we have caller id on the phones and the kids never answer the phones to those who they don't know. And a gentle lie can be fine now, but if you found out by lets say someone else that they are skying instead of with you. No I would rather know the truth anyday and maybe that makes me cold but to know that lets say daughter is with friends instead of with me would be fine, and when her friends come up to me and say heyyyy how was her trip I would say "ohhhh it was great" versus being surprised and hurt. And to be able to trust people is important to me as well, I have been lied to by people and hurt me big time. where is the line and can it go to far?
What's 'skying'? If it is something that I specifically told them not to do or something that is illegal and they are doing it, then I'm going to be quite bent. However, if it's something that they wouldn't be forbidden to do, then why should I care? Also, if the person doing the fibbing is an adult, they don't owe me a rundown of what they have been doing, so they are welcome to spin a little white lie.
Anyone who knows me, knows that I'm honest....usually to a fault. ...
You know why they call it that, right? They call it that because often times the truth is not the best policy. Here's an example:
Last Saturday morning my wife's uncle, who is a farmer, was driving a big box truck full of veggies to market. An oncoming Ford Escape was driven by a sleepy driver. The car went into the ditch. The driver then over corrected, sending his vehiclke out of the ditch at an angle to the road. When the car contacted the road, it began to flip, rolling and bouncing along the road just like in a movie. Our uncle couldn't get out of the way. Since the car was bouncing in the air in addition to rolling, it didn't hit Hank's Mack truck in the bumper. Instead it hit the cabover truck just at the bottom of the windshield. Rescue personnel took 45 minutes to cut him out of the truck before they were able to life flight him to the closest trauma center, 30 miles away.
Hank called his wife immediately after the accident and she beat the rescue crews to the scene by several minutes. From the time that she got there to the time he was finally freed, she sat in the mangled cab holding him up so that he didn't have all of his weight on one arm. He was pretty bad off and she was pretty certain that she was going to lose him. When we got to the hospital about 40 minutes later, she was still waiting to here something and was basically in shock.
Initial scans showed four broken ribs, multiple leg fractures, and possible tendon damage to one hand, in addition to several areas that just needed to be stitched up. He was in need of at least three orthopedic surgeries, but there was no internal injuries found and everything was deemed to be 'recoverable' based on the initial review.
The trauma unit has four visitation times per day, during which two people at a time can visit. It just so happened that my sister in law, a non-practicing nurse was visiting while the doctor was talking to him. The doctor noted that their was a break in one of his cervical vertabrae so they were going to leave the collar on for now just to keep unnecessary pressure off the hairline fracture. My SIL, never passing up an opportunity to show how brilliant she is, promptly came out to the waiting room and told his wife that his neck was 'broken'. She took a very common and relatively minor whiplash injury, whipped it into a ton of drama, and served it up to the extremely stressed out wife.
The smart thing would have been to leave the trauma unit as soon as the doctor arrived and get his wife. Her second option would have been to ask a few questions of the doctor so she truly understood the injury and then to explain it carefully to his wife. A third option would have been to keep her pie hole shut and let Hank or the doctor explain it to his wife. She took none of those options and went with 'the truth', instead.