"Oops, I lied..."
Posted: Thu May 23, 2013 1:38 pm
I have a coworker who, like many of us, occasionally makes mistakes. The way she responds to those, however, has me a bit surprised.
When she's talking with a customer, sometimes she'll make a mistake, or miss some data that has been corrected, or things like that. When she finds the error, though, she usually responds with "oops, I lied, it's actually...."
The first time I heard this it surprised me. I thought "no, you didn't lie, you just made a mistake." I've never called her out on the semantics of this (maybe it's the English major in me) but it makes me wonder why she responds in this fashion. As if she is saying "I am too proud to admit that I was wrong, so I deliberately chose to mislead you instead."
That's what I think it is. Pride. Too proud to admit to a fault, but she chooses to portray herself as a deceiver in response. Personally, I don't think that's a way I would want to be perceived. She may not even be aware that she's doing it, since it's become second nature to her.
But it does make me think about what we've been taught as Christians - to strive to be honest and forthright to all of our fellow men. To not be too proud or "stiffnecked" to accept the truth, no matter how uncomfortable it makes us.
This has just been some idle thoughts that I've had recently and wanted to share with others.
When she's talking with a customer, sometimes she'll make a mistake, or miss some data that has been corrected, or things like that. When she finds the error, though, she usually responds with "oops, I lied, it's actually...."
The first time I heard this it surprised me. I thought "no, you didn't lie, you just made a mistake." I've never called her out on the semantics of this (maybe it's the English major in me) but it makes me wonder why she responds in this fashion. As if she is saying "I am too proud to admit that I was wrong, so I deliberately chose to mislead you instead."
That's what I think it is. Pride. Too proud to admit to a fault, but she chooses to portray herself as a deceiver in response. Personally, I don't think that's a way I would want to be perceived. She may not even be aware that she's doing it, since it's become second nature to her.
But it does make me think about what we've been taught as Christians - to strive to be honest and forthright to all of our fellow men. To not be too proud or "stiffnecked" to accept the truth, no matter how uncomfortable it makes us.
This has just been some idle thoughts that I've had recently and wanted to share with others.
