Every one of us have some kind of inner dream, I’m no exception to that. I wanted to be a doctor, but never got a chance to unravel my dream because my financial situation made my life miserable and I ended up doing a worthless Bachelor's degree. I worked two jobs to earn a degree and to make my parents’ life better. If my parents took some initiative I would have been a doctor and I would have made my life and theirs much easier. I know, my story is really pitiful expect for the fact that everything I just told is a lie. Sounds shocking?, I lied just to draw the attention of the reader and make my paper more interesting. I’m not alone because people lie to save themselves from an unlikely situation, to shift a blame, to avoid confrontation, perhaps to feel better or to get others attention just like me.
It’s just not me, on average people lie twice a day; it's difficult to believe, but it's true (DePaulo, Kashy, Kirkendol, Wyer, and Epstein, 1996). If we start lying around age 3 and live until 70, we would have lied 48910 times and that’s a lot of lies. It is unfortunate that deception has become a major factor in social interaction and people admit that they use it in 14% of their emails, 27% during face-to-face conversations and 37% during phone conversations (Hancock, 2007). If we say that we have never committed a sin in our life, we just deceived ourselves says the Holy Bible. Each and every one of us would have lied at some point. Just because we lie frequently it doesn't mean that it's an easy job. In fact, lying is very demanding because lairs have to work hard to hide their emotions and expressions. Also, deceivers invest a great deal of effort to protect themselves from being caught so they carefully release ...
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...eir kids for their action, it actually sends a wrong information that they are punished for telling the truth. Thus, kids start lying at an earlier age and continue to tell lies life long.
Works Cited
Ekman, P. (2001). Telling lies: Clues to deceit in the marketplace, politics, and marriage (3rd ed.). New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
Ekman, P. & Friesen, W. V. (1969). Nonverbal leakage and clues to deception. Psychiatry, 32, 88-106.
Hancock, J. (2007). Digital Deception: When, where, and how people lie online. In K. McKenna,
T. Postmes, U. Reips, & A. Joinson (Eds.), Oxford handbook of internet psychology
Oxford handbook of internet psychology (pp. 287-301). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Neal Karlinsky and Jessica Hopper, ABC News April 22 2011 http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/washington-teen-gaby-rodriguez-fakes-pregnancy-social-experiment/story?id=13434764
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