Synopsis: This mini love lesson covers Lying for Us-ness; Lies and 
Breakups; How to Get Yourself Lied to A Lot (A Baker’s Dozen Ways); 
Sabotaging Truth-Sharing Sabotages Love; How Lies Limit Love; When Love 
with Truth Is Not Allowed; and What to Do.
Lying For “Us-ness”
“I lie to save my marriage.  I’m pretty sure sooner or later I will 
get caught and our marriage will be over.  Until then, lies are the only
 way to keep my marriage going.”  So said Benson who was working hard at
 trying to learn how to live authentically.
He freely admitted that his
 career and personal life was saturated with falsehood but he vehemently
 testified that, nevertheless, he did love his wife.
Jolene stated, “I 
lie a lot to my husband just like my mother and grandmother did to their
 husbands and so taught me.  I really don’t know any other way that 
could possibly have a chance of working with my husband. Truth be told, I
 don’t know how any spouse can not lie a lot if they want to make their 
marriage work.”  Ginny and Josh in couples counseling were trying to 
figure out if their relationship could survive if both of them told each
 other several difficult truths. They had confessed that to keep their 
marriage going smoothly there had been a lot of deceit, both by the 
commission of out-and-out lies and even more by omissions of the full 
truth about a lot of things.
What is to be done about the lies, deceptions, half-truths, 
distortions, concoctions, perjury, beguilements, exaggerations, 
misrepresentations, evasions and out-and-out fraudulent deceit which 
occurs in a great many love relationships.  Some answer “nothing can be 
done” because all the lies are protective, softening, palliative and in 
one way or another useful in keeping a love relationship going.  Others 
say love needs the truth and without the truth real love will die.  
Still others recommended that it’s okay to lie about some smaller things
 but not the big stuff.  However, people can vary on what they call ‘big
 stuff’.
There are those who comment that our culture and our love 
mythology especially teaches everybody to tell a lot of lies in love 
relationships.  “Don’t risk your relationships by telling the truth 
about anything that would hurt someone’s feelings” is something I once 
over heard an aging, Southern Bell tell her granddaughter. Of course 
there are those who want to know all the truth from others but they 
aren’t about to give anyone their own full truth.
Then there are the people who lie about love itself.  Tatiana said, 
“I admit I live a very two-faced life.  One face is for my husband and 
that face lies to him that I love him.  Another face is for my lover and
 that face tells the same lie but in different ways.  Since I don’t 
really believe love exists everything I say about love to men is a lie. 
 But they say it too.  They tell you they love you but all they want is 
sex.  But men are easily fooled.  They want to believe women are all 
about love.  I’m about wealthy pleasure and men are very useful for 
attaining that”.
So, what do you think?  How do you operate when it comes to telling 
lies, small, medium and large lies in a love relationship?  Do you want 
the truth no matter what it is?  Can you handle the truth no matter what
 it might be?  Before you decide for sure let’s look at some different 
things.
Lies And Breakups
“If he just hadn’t lied to me we might have made it”.  “She was just 
too deceitful. I never knew what to believe.”  “I thought I didn’t want 
to know the truth but in the end it was all the deceptions that 
destroyed us.” “Now I know I really did lie by what I didn’t tell and 
that is definitely what sank our ship.  I kept telling myself a lie, 
that omitting the truth wasn’t really lying.  If only I had admitted to 
myself that that was complete bullshit then I might not have lost the 
love of my life.”  “I really did not expect she would stop seeing me or 
even talking to me just because I told another lie”.  “We lied to each 
other a lot and in doing so we never faced our real issues.”
Every week I hear things like the above quotes when doing 
post-divorce and breakup recovery counseling.  The truth, at least as I 
see it, is that lying usually is more dangerous, or just as dangerous, 
to love relationships as is telling difficult truths.  At least for the 
strong of heart, truth (even very tough truth) is likely to give you the
 healthiest, long-range outcome.
It is true that some people cannot or 
will not work with certain truths that may arise in a love 
relationship.  It also is true that some love relationships are not 
strong enough and the love not healthy enough to enable the people to 
deal with certain truths.  In those cases breaking up or divorce may be 
painful but best in the long run.
These things not only are true for couples but also are true for all 
other kinds of love relationship also.  Time and again I have heard 
someone scream at a family member in family counseling “you lied to 
me”.  Often the “because” of why the lie was told doesn’t seem to 
matter.  Usually the wound caused by the lie and whatever the lie is 
about can be healed with enough love, and with the guidance of good 
family therapy.  Friendships, even deep and long-lasting friendships, 
may be killed by the telling of lies.  It seems that every type of love 
relationship can be endangered by lies.
How to Get Yourself Lied to A Lot
How do you help get yourself lied to?  Notice in this question I did 
not use the word cause’ but instead the word ‘help’.  As I see it, the 
person who tells the lie causes it.  However, we all can set things up 
so people will frequently choose to avoid telling us the truth if they 
can.  Here are a ‘baker’s dozen’ ways you can be pretty sure to assist 
yourself not getting told the truth or certainly not told the whole 
truth.  Each of these ways also can be quite destructive to the 
development of a healthy, real, love relationship.
1.  Be very condemning and judgmental when you hear a
 truth you don’t like, so people learn that telling you the truth is far
 too costly emotionally, and in energy and time consumed.
2.  Be so sure you’re right that no other view could
 possibly have validity, so your loved ones learn there is no use in 
even trying to tell you there truth.
3.  Come across very weak, fragile and delicate, so no one dares telling you a tough truth for fear you will break or be crushed.
4.  Play ‘overt victim /covert persecutor’ by 
showing that you feel supremely agonized at being blamed, or full of 
suffering martyr guilt, or you feel excessively at fault every time 
there’s a possibility of an unpleasant truth to be dealt with, so 
everyone will either dodge dealing with you or do anything to placate 
you, instead of just working at dealing with unpleasant truths.
5.  Become quickly and strongly upset, hysterical, 
incoherent, irrational and emotionally overwhelmed, so loved ones are 
busy trying to sooth you and their truth telling gets postponed, perhaps
 indefinitely.
6.  Demand and then deny evidence, insist your 
version of historical events is the only accurate one, and try to 
overwhelm with logic and oratory much like an aggressive lawyer in 
court, so that unpleasant truths get bulldozed and lost in the fray.
7.  Lash out with rage, personal attacks, putdowns, 
criticisms and personal negations of loved ones without mercy, and as 
you do so clutter the discussion with angrily stated irrelevant, 
unconnected to the original topic accusations, and miscellaneous 
material, so there isn’t a chance for a person’s truth to get a real 
hearing.
8.  Subtly, or overtly by your behavior, threaten 
loved ones who tell you uncomfortable truths, helping them fear that 
your vengeance will fall upon them and consequently cause them to 
protect themselves by hiding truth from you.
9.  Become unlovingly cold, distant and uncaring 
with elements of silent dismissal and attitudinal demeaning or 
condescension which is covertly obvious and, thereby, making yourself be
 seen as pretty much unapproachable.  If that doesn’t work withdraw and 
go into mysteriously hiding, so truth can not reach you.
10.  ‘Awfulize’ (make it far worse than it is) 
everything a loved one says, jump to all sorts of awful conclusions, and
 prove that telling you the truth blows everything out of proportion, so
 truth telling will always be a long ordeal to be avoided.
11.  Act indifferent by not listening carefully or 
showing any emotional care or concern, and project that you regard what 
you’re being told as irrelevant and unimportant. (This is particularly 
good for getting deceptions of omission to come your way).
12.  Use the truth a loved one shares with you 
against them later on, thus, punishing them for sharing their truth with
 you, and teaching them to avoid the risk from now on.
13. Ignoring the truth being shared and firing back 
or countering with something negative about the person telling you their
 truth, thus, devaluing their truth and deflecting dealing with it.
Sabotaging Truth-Sharing Sabotages Love
Each of the above 13 ways and a number of others act to sabotage both
 the telling of truth and the growth of love.  Lots of people do not 
realize that they get lied to partly because they make telling the truth
 have really bad outcomes.  Yes, it’s true we all should have the 
courage to tell the truth anyway, but that often is not the case.  Yes, 
we all should have sufficient love to be dedicated to giving our loved 
ones nothing but the truth, but that too is often not the case.
If you 
can lovingly hear the truth people are ever so much more likely to tell 
you there truth.  That often takes a good amount of healthy, self-love 
and the ability to do what is called ‘owning your okayness’ and ‘not 
giving away your power’.  See the entry “Healthy Self-Love and Not 
Giving Your Power Away”.
How Lies Limit Love
If I lie to you I do not present you with the real me.  If you send 
love to that false me it does not reach the real me.  I either know or 
doubt you would send your love if you knew the truth I am withholding.  
Therefore, I am not reached and I’m not nourished by your love.  My lie 
may help me, or you, or both of us escape a painful conflict but by 
lying I also escape the chance of the real me being loved by the real 
you.  Thus, I cause us to elude the chance of sharing and experiencing 
intimate, real and perhaps healing love together.
When Love with Truth Is Not Allowed
She said, “If I ever find out you even think of having sex with 
another woman I will divorce you!”  He secretly and silently interpreted
 this as “I can never share with you the truth of my real sexuality. 
Therefore, I had best begin to look for someone else I can be real 
with”.
He said, “You know I’m right and I refuse to hear you say another 
word about this subject!  So, eventually she was in the arms of another 
who could and would listen to anything and everything she had to say.
If you cannot accept my truth how can I feel you accept me?  If you 
cannot accept me, flaws and all, how can I believe you truly can love 
the real me?  Please do not condemn or deny my messages of myself, and 
do not falsely agree with me either.  Please be willing to hear the real
 me as best as I can present it today.  Then tomorrow I may grow to have
 a better message and certainly a greater love for you!
What To Do
If you lie a lot, or perhaps you help yourself get lied to a lot, or 
if you are living some big lie, I like to suggest this.  By small, exact
 steps you can get to where you live authentically, without lies, or 
without being much lied to, and in the process you do no harm to anyone.
I like to suggest that for your own health and well-being, as well as
 for those you care about, cautiously working your way into a life of 
truth almost always is achievable and by far is preferable.  One reason 
for that is lies usually cause a lot of psycho-physiological stress, not
 to mention relational diminishment and danger.  Coaching by a good 
counselor often is just about invaluable whenever love is being 
sabotaged by lies.  Finally consider an old teaching question.  Can you 
build something real out of something false?
As always – Go and Grow with Love
Dr. J. Richard Cookerly
♥ Love Success Question      Is your self-love sometimes too-weak for you to be able to hear the truth?