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  • “. . .you must look at who you are and make an effort to know yourself, which is the most

  • difficult knowledge one can imagine.

  • When you know yourself, you will not puff yourself up like the frog who wanted to be

  • the equal of the ox.

  • . .”   Don Quixote, Miguel de Cervantes

  • From an early age most of us are taught the value of honesty and we are swift to cast

  • scorn on the liars who walk among us.

  • Yet, in a striking paradox, many who claim to be honest in their interactions with others

  • fall prey to the most insidious form of dishonesty: that of lying to one's self.

  • In this video we explore the phenomenon of self-deception and examine how it paves the

  • way for broken relationships and a ruined life

  • Nothing is so difficult as not deceiving oneself." 

  • Ludwig Wittgenstein, Culture and Value

  • Deception is a two-faced phenomenon.

  • On the one hand there is explicit lying, where we tell a lie to another person, but know

  • that we are lying.

  • On the other hand, there is self-deception, where we tell a lie, either to ourselves or

  • to another, but we believe the lie we tell.

  • It is easy to understand why people tell explicit liesfor even if immoral, an explicit

  • lie can help us to evade responsibility, avoid difficult confrontations, or gain the favour

  • of another.

  • But why do we lie to ourselves?  

  • We lie to ourselves because it is one of the most effective defensive mechanisms against

  • painful thoughts, emotions, and beliefs.

  • Whether mental pain is triggered by a sense of personal inadequacy, feelings of inferiority,

  • self-loathing, guilt, or shame, self-deception helps us escape these feelings.

  • Self-deception also reduces the mental discomfort that accompanies cognitive dissonance, or

  • as Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson write in Mistakes Were Made (but Not By Me): 

  • The engine that drives [self-deception], the energy that produces the need to justify

  • our actions and decisionsespecially the wrong onesis the unpleasant feeling . . . called

  • cognitive dissonance.”

  • Cognitive dissonance is a state of tension that occurs when a person holds two cognitions

  • (ideas, attitudes, beliefs, or opinions) that are psychologically inconsistent with each

  • other, such asSmoking is a dumb thing to do because it could kill meand “I

  • smoke two packs a day.”

  • Dissonance produces mental discomfort that ranges from minor pangs to deep anguish; people

  • don't rest easy until they find a way to reduce it.”

  •   Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson, Mistakes

  • Were Made (but Not By Me)

  • Cognitive dissonance is pervasive in the human experience.

  • For example, it arises if we have harmed another, but believe ourselves to be good.

  • It will be triggered if we are stuck in a dead-end job, yet believe we are smart and

  • capable.

  • Or it may emerge if we think we are a person of value, but are in a relationship with an

  • abusive or disloyal partner.

  • To reduce the cognitive dissonance triggered by situations like these, we can take healthy

  • actions that address the root cause of our mental anguish.

  • We can apologize for a wrong done to another, we can cultivate skills that make a new career

  • possible, or we can end a toxic relationship.

  • But taking these constructive steps often requires courage, discipline, and hard work

  • and so the easy way out of resolving our dissonance with self-deception can prove tempting.

  • We can tell ourselves that the other person deserved the wrong we did to them, that our

  • dead-end job provides us with security, or that our relationship isn't toxic as we

  • deserve our partner's anger.

  • These self-deceptions allow us to escape the anguish of cognitive dissonance without making

  • any real changes to our life.  

  • Everyone takes the easy way out at times, but if self-deception becomes chronic and

  • the primary way we deal with mental pain, we begin down a path that can easily ruin

  • our life.

  • For each lie we tell ourselves to escape awareness of the existence of a problem, is a step taken

  • away from the path of self-development.

  • Each time we deceive ourselves to diminish the uncomfortable feelings of cognitive dissonance,

  • our problems and difficulties go unresolved, and we set ourselves up for greater suffering

  • down the line.

  • Or as Travis and Aronson explain

  • “. . .mindless [self-deception], like quicksand, can draw us deeper into disaster.

  • It blocks our ability to even see our errors, let alone correct them.

  • It distorts reality, keeping us from getting all the information we need and assessing

  • issues clearly.

  • It prolongs and widens rifts between lovers, friends, and nations.

  • It keeps us from letting go of unhealthy habits.”

  • Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson, Mistakes Were Made (but Not By Me)

  • The more the quicksand of self-deception pulls us down, the more we limit our potential.

  • But self-deception, is more than just self-limiting.

  • It also impedes the cultivation, and maintenance, of healthy relationships and in extreme cases

  • can motivate us to commit acts of cruelty toward innocent victims.

  • To understand how self-deception harms interpersonal relationships, we need to recognize that one

  • of the most common ways that we deceive ourselves is through the manipulation of our memories.

  • We can be selective as to what we remember and denying that something has happened is

  • one of the most effective means to reduce cognitive dissonance.

  • For example, if we have wronged someone and feel guilty about it, instead of apologizing

  • and making amends, we can deny that the event ever happened, or as Nietzsche put

  • “I have done it, says my memory.

  • I cannot have done it, says my pride and remains inexorable.

  • Finally, the memory gives way.”

  • Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil

  • Manipulating our memories to deceive ourselves goes further than mere denial of a memory,

  • many people will go as far as to create false memories to diminish mental pain and to resolve

  • cognitive dissonance.

  • For example, if cognitive dissonance is triggered by the contradictory beliefs that (a) we are

  • a smart and capable person and (b) our life is a mess, we have a few options to quell

  • the mental anguish of our cognitive dissonance.

  • We can take steps to straighten out our life, or we can blame our current situation on events

  • of the past and even if our past wasn't bad enough to excuse our current problems,

  • we can deceive ourselves with false memories to convince ourselves it was.

  • With false memories we can turn our past into a horror show of abuse, trauma, and cruel

  • twists of fate, that makes our current life situation not a disappointment, but an accomplishment,

  • given what we tell ourselves we went through.

  • Or as Travis and Aronson explain in Mistakes Were Made (but Not By Me): 

  • Why would people claim to remember that they had suffered harrowing experiences if

  • they hadn't, especially when that belief causes rifts with families or friends?

  • By distorting their memories, these people can get what they want by revising what they

  • had, and what they want is to turn their present bleak or merely mundane lives into dazzling

  • victories over adversity.

  • Memories of abuse also help them resolve the dissonance between “I am a smart, capable

  • personandMy life sure is a mess right nowwith an explanation that makes them

  • feel better about themselves and removes responsibility.

  • . ." Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson, Mistakes

  • Were Made (but Not By Me)

  • Another way self-deception harms relationships was identified by Fyodor Dostoevsky.

  • In his book Demons, one of the characters, Fedka the Convict, observes how the protagonist,

  • Pyotr Stepanovich, “invents a man and then lives with him”.

  • What he meant by this was that instead of looking at someone in a clear and objective

  • manner, and evaluating their character based on their behaviors and actions, sometimes

  • we create, or invent, a fictitious characterization of another to justify how we treat them.

  • In Dostoevsky's book The Brothers Karamazov, he gives an example of this form of self-justification

  • in action.

  • When one of the characters is asked why he hates someone so much and he answers:

  • “I'll tell you.

  • He has done me no harm.

  • But I played him a dirty trick, and ever since I have hated him.”

  • Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov

  • Creating a fictious characterization of another person to justify mistreating them, sets us

  • down a dangerous path.

  • In Mistakes Were Made (But Not By Me), Tavris and Aronson provide an example of how this

  • process can unfold

  • Take a boy who goes along with a group of his fellow seventh graders who are taunting

  • and bullying a weaker kid who did them no harm.

  • The boy likes being part of the gang but his heart really isn't in the bullying.

  • Later, he feels some dissonance about what he did.

  • How can a decent kid like me,” he wonders, “have done such a cruel thing to a nice,

  • innocent little kid like him?”

  • To reduce dissonance, he will try to convince himself that the victim is neither nice nor

  • innocent: “He is such a nerd and a crybaby.

  • Besides, he would have done the same to me if he had the chance.”

  • Once the boy starts down the path of blaming the victim, he becomes more likely to beat

  • up on the victim with even greater ferocity the next chance he gets.” 

  • Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson, Mistakes Were Made (but Not By Me)

  • This dynamic of a nice kid becoming a bully by convincing himself that the victim deserved

  • it, is the same dynamic that occurs at a collective level when normal people scapegoat an ethnic,

  • religious, or political minority.

  • The scapegoating process typically begins with minor transgressions being committed

  • against the scapegoated group.

  • Perhaps the group is banned from certain places or stripped of certain rights.

  • An act of justification usually follows these initial transgressions, whereby the scapegoated

  • group is demonized in the minds of the aggressors with words and accusations.

  • For example, the scapegoats may be labelled as degenerate, disease ridden, or a threat

  • to society, or they will be accused of fictitious crimes.

  • This demonization process paves the way for even worse acts of aggression to follow and

  • if this process, which the psychologist Ervin Staub called a “continuum of destruction”,

  • is not halted, the end result can be horrifying, as evidenced in the totalitarian states of

  • the 20th century

  • One psychological consequence of harm-doing is further devaluation of victimspeople

  • tend to assume that victims have earned their suffering by their actions or character.”

  • Ervin Staub, The Psychology of Good and Evil

  • Given that self-deception limits our potential, ruins relationships, and can turn us into

  • a man or woman capable of inflicting serious harm on innocent victims, if we wish to live

  • a fulfilling life and to contribute to the uplifting of others, not to tearing them down,

  • we should limit the degree to which we lie to ourselves.  

  • Sometimes, escape from the quicksand of self-deception occurs when we hit rock bottom, and our illusions

  • are shattered against our will.

  • But this is a dangerous means of escape as the attempt to rebuild a broken life is an

  • arduous task.

  • It is far better to voluntarily break our illusions through a ruthless attempt at self-honesty.

  • For as Carl Jung noted

  • “A visible enemy is always better than an invisible one.

  • In this case I can see no advantage whatever in behaving like an ostrich.

  • It is certainly no ideal for people...to live in a perpetual state of delusion about themselves,

  • foisting everything they dislike onto their neighbours and plaguing them with their prejudices

  • and projections.”

  • Carl Jung, The Practice of Psychotherapy

  • When we break the habit of self-deception, life unfolds with a newfound ease as we are

  • no longer burdened by the convoluted web of falsehoods we once spun.

  • Freed from the exhausting need to layer deceit upon deceit we can devote more energy toward

  • accomplishing meaningful goals.

  • When we stop lying to ourselves about how we treat others, we cease sabotaging our relationships,

  • and we avoid the perilous path of scapegoating.

  • Ultimately, abandoning self-deceit is an act of self-emancipation as greater honesty frees

  • us to heed the age-old wisdom to know thyself

  • To this day I have deceived others and myself; I have suffered for it, and my suffering

  • was cheap and vulgar.

  • . .I'm glad that I see my faults clearly, that I am conscious of them.

  • This will help me to reform and become a different man.”

  •   Anton Chekov, The Duel

“. . .you must look at who you are and make an effort to know yourself, which is the most

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Why Lying to Yourself is Ruining Your Life(Why Lying to Yourself is Ruining Your Life)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2024 年 02 月 25 日
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