
Loving
is nothing without truth.
Honesty, What a Concept
On Friday, January 16th, 1999 John Stossel of the ABC
20/20 News team did a story on Brad Blantons book Radical Honesty: How to
transform your life by telling the truth. I watched it because I wanted to find out
what exactly radical honesty was.
As it turns out, radical honesty is
....well....honesty. What astounded me most about the program was that people thought
telling the truth WAS a radical idea. Dont you find that just a bit odd?
At the end of the story, Barbara Walters even warned
viewers, don't try this at home without someone trained in this. Tears ran
down my face as I rocked with laughter and disbelief. Don't try this at home?!? Honesty?!?
Are we so lost as a culture that we regard honesty as a dangerous pursuit without a
trained non-liar at our sides?? Has the world become so warped that we
consider telling the truth, a dangerous exercise? It seemed extremely bizarre to me.
But yet, maybe it's not so bizarre. Haven't all of us
been taught that it's better to lie to someone than to hurt their feelings? That there are
just some things you simply never, never tell another? We're not suppose to tell anyone
when we've had an extramarital affair, especially not our spouse. And god forbid we're
honest with each other about sexual matters.
But have we become so adept at lying, that we've
forgotten that we are, in fact, lying? Have we forgotten HOW to tell the
truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?
The liar's
punishment is not in the least that he is not believed, but that he cannot believe anyone
else.
--George
Bernard Shaw
Perhaps we were taught to lie because we as a society believe we actually can hurt
another emotionally. We believe we have the POWER to make another person feel something
emotionally.
So who's responsible for how we or another chooses
to respond to words? If you truly had the power to make people feel certain emotions, then
you should be able to create other people's reactions at will. If you said the same thing
to thousands of people, you should be able to get an identical emotional response from all
of them, right? But the fact is, youd get as many different responses as there are
people. Each would react according to their belief systems and interpretations of your
meaning.
If people understood everyone is responsible for their
own emotions, we'd feel freer to say what we think and feel. Most times, it's our own lack
of trust in ourselves to be able to deal with other's reactions, that is the stumbling
block to our honesty. How will *I* feel if this person reacts badly we ask
ourselves. I might feel guilty, so I wont tell the whole truth.
Because face it, people WILL get angry and hurt sometimes
in reaction to our honesty. But the alternative of living lives filled with lies and
half-truths is not much of an alternative. We end up walking around on eggshells,
monitoring our every word, and trying to predict how others might respond. It's a slow,
awkward process of communication.
I agree with Dr. Blanton. Honesty about everything truly
does open the doors to intimacy, love, and dynamic relationships. Without it, we're all
just actors on a stage, reading our scripted lines. And to some degree, I think everyone
knows we're pretending to be truthful. It's like we're all walking around holding dead
chickens in our hands, making deals with each other. Pretend you don't see my
chicken, and Ill pretend I don't see yours. It's a scam, but one we're pulling
over our own eyes.
I have this impossible dream about everyone on earth
standing up, and all at the same time shouting out, I'm a liar!. And as we all
look at each other and smile, we could start anew and begin fresh. Then, we could continue
our lives with a willingness to trust that its okay to think and feel what we do, and have
the courage to speak our truth.
Imagine being real and genuine with each other. Imagine
what the world would be like if you could actually believe what people tell you. It might
get a bit rocky at times, but it would radically change the world.
So maybe honesty is a radical idea in this day and age,
but lets do our part in "telling the truth" so honesty becomes common place. The
love that would follow would be far from common.
You know how it is
when you decide to lie and say the check is in the mail, and then you remember it really
is? I'm like that all the time.
--Steven Wright
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