lol truth... I would love to speak truth only but that would be practicaly suicide,I would be kicked out,I wouldnt have job or single friend
The job part is unavoidable, but if pure honestly would cause you to lose all friends, then I think you need to work on your perception of others. Maybe you don't respect them enough. At the same time, it depends how you say it. If you're genuinely telling them something cuz it'll help them in the long run, that means you respect them and have their best interest in mind, if you're obvious about it, then you won't lose any friends cuz a friend that helps you overcome your flaws is a good friend. I read a book on body language, and after that it started to become real easy to see who are real friends and who aren't. Its pretty awesome. I can use it to test myself too. To put it simply, a real friend sees your success as his/her own success, whereas a fake friend won't care or might even be jealous of your success. There are way more tests than that, but thats the one I like to use. This is probably common sense for most people, but I got a mild case of autism so I don't spot these things naturally, its only after reading about it that I can look out for them. When it comes to things people can't change, like their physical appearance, I don't know if its good to be honest, cuz theres nothing they can do to solve it. So I suppose in those cases, its best not to be too honest.
related reading:
is it ok to lie sometimes to your SO?
Honesty
to me, when you lie to "
save somebody's feelings" or "
make it hurt less" or whatever rationalisation you're using for lying, you've basically saying "
i don't respect/love/trust you enough to have your own response to this truth so i'll just decide for you that you can't handle it"
you're effectively saying that your right to decide what is and isn't right for them to hear is more important than their right to make that distinction themselves.
to me that's not how friends and family who respect, love and trust each other behave.
alasdair
Yeah I agree. Thats my experience at least. Also, its awkward to bring up bad things to someone, nobody wants to do it so someone whos not a real friend just wont bother. A real friend will deal will face the awkwardness and tell you. But this is when the truth relates directly to the other person. If the truth is about yourself, lets say for example you got start taking amphetamines temporarily (everyone quits in the end, but some people think a drug habit is a terminal illness) and you know that your mother would be worried to the point that it would be bad for her well being. In that case, I think its best to just keep it to yourself. Of if you decide to go to the Colombian Amazon and do ayahuasca, knowing that its gonna be a dangerous, instead of worrying your mother by laying it all out, would it be better to tell her your just gonna be staying at a holiday resort in Peru or something. If you end up dying, then she'll feel bad about it either way, but if you come back safe and sound, then her worrying was pointless.
This body langauge thing is awesome. After reading that book, now I look out for things like how a person reacts to my success. I deferred my last year of college, so I'm in a new class this year, and I respect everyone there, but now I can watch for signs to see if that respect is reciprocal. I'll watch and see how a person reacts to my successes and failures. Fake friends say things like "you lucky bastard", "ya fucker" when you share a success, and they laugh when you share a failure. Real friends congratulate you on your success, and don't like hearing about your failures. I started watching myself too, and behave the same way. I like hearing about my friends successes. Whats weird is that one fake friend I made has become pretty close, and even though all my body language is of a real friend, he still remains a fake friend. He doesn't cause any problems or anything, its kind of a mutual beneficial relationship we have but I can't trust him, and its shit being about people who can't trust.