I realize I have been ignoring the religion part of this
blog lately. And I was all set to give you another installment of My Favorite
Bible Stories. Until this
story caught my eye.
It’s a fictional story about a man who successfully maintains
a “respectable” job and family life, while sneaking off with a girlfriend a
couple times a year. This cliché continues until the development of an app
which detects the brain’s instinctual recognition response, something to do
with P300. Read more
about the P300. In the story, the app is called The Game that Detects a
Cheating Spouse.
The point Bruce Kasanoff is making involves easily accessible technology which is able to instantly and accurately tell when you're lying. While there is an obvious connection with relationships and cheating, Kasanoff remarks that such technology concepts could also be
applied to situations such as lying at work, or anywhere else you find it easy to be economical with the truth.
Kasanoff says, “What will life be like when the truth becomes inescapable?”
Well said.
But I want to take this beyond obvious lies; cheating, stealing, willful deception. Not a human on earth would deny having told at least a few “white
lies” in their lifetime. In fact, I would venture to guess, most of us tell white lies several
times a day. We lie to keep from hurting someone’s feelings, such as That is the world’s most god-awful lipstick.
A world where you can’t successfully lie about your boss's new plaid blazer would be different indeed.
Then there are the lies we tell, the carefully plotted
deceptions we construct, to keep others from seeing our
weaknesses, our
insecurities. Like when we laugh at a joke because everyone else is laughing,
even though we don’t really get it. Or, we nod along, even when we have no idea
what someone is talking about.
The scarier deceptions come when we’re hurt by
someone or something, but we can’t bring ourselves to talk about it. So we
pretend it doesn't exist. This may preserve our feelings for a little while,
but it’s still lying. And like any lie, you have to keep lying in order to keep
it hidden. And keeping anything hidden, never feels good for long.
Even though the story is about cheating, what I’m talking
about is self-actualization,
fulfilling your mental needs and reaching your full potential. What this story
brought to my attention was … how much I don’t
lie anymore. To anyone, about anything.
It’s not just about having open and honest poly relationships. Though that’s part of it. I also see how I have finally come to a place
where I am comfortable with my weaknesses and my insecurities. I have on occasion
taken them out and laid them on the table where anyone who cared could see
them. Not for pity, but merely because I had nothing to hide. Here they are! I know they’re stupid, childish, petty, maybe even unnecessary. I acknowledge them. I embrace
them. And I don’t expect anyone but myself to deal with them. Though I’m not
above assistance every now and then.
Recently, while in the process of making a fool out of
myself, someone told me: “I’m not laughing with you, I’m laughing at you.” But here’s the problem with
that. As long as I own my foolishness, as long as I think it’s just as foolish
as you think it is, as long as I’m laughing too, I cannot be laughed at. When my weaknesses are revealed,
intentionally or accidentally, the way I see it, you have only two choices.
You can laugh along with me, because I find my stupidity to be endlessly
amusing. Or, you can choose not laugh. And neither choice will bother me.
I literally have nothing to lose because I have nothing to
hide. Even if I were to lose the people and the things that are important to
me, I still have the knowledge that I have nothing to hide. I don’t feel the
need to lie about my insecurities or blunders to win someone’s affections. Such
people aren't worth my time anyway. And though my opinions about how others
dress, or speak, or conduct themselves might hurt someone's feelings, I am not ashamed of
them. I do my best to conceal these truths for their sake. But I have no fear of them
being revealed.
Are you Liar, Liar, pants on fire! ? |
All of this freedom, to not have to lie about my opinions,
my feelings, my truly most embarrassing moments … all of this I attribute to
the secure sensation of absolute happiness I've had of late. I have nothing to
fear, and so the world is my playground.
What insecurities are you hiding? What would happen if you
revealed them?
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