket or get into a theme park free of charge. Itâs setting a bad example and itâs not a good idea.
Wiggling out of Trouble
You get pulled over for speeding, and youâre telling your spouse you are going to get out of a ticket by telling the officer your child is sick and has to go the bathroom. Now. And the officer will probably let you go. But your kid is not sick and hears this; itâs not good, parents. Not good.
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