Before, During, After Map

Lying

Denying something happened, changing the story, blame shifting, making things up, or saying what they think adults want to hear.

Before the moment
Lying is often a safety strategy. The goal is to make truth feel safe, not to catch them out.
What might be happening underneath?
  • Fear of punishment, rejection, or shame, especially if truth used to be dangerous.
  • Protecting attachment, they may say what they think keeps adults calm or close.
  • Habit from earlier environments where survival depended on telling adults what they wanted to hear.
  • Confusion, impulsivity, or weak memory under stress, the story changes as they scramble.
Support that helps
  • Build a home culture where mistakes can be repaired, “You won’t be in more trouble for telling the truth.”
  • Use low-shame language, focus on learning rather than blame.
  • Ask fewer questions when you already know, avoid turning it into an interrogation.
  • Keep consequences predictable and proportionate, so truth feels worth it.
Gentle prompt
What would make honesty feel safer than self-protection in this house?
Write your awesome label here.

We have a few courses about lying

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