I have lied to my 4 year old quite often, and will do so again I am sure.
If the correct answer to the question
"What were you and Mommy doing in the bedroom?"
is actually:
"A reciprocal act of oral sex assigned a number just below 70.",
then I think:
"Napping."
is the better answer.
<snip>
Ausmerican, What you told your four year old, was totally exceptable! They are not ready for that kind of truth yet! Five more years!
Gotta agree with you on that one Ausamerican.
But I think even when your 4 year old becomes 24 she would rather not know certain things about you and Mom. Privacy is another reason used to justify lying.
Most people say that young children don't need to know about sex and its appropriate to hold off on the knowledge. But given what really happens in society -- I wonder if what is
really being taught to children in this fashion are the concepts of privacy and the important idea that its not appropriate to talk about every topic with every person. And one should never learn about sexual techniques from their parents.
This reminds me of the Santa Claus issue. Why do billions of people around the world lie to their children about a short fat dwarf who favors the color red?
I think the answer is deeper than because it's a fun thing to do. I use to think perhaps it was a way for parents to avoid explaining to their kids why they didn't get as expensive a present as some of their friends. Maybe, but I think the real reason is even deeper than that.
The real answer may be that most people want their children to know that people lie, and not just strangers but people that they know and love. That is probably too hard a thing for families to talk about directly -- and maybe the whole way society handles Santa Claus allows us to do so indirectly.
I don't think this is something thought out and done on a conscious level. I think its just something that a lot of communities accidentally stumbled upon and they kept doing it because, unconsciously, most people realize that it works and that its teaching something that needs to be learned.
I think that is why the whole Santa Claus cycle has been kept. A baby finally becomes old enough to be aware of a new character and have something new to talk about with the family, then becomes old enough to be able to look forward to a simple annual ritual, and then finally learns that even loved ones lie ... these are all important rites of passages that symbolize stages of cognitive growth.
Being raised Jewish, I don't have direct experience with the Santa Claus ritual. Let me ask you all, when most kids learn that Santa Claus is a lie -- do they move on and start to queston other things as well? I think that would be a reasonable response -- but I don't recall what my non-Jewish friends did.
As to some of the other common reasons to lie here I avoid those by being honest just one time.
My mother-in-law asked if the dress she was wearing made her butt look big. I replied no, the material the dress was made from and the pattern on it did nothing to make her butt look big.
Then, as she was walking happily away I mentioned "It is the fact that you have a huge arse that makes your butt look big."
Now, thanks to my admirable honesty in that regard, I never get asked questions like that.
So ... no white lies in the Ausamerican house.

How do you get along with your mother-in-law?
