
Lies Are Never Victimless
- Shane's Hope

- 4 days ago
- 3 min read
Lies are often dismissed as small, harmless, or even necessary. People soften them with
phrases like “white lies,” as if changing the name
changes the damage...........
it doesn't.
A lie is a lie. Whether it's wrapped in politeness or sharpened into a weapon, it carries consequences that reach far beyond the moment it is spoken.
In divorce, lies are rarely accidental, they are often strategic. They usually come from the more dominant party, the one who wants everything, and treats truth as optional in the pursuit of control.
Exaggerations are presented as truth. Half stories are told as full narratives. Silence is used to hide what doesn't serve the desired outcome. And those exaggerations are lies.
Research shows that dishonesty in conflict is about a persons motive. Studies have found that men and women lie, but the intent behind the lie often differs. In high conflict divorces, which make 10% to 20% of cases, but dominates the court system. Strategic behavior, including exaggerations, "white lies" and false narratives, has become far too common, it has become a tool in the legal toolbox regardless of the morality
The danger is not just in the initial statement, it's in what follows.
Lies create a ripple effect. One statement becomes a narrative. That narrative becomes belief. That belief begins to shape decisions, relationships, and outcomes. Courts hear it. Attorneys build on it. Children absorb and live in it. Family members react to it. The damage spreads like poison in the blood stream.
Lies are not contained between two people; they move outward, touching everyone connected to the situation. Children begin to question their reality. Family members take sides based on information that may never have been true, often it's the children blindly pledging allegiance with the person spreading the lies for their benefit. Reputations are altered by words that were never grounded in fact. Hopelessness takes control of the direct subject of the lies pushing them into a dark place. There is absolutely nothing victimless about that, about lies!
Psychological research has shown that repetition increases belief. The more something is said, the more likely it is to be accepted as true, even when it is not. In a courtroom or within a family, this effect can quietly reshape reality before anyone stops to question it.
Words carry weight. In divorce, they carry even more. A false statement can influence custody. An exaggeration can shift perception. A repeated claim can become accepted as truth simply because it has been said enough times.
And when children are involved, the impact deepens.
Children exposed to high conflict divorce are at a significantly higher risk of anxiety, depression, and long term relational challenges. When they are pulled into narratives that are not fully true, the damage is not temporary. It shapes how they see their parents, themselves, and the world around them.
That's where the harm becomes everlasting. Trust is broken. Relationships are strained. Emotional wounds form that do not simply disappear when the truth eventually surfaces. And the truth does come out!
It always does.
Time doesn't erase the impact of the lie. By the time the truth is revealed, decisions have been made, relationships have shifted, and harm has already taken root. The correction rarely carries the same weight as the original falsehood, the scar remains.
Lies do not just affect outcomes, they affect people, they alter lives, shape childhoods, and leave behind consequences that cannot be undone.
No matter how small they seem in the moment, their reach is wide and their impact is infinite.
The truth may take time, but the damage from a lie begins the moment the words have been spoken.
And once it begins, it doesn’t stay contained.
For Shane. For Families. For Change.

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