Author: Women Lie More, Better Than Men
Women lie more frequently than men, and they're much more clever about it and talented at it, to boot, a new book concludes.
In "Little White Lies, Deep Dark Secrets: The Truth About Women and Deception," Susan Shapiro Barash cites an online survey of 500 women in asserting that females fib about everything from love, to money, to plastic surgery.
Women are also much more prone to telling "little white lies" to try to keep from hurting someone's feelings, Barash contends.
On The Early Show Tuesday, CBS News correspondent Bianca Solorzano explored the topic, and co-anchor Maggie Rodriguez chatted about it with actress and comedian Nancy Giles, who's a contributor on CBS News Sunday Morning and Dr. Jennifer Hartstein, a clinical psychologist in New York City.
Solorzano says the book "takes an honest look at why women lie," seeking "some truth about dishonesty." Some 75 percent of the women who responded to the survey said they lie at work to keep their job. Half admitted lying about how much they like being a mother. And 75 percent fessed up to half-truths about shopping (telling their husbands they spent less than they really did).
Hartstein says, "It's really a social thing. We don't want to hurt anybody's feelings. We don't want to put anybody down. So, we really work very hard to keep the peace, keep it easy, be nice, be cordial. But you can just say, 'Oh, it's great,' and walk away, or you don't have to say anything at all, because silence is golden sometimes!"
Giles kidded that, "In many ways, we sort of have to (lie). It's part of our DNA -- just to manage, to keep our lives in balance. If you told the truth all the time, you'd be exhausted!"
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved. In "Little White Lies, Deep Dark Secrets: The Truth About Women and Deception," Susan Shapiro Barash cites an online survey of 500 women in asserting that females fib about everything from love, to money, to plastic surgery.
Women are also much more prone to telling "little white lies" to try to keep from hurting someone's feelings, Barash contends.
On The Early Show Tuesday, CBS News correspondent Bianca Solorzano explored the topic, and co-anchor Maggie Rodriguez chatted about it with actress and comedian Nancy Giles, who's a contributor on CBS News Sunday Morning and Dr. Jennifer Hartstein, a clinical psychologist in New York City.
Solorzano says the book "takes an honest look at why women lie," seeking "some truth about dishonesty." Some 75 percent of the women who responded to the survey said they lie at work to keep their job. Half admitted lying about how much they like being a mother. And 75 percent fessed up to half-truths about shopping (telling their husbands they spent less than they really did).
Hartstein says, "It's really a social thing. We don't want to hurt anybody's feelings. We don't want to put anybody down. So, we really work very hard to keep the peace, keep it easy, be nice, be cordial. But you can just say, 'Oh, it's great,' and walk away, or you don't have to say anything at all, because silence is golden sometimes!"
Giles kidded that, "In many ways, we sort of have to (lie). It's part of our DNA -- just to manage, to keep our lives in balance. If you told the truth all the time, you'd be exhausted!"
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First of all, 500 does not seem like much of sample to base these conclusions on.
Second, how do we know that Susan Shapiro Barash isn''t lying? :)
http://360.yahoo.com/mamaditto
daffy64
toupe''s,socks and banana''s stuffed down the front of pants,yes I''ll call you in the morning,yes I respect you,lets not forget the male mechanic that tells females it cost $700 for a car part when they would charge another male counterpart only $70.Not to mention (heaven or hell forbid !!)"What lip stick on my collar. I don''t know what you are talking about.Your crazy!!"
Don''t get me started !!!
Women may lie to keep the peace, men lie to get a piece!!
If women tell the truth to others they are called a b-i-t-c-h. If men do they are honest. BS!!! I tell women the truth, we deserve to hear it.
Also, TV shows lately are awful to men, commercials too. It is time for those shows etc to stop also. A good example is the awful Toyota commercial. Why would I be enticed to want one of their cars after they show a man being attacked by a nursing animal-a badger. Badgers are known to be tough to run into in nature. They are not friendly. The commercial also makes a negative remark and inference about nursing females. It needs to be taken off the air. It is not funny. boycott Toyota until they take it off the air. We shouldn''t have to see men abused on tv either.
Oh puh-LEASE...
Just turn on your tv - guys are always... and I mean ALWAYS potrayed as hapless, urge driven, inconsiderate, louts... and they''re almost always shown as weak doafs compared to women... and why??? 3 reasons:
1 - any good storyline needs someone to beat up, and men are the last of the ''fair game''
2 - women like you would scream from the mountain tops if there were even a whif of the same toward women... kinda like you are now
3 - men have been attacked so consistently for the last 50 years that they''ve simply gotten used to it.
and yet women STILL think they''re getting a raw deal...
typical