No Stupid Questions - 197. Is It Wrong to Lie to Children?
Episode Date: May 26, 2024Why do we tell kids that a fairy will give them cash in exchange for their teeth? How should we talk to them about scary things in the world? And is Mike one of the greatest operatic tenors of all tim...e? SOURCES:Laura Wheatman Hill, journalist.George Lin, Ph.D. student in psychology at the University of Pennsylvania.Melinda Wenner Moyer, journalist and author.Luciano Pavarotti, Italian operatic tenor.Amy Stoeber, clinical psychologist.Jacqueline Woolley, professor of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin. RESOURCES:"Parenting by Lying," by Peipei Setoh, Petrina Hui Xian Low, Gail D. Heyman, and Kang Lee (Current Directions in Psychological Science, 2024)."Should You Always Tell Your Kids the Truth? It Depends," by Laura Wheatman Hill (CNN, 2021)."Parenting by Lying in Childhood Is Associated With Negative Developmental Outcomes in Adulthood," by Peipei Setoh, Siqi Zhao, Rachel Santos, Gail D. Heyman, and Kang Lee (Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2020)."The Santa Lie," by Melinda Wenner Moyer (2012). EXTRAS:"When Is It OK to Tell a Lie?" by No Stupid Questions (2021).How to Raise Kids Who Aren't A*******: Science-Based Strategies for Better Parenting — from Tots to Teens, by Melinda Wenner Moyer (2021).Life Is Beautiful, film (1997)."Love at the Five and Dime," song by Nanci Griffith (1986).The Hiding Place, by Corrie ten Boom (1971).
Transcript
Discussion (0)
My mom thinks that I am the greatest.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Mike Maughan.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, is it wrong to lie to children?
Wait, does the Easter Bunny only shop at CBS Pharmacy? And I'm going to show you how to do that. Let's see. Mike, the other day I was texting with my mom and my sister and we were texting about
lying.
Like you were lying to each other or you were just texting about the concept of lying?
I don't remember how this came up, but we were talking about whether we lie to our children,
because we're all now parents, and does it matter?
Now, before you say anything, can I just say that since we are going to talk about lies that we may or may not have
been told by our parents, that this may be something that any parents listening to the
conversation may want to listen to on their AirPods.
Yes.
I mean, the funny thing about my childhood is I cannot recall a single occasion
on which my parents lied to me.
Or that you knew they lied to you.
Yes, okay, that's true.
Surely they must have lied to me,
but I to this day cannot think of a time where that happened.
I will say I'm roughly in the same boat
with the exception of maybe the most glaring
and obvious examples that are
kind of ubiquitous in culture of Tooth Fairy, Santa Claus, Easter Bunny, stuff like that.
And I will just lay it out on the line here. I think that those are very good lies to tell.
What? Tooth Fairy lies?
Yeah, I do. But I think that there is something really beautiful
about this idea of childhood and fantasy and imagination
and the excitement that that brings.
And I know there are others who disagree
and I know that there have been some who, you know,
rocks their world when they find out
that their parents have lied to them.
But I think that there's also, generally speaking, a beauty to it.
What do you think?
I mean, did you tell your children that those fictional beings exist?
Let's see.
Santa Claus?
Yes.
Easter bunny?
Yes.
Maybe for fewer years.
I think they were like wise to the absence of the Easter bunny a little sooner,
probably because they could see that everything in the Easter basket was from CVS.
They're like, wait, does the Easter bunny only shop at CVS Pharmacy?
And then Tooth Fairy, oh yeah, we kept that going for a long time.
And sometime after texting Annette, my sister, and my mom, I was asking Jason if we lied to Amanda and Lucy.
And he was like, well, I have many fond memories of sneaking into their bedroom and sneaking
that one dollar bill under their pillow. And then that part was easy, but getting the tooth
out, right? Because you had to like kind of feel around for it without your kids waking
up. So we did perpetuate those three lies for as long as we could, by the way.
We didn't want to break the fiction.
So you were told these three lies when you were a kid.
Of course, and I'll even tell you how I found out all three were not true.
Was it all in one day?
No, that's what's so shocking maybe is I was like, one down, the other two must be real.
I don't know.
I know. Isn't that funny?
Like it took years for my kids to be like, oh wait, hold on.
Right.
But anyway, go on, tell me the story.
So, Tooth Fairy, I was suspicious.
And so I did put a tooth under my pillow without telling my parents.
Oh, that's such a good test.
And night one went by and and night two went by,
and night three went by, and finally I said,
hey, mom and dad, there's no tooth fairy.
I put the tooth under my pillow and nothing's happened.
And they said, well, Michael, we have to call
the tooth fairy so she knows to come.
Oh my gosh, parenting genius.
Defending the lie with the lie.
Okay, were you convinced? Were you like, oh right, you have to call the Tooth Fairy?
No, I was not convinced.
You were already old and cynical, Mike.
Well, I hope I wasn't cynical, but I think I was maybe investigative?
Curious? Scientific, Mike?
I will say one of my brothers talked about how with his kids, he has repeatedly said that the Tooth Fairy got caught in a snowstorm.
So, lies upon lies.
I think these like, um, tall tales are kind of adorable.
Again, I can't remember my parents like perpetuating myths that they thought would make me feel good.
But I know for myself there was for years, every Christmas,
Jason and I would let the girls put out a cookie
and a glass of milk for Santa.
Of course.
Of course.
And then every Christmas Eve, Jason would literally drink the milk.
I guess he could have poured it down the drain.
He felt somehow that would be un-Christmas-like.
But he would drink the glass of milk and then eat the cookie but leave some crumbs.
I think that was just for like a poetic finesse.
So it wasn't even like passive lying.
That's like kind of like full on active, I'm going to pretend that this is true when it's
just not.
Well, look, I think that early in my childhood, my parents were much more careful about maybe the cookie
or we would leave out Easter eggs for the Easter bunny, which I don't know how that
makes sense, but we would have some eggs.
You left out eggs for the bunny?
They're supposed to leave eggs for you.
I think it was more, here's the beautiful art I've created for you out of it.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
Got it.
But here's the thing.
My parents who are amazing, maybe got a little lazy when it came to some of these things
because I remember going to the fridge and the exact hard-boiled egg I had left out the
night before for the Easter bunny was back in the fridge and that was my first clue.
I was like, wait a minute, the egg I decorated and left for the punny is back in our fridge.
Maybe something's up here.
That would have been my dilemma because I'm like, on one hand, I want my daughter's childhood
to stay pure and innocent.
On the other hand, I don't want to waste a perfectly good egg.
That's the moral tension that would be right there for me.
Well, look, I think this broader topic of parenting and lying, and of course the even
broader broader broader topic of like, when is it okay to lie?
If it's ever okay to lie to people we care about is so interesting.
There's this very recent idea in parenting psychology.
It's called parenting by lying.
Have you ever heard of parenting by lying?
No, but I'll tell you my visceral reaction to it is that sounds terrible.
As much as I've just defended lying, like that sounds awful.
So the paper that I was reading, and it's in my favorite journal, Current Directions
and Psychological Science.
So the authors are at different universities.
I noticed that two of them are from Singapore.
And I bring that up because there is this Asian dimension of parenting by lying, which
I'll explain.
But they define parenting by lying as, quote, a practice in which parents lie to their children
to influence their emotions or behavior, unquote.
So it's on purpose, manipulative.
And what's the context of the lies?
Is this like, hey, you're really good at this to encourage a child to continue to develop
in that area?
So to be clear, parenting by lying has one of two goals.
You're manipulating your kids' behavior or you're manipulating their feelings.
So here are some examples of parenting by lying when the parents are trying to get their kids to do something. Parents have said things like, if you continue
to mistreat your sister, I will call the police to put you in jail. If you don't finish your
rice, you'll grow up to marry someone with pimples all over his face. And here's the
last example from the article. If you finish your homework, I'll take you to Disneyland.
So these are three example lies
must be from their interview research.
I have to say, I read those and I was like, what?
I mean, those all feel like pretty extreme.
They're like kind of unbelievable.
I just wonder if there are ways to get one's child
to do something or feel something without
going to the extreme.
For example, if you tell your child if they do this, you'll take them to Disneyland.
They can tell really well if you took them to Disneyland or not.
And so you get one shot at that lie.
Yeah, I know.
It doesn't seem like a scalable solution, as they would say in today's parlance.
Like, how does that work more than once?
Any of these things seem pretty house of cards-like.
How do you keep up this pretense?
Here, let me give you the examples of parenting by lying where the goal is to influence how
your kids feel.
Again, this is from the article that I was reading. Parents might say, that
was beautiful piano playing when they think that the piece was played terribly, or your
pet dies and like, Kitty went on to live on a farm. Like, you know, whatever it is that
they say to make the child-
Can you visit Kitty? No, it's a very far away farm.
It allows no visitors. Like, oh, we're going to flush this goldfish down the toilet so that it can get to the
river.
Right.
You know, these are all ways to, I guess, spare our children's feelings in a way.
And you might argue that these myths about Tooth Fairy, Easter Bunny, Santa Claus are
all so that we can make our kids happy, you know, for like one more precious innocent year
where they can believe in beautiful, untrue things.
So that actually is a little less unbelievable,
don't you think?
Oh, I have a story for you.
Okay, go, yeah.
I cannot sing.
I am not a singer.
Okay.
So I was singing in the kitchen.
I couldn't have been more than like 10, 12, maybe younger.
And my mother, bless her soul, runs into the kitchen. I mean, I remember the urgency and
force with which she ran. She slid on her feet and says, as I'm singing, is that Luciano
Pavarotti? And I legitimately believed.
No!
She sold it so well. I thought that my mother thought that I was Pavarotti? And I legitimately believe she sold it so well.
I thought that my mother thought that I was Pavarotti.
You were Luchiano Pavarotti.
And I was like, wow, I am so good that she mistook me for one of the greatest opera singers
of all time.
And I now as an adult feel so stupid that I believed it.
Maybe I was so eager for validation.
I don't know, but I was all in and I was like, man, my mom thinks that I am the greatest.
See, that's the thing.
I think when you think of these examples and you or one quickly passes judgment, like a
what parent would tell their kid, if you don't finish your rice, you'll grow up to marry
someone with pimples all over his face.
And I can say with confidence, I never said that to Amanda or Lucy.
But like, you know, when you really start to think about these edge cases, I mean, especially
when it comes to making your kids feel confident or happy, but maybe even these sort of like
false threat lies.
I mean, you have to admit that the parents probably had
in some ways a defensible motive.
You have to do your homework.
I want you to finish your vegetables.
Like, I don't know, maybe there's an argument
that parenting by lying is not that different
from parenting by honesty. Yeah, I think parenting by lying needs a rebrand.
Let me share with you one thing that I thought was helpful.
It comes from a woman named Melanie Wenner-Moyer.
She's a journalist who covers parenting, science, and medicine, and she wrote an article called
The Santa Lie in Slate.
She's also the author of a book called How to Race Kids Who Aren't A**holes. Good goal for anyone.
Yeah, that's a good goal.
She basically in this article in Slate
makes a differentiation on good lies and bad lies.
The good lie pile is something that parents invoke
for the benefit of their children.
And so maybe that is there are some adult concepts that
they're too young to understand or to maybe emotionally process. And so we're doing that
on their behalf to protect them. Then on her bad light pile, that is where you're just
deflecting blame or avoiding responsibility. For example, hey, we can't go to the playground
today, it's closed, but really you're just too lazy
to get off the couch.
Okay, but here's the thing,
all the examples of parenting by lying, you know,
are essentially quote unquote for the good of the child.
I mean, not even just quote unquote, like they are,
I am not saying they're good.
And by the way, the research is pretty clear, it's bad.
Like parenting by lying predicts lower attachment to parents and all kinds
of terrible outcomes for children, including kids lying themselves and having downstream
problems with their social adjustment and so forth. But it's really hard to go all the
way back to the beginning and saying like, well, was the intention good or bad? Because I can't think of many of these lies
that don't at least have some positive intent for the child.
Here's where I would reframe it a little bit.
I think that the whole like,
you're gonna marry someone with pimples
or I'm gonna call the police.
I just think those are bad regardless
because it's like a threat.
Yes, there's like a real sense of coercion.
Right. On the other hand, I do think there's something different about like,
oh, Santa's elves are watching, because in my mind, at least,
that goes to this idea of fantasy, creativity.
Now, I will just say this.
What Moyer talks about is that most children grow up with the ability to differentiate,
and so the idea that Santa Claus is not real was not so traumatic that they're like, oh
my gosh, I've been lied to my whole life.
I think what Moyer is talking about here, which I think is interesting, and she's referencing
some work by Jacqueline Woolley, who's a psychologist at the University of Texas at Austin. Typically, children learn the truth and
they understand the difference and can differentiate between these types of lies. And generally speaking,
they don't resent it. They don't resent their parents. And they don't suddenly think that like,
all lying is okay, because children have the ability as they age and grow up to recognize, oh, that was a fun lie
that made Christmas or that time of year
more exciting and accessible and joyful.
Because I think that there is sometimes this worry
in a parent's mind that a child's gonna wake up one day
and be like, you've lied to me about everything,
none of it's true.
And I think what Moyer is writing about here,
what Dr. Woolley is talking about is most children on average, on balance, they get it. They figure out the differentiation
and it's not traumatic.
Do you know what as if thinking is? It's like pretending.
Yeah.
You imagine like, as if I were a dinosaur. I think little kids are actually better at
it. As we get older, we get sort of burdened by, you know, realistic thinking. But I wonder whether
when you tell kids about the Easter bunny or the tooth fairy,
I wonder whether there is a part of them that knows you're not
serious. I just wonder whether kids in some ways are wise to the lie from the very beginning.
I don't know.
I'm just speculating.
I think I would hesitate to say from the very beginning, but obviously as one grows up,
maybe at two and three and four, Santa Claus is so obviously real.
But look, by six, seven, probably by eight is when Moir was writing in this article that
most kids kind of have reached the point of not believing in Santa
Claus at eight years old.
There's actually been research on this?
Yeah, eight is the age that she referenced. But I think kids go through this process, right?
I did. You start to wonder, but I think to your point, we want to believe because it's beautiful.
We want to believe and then maybe you're right, like as you get a little older
and you're starting to fit the pieces together,
you start to not believe the literal thing,
but maybe it's gradual, right?
Right.
Well, Mike, I think you and I would both love to hear
the thoughts of our listeners
about when and if we should lie to children.
Do you remember any specific lies
that your parents told you as a child?
How did those lies affect you?
Record a voice memo in a quiet place with your mouth close to the phone and email us at nsq at Freakonomics.com.
Maybe Mike and I will play it on a future episode of the show.
But maybe not. I won't lie about that.
Also, if you like No Stupid Questions and want to support us, the very best thing you
can do is to tell a friend about it.
Spread the word on social media or leave a review in your podcast app.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions, should Angela's parents have lied more when she was
a kid?
My dad would open a present, unwrap it, hold it up,
look at it, and say, I don't want this.
Now back to Mike and Angela's conversation
about lying to children.
I think when I remember my dad in particular, I was trying to search my childhood memory bank for times
that he lied to me and I could only think of times where he told me the glaring truth and that it sucked.
Honestly, like, you know, I would get him presents for like Father's Day or
for Christmas.
I didn't have a lot of money.
I was just like some little kid.
And there was this like five and dime store called Woolworths.
You are too young to remember Woolworths, are you not?
I do not remember Woolworths,
but my mother played these albums my entire life
by a woman named Nancy Griffith,
who is kind of a folk singer.
And she sang about Woolworths all the time.
So Woolworths has a very deep, soft place in my heart.
That makes me feel even older.
Yeah.
It's like, yes, but there was a black and white silent movie in which we...
No, Woolworths was great, Mike.
You know, it's a little bit like a dollar store today, right?
It's like aisles and aisles of stuff that was manufactured overseas
and probably immediately destined for landfill.
And I would wander these aisles looking with this little pocket change I had
in my little plastic purse or whatever to buy my daddy a present.
And what could I have bought?
I think maybe in a very good year, it was like
soap on a rope from Old Spice or something. I mean, you know, admittedly not great presents.
But my dad would open a present, unwrap it, hold it up, look at it and say, I don't want
this. And I was crushed. But I think it just reveals to me the complexity of lying versus honesty.
I mean, it's clearly a case where everybody would have been better off with like a tiny
white lie.
Absolutely.
I think there's this idea that sometimes some people feel so strongly about honesty that
they forget to feel strongly about empathy or about kindness.
There are a balance of virtues, and it's okay to
look at that balance and say, hey, in this moment, empathy is more important. I think that's the same
thing we're talking about too with when is lying okay to kids. And it's not just Santa and the
Tooth Fairy, but there are times when there's trauma, right? There's divorce, there are crimes,
there are different things that you kind of want to omit something for a child in order to make sure that we can preserve sort of the innocence that they have.
There was an article by a woman named Laura Wheatman Hill, a journalist who wrote in CNN,
should you always tell your kids the truth, it depends.
And she refers to this psychologist, Amy Stober, who specializes in trauma in children and talks
about setting boundaries based on age, maturity, and your child's personality is not a lie.
And so, when parents are getting divorced, for example, most divorcing parents choose
to leave out details about infidelity, about abuse, about addiction, because you don't
need to tell the whole story,
pending how old your kids are and the situation.
It's interesting though, in this article, Hill also talks about we need to be mindful
that the truth usually comes out.
Kids are not dumb, they tend to fill in the gaps, you don't want them to distrust you,
etc.
So it's not about lying to them, but it's about giving
them age and personality and maturity appropriate information for what they need to know then,
but then they don't feel lied to in the end when the truth does ultimately come out.
So the moral of that story or the take home advice is, it's not that you should never
tell a lie.
It's really complicated
because honesty comes into conflict with empathy
or with generosity or something else.
Right.
I will say, I thought this was super interesting.
There was a Reddit thread said,
what lies did your parents tell you that you believed
and how did you find out it was a lie?
There are a lot of funny ones and interesting ones
and sort of the bad-like category of my
parents were lazy and didn't want to do X, Y, Z. One that I thought was really beautiful,
though, said, my mom somehow kept up the facade of us being financially comfortable, although
my father wasted our money immensely. I always felt kind of rich until I found out that my
mom sometimes went years without buying anything for herself so my brother and I could grow
up without having to worry about money at all.
Now, tragic in its own way, but it reminds me of this incredible movie that you may or may not remember, Life is Beautiful.
I think it won Best Actor, Best Director, something like that, with the actor Roberto Benigni.
Oh, wait, wait, wait. Is there a bicycle in it?
Yes, there is a bicycle in it.
But it's about the Holocaust and how he basically is convincing his son that the entire thing that they're going through is actually a game.
And so he's lying to his son the entire time to protect his son from feeling immense fear. So that's where I would say, like, I don't think that the conversation of, is it okay
to lie to your child or not, is black and white at all because of these competing virtues
and because of this idea that there are some things that it is okay to protect one's child
from.
And I think this child in the, it's a movie, of course, but in Life is Beautiful, would probably look back on his father's lies and say,
that was the most beautiful gift he could have given me because he gave me a feeling of security.
He gave me a sense of love in a world that was filled with pure evil at that time.
Well, this may be why it's so prevalent. These researchers who, I think, coined the term parenting by lying, they cite this study
from 2013 where they surveyed parents on whether they lied to their kids and 78% of American
parents said yes.
They engaged in parenting by lying of some sort.
And the rest of them lied about-
Yeah, I know, I was gonna say like,
I don't know about the other 22%.
Okay, 78% was for the American parents.
What percentage of Chinese parents admitted
to engaging in parenting by lying?
Well, I'm gonna guess it's higher
because you were insinuating that maybe in Asian cultures
it was more predominant.
95%.
98%.
What? Wait, so you're saying your parents were in the 2% who didn't lie to their children.
Oh, definitely. You know, there was this guy that I met named George Lin, and I met him
when he was switching from medical school to, he wanted to get a PhD in psychology.
And you might think like, okay, whatever, like he wanted to switch from being an MD to being a PhD, but he's Chinese and for his family
and his mom in particular, this was, ugh, this was not what he was supposed to do.
And he's a full grown adult actually doing very well in this track of like eventually becoming a physician.
And oh my gosh, he was so torn up about it.
And actually when he met me, he was asking me about how he could become a psychologist
so that he could study tiger parenting.
So if you ask George, you know, why it might be that the prevalence of parenting by lying is higher
among Asian families compared to American families.
I'm not sure George would say it's all about just being more honest.
And by the way, it's not like all Asian parents are tiger parents, but certainly there are
many.
It's a kind of parenting where you love your kids, but you are trying to control them.
There is this sense, and I will even say this of my own childhood though, my parents didn't manipulate me by lying,
but there was a sense that in a way you were like the hand to the arm of your parents.
You were like just an extension of them. And there wasn't a real boundary.
And so in that sense, you know, we don't feel like we're lying to our bodies when we take Tylenol when we have a fever.
Because it's just ourselves. We're just doing it for our own good.
But because there's this lack of a boundary, there's this like, sure, I can control you.
I can tell you to be a doctor. I can tell you who to marry.
I can tell you that you have to finish your rice, no matter whether you're hungry or not hungry.
And I don't care what you want to do or how you feel about it.
You know, again, I don't want to stereotype all Asian parents or even all Chinese parents,
but I do think this tiger parenting approach has this element of like, it's okay to manipulate your kids by any means, including lying,
because they are not just the next generation, they are just part of who you are.
And I think that's, I don't know, to me that's just not a healthy way to do it.
Like, kids need to grow up and be who they want to be.
I know you're probably being hesitant because you don't want to pass judgment on like another
cultural practice.
Do I sense this kind of like, well, that doesn't sound so great, but who am I to judge?
Correct.
Because you want to judge less and love more.
Exactly.
Doesn't feel like something that I would want to have in my family. I mean, look, let me liberate you a bit because I think the need for autonomy is actually universal.
I think you have a need to feel like you have freedom to do and think and feel the things that you want to do, think, and feel. And that has been shown in many research studies to be one of the primary human motives, whether
you grew up in Asia, Africa, Australia, and it doesn't matter.
So I think, Mike, we don't have to be too hesitant to say, like, that's not great.
I may be saying this because I grew up in the United States and I can't even imagine
actually having that level of manipulation.
I do think though that maybe you don't want to raise your kids by like no bullsh** and
no secrets.
But at the same time, when you tell the truth to your kids, there is a kind of unequivocal
respect for their freedom to make their own choices and to figure out life
however they want to, as opposed to just like giving them the version that you want them
to have.
I think that is very fair.
At the same time, again, going back to this idea that there are different virtues that
are important, I think that it's, and you should lie to your children
when they give you a gift that you don't love.
Because what you want to communicate and foster is love.
You're going to put a stake in the ground.
You're like, okay, let me make this really clear.
You had a gift, be delighted.
Yes, because the point isn't the object itself.
The point is the giving of the gift
and the receiving of the gift.
Look, Mike, I think as we wrap up this conversation
about lying, I'd like to open the aperture a bit.
I think there are now more households with pets
than there are households with children.
Are you serious?
I guess that makes sense, but wow.
I think it might even be households with dogs in particular. I'm going to have to ask for
a fact check on that. But yes, we're having fewer kids and we're getting more pets. Not
everybody has to grapple with the question of, you know, whether to lie about the tooth
fairy or not to lie about the tooth fairy. But I think everybody has to grapple the question, is it okay to
lie to people we care about, whether they're our children or our friends or our coworkers
or our bosses, if it's for their own good? And I think if I have you right, you're saying,
yes, if there is a higher virtue that trumps honesty. Is that the Mike Mon position on lying?
I will say that in a business context, in terms of doing any sort of deal, in terms of negotiating,
I do have a very hard and fast rule that I won't lie to people. I think that is very different
than what we're talking about here. But I'm going to admit something that just will forever put me in the pantheon of nerds.
Oh, go do it.
I have a really good friend, Mike Wheatley.
And Mike Wheatley took philosophy our freshman year of college.
I didn't.
And he sent me some of his papers.
This is when we're 18 year old freshmen and I read them and I thought they were fascinating.
So the summer after my freshman year of college,
just for fun, on my own, I wrote a 17 page paper
that I entitled the morality of the greater good.
You, as a voluntary activity,
wrote a long typed paper on this question of ethics.
Yes, and it was about when it's okay to lie and when you should lie.
And I used the example from Les Miserables when there's this nun who is helping hide Valjean,
and she is well known as having never told a lie in her entire life.
If you've read the book, it's not as much in the play, but they come to her, they ask her where
Valjean is, and so she says he's not here. And they just have to believe her because her reputation
is such. Or there was a book called The Hiding Place about the Ten Boom family who was helping
Jews escape during the Second World War and during the Holocaust.
And one of the sisters, Nellie, the Gestapo, come into her home and say,
are you hiding any Jews? And she has this philosophy that you cannot lie. So she said,
yes, they're under the floor. And I was like, oh my gosh, that is the dumbest time to be honest.
Wrong, wrong.
And so all of those instances were times
when you might say, yeah, the greater good was to lie.
And that is why I, as a total nerd,
and then I mailed it to Mike Wheatley,
because this is back when you mailed things,
and I just said, hey, here's the paper I wrote.
And I was going out to visit for like a week that summer
to go hang out out and he lives in
DC in Virginia area and his mom was like, oh gosh, this guy's gonna be such a dork
But I felt that strongly as an 18 year old look
I think that puts you in the pantheon of something but I don't even want to say that it was a bad thing
Here's where I want to end we've talked about, you know, you're unwrapping a Christmas gift, you know, your kid asks,
like, is Santa Claus real?
Okay, that's one dimension of this question of when is it okay to lie.
But there's another angle on this, which is when you are the recipient, what can you do?
What are your choices?
You mean when someone lies to you?
Well, when you're talking to somebody
and you have a choice of whether you wanna ask them
for the full truth or whether you in fact
would like them to not tell you the whole truth.
So a few years ago, I was visiting this company
called Gong, like G-O-N-G.
It's like an AI platform,
but I remember being very much
admiring of their culture because they had very intentionally cultivated a culture of
fun and of always trying to do better, but they had this expression called no sugar.
I wrote it down in my notebook. I'm like, oh my gosh, I love this. So apparently at Gong, I can ask you for feedback, no sugar or it's a bad day and I need a little
sugar.
And so anyway, I think you're right.
Sometimes in life, it's the best thing to maybe allied the truth and sometimes it's
the best thing to leave no secrets.
But I think the idea in this practice of no sugar is that you could also, on the receiving end, be a little proactive.
Most days I can handle no sugar. And some days I can't.
And now here's a fact check of today's conversation.
The author of the 2012 Slate article, The Santa Lie, is Melinda Wenner-Moyer, not Melanie Wenner-Moyer.
Mike got some details wrong in a story from Cory Tenboom's 1971 autobiographical novel,
The Hiding Place.
When directly asked by the Gestapo whether a young woman hiding in their home is Jewish,
Tenboom's sister, who is named Nali, not Nelly, admits that she is.
Nali tells her sister,
God will not let them take her to Germany.
He will not let her suffer because I obeyed him.
The young Jewish woman is taken by the Gestapo
to be transported to an extermination camp,
but is rescued before reaching Germany.
Finally, Angela requests a fact check
on whether there are more US.S. households with dogs than
children.
According to recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau, 26.6% of all households have at least
one child, and 38% have a dog.
However, kids still beat cats, which are present in 22% of households.
That's it for the fact check.
Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some thoughts about last week's episode on
neuroticism.
Hello, No Stupid Questions.
This is Tim from California.
In your podcast on neuroticism, I was struck by how the caller Amanda described her form
of neuroticism, a sort of structured sensitivity
and tendency to overthink. I wanted to recommend the book, The Highly Sensitive Person by Dr. Elaine
Aaron to Amanda and anyone else who feels similarly. It gives very good explanations for the how and the
why of her form of neuroticism, and above all, it underscores the many advantages
of being highly sensitive.
Hi, I'm calling in as someone who is probably seen
by the world as being somewhat neurotic.
I think it can be very challenging to make friends
because people don't like the negativity,
but I also feel like it gives me a tenacity to take an information and look for solutions
on very big overwhelming problems like major public health issues and climate change, which
are both issues that I like to spend a lot of time learning about and trying to solve.
I have more tolerance and persistence with those
issues than a lot of other people do.
That was Tim Wheeler and Susan Abrams. Thanks to them and to everyone who
shared their stories with us. And remember, we'd love to hear your thoughts
online to children. Were you lied to as a kid or do you lie to your kids? And what
are the effects of those lies? Send a voice memo to nsq at Freakonomics.com
and you might hear your voice on the show. [♪ music playing, drum beat playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing, guitar playing I've never really cared about trying to be cool, but maybe that's just because I felt like it was a hopeless battle for me.
That's next week on No Stupid Questions.
No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network, which also includes Freakonomics
Radio, People I Mostly Admire, and The Economics of Everyday Things.
All our shows are produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
The senior producer of the show is me, Rebecca Lee Douglas.
And Lyric Bowditch is our production associate.
This episode was mixed by Greg Rippon.
We had research assistance from Daniel Moritz-Rabson.
Our theme song was composed by Luis Guerra.
You can follow us on Twitter, at NSQ Underscore Show,
and on Facebook, at NSQ underscore show and on Facebook at NSQ show
If you have a question for a future episode, please email it to nsq at Freakonomics comm
To learn more or to read episode transcripts visit Freakonomics comm slash nsq. Thanks for listening
Oh, God bless editing. I'm so sorry, guys.