No one wants to be lied to. When it comes from another adult, you feel betrayed. When it comes from your kids, you feel that PLUS a responsibility to make it stop ASAP, before it becomes a βthingβ that reflects badly on you as a parent.Β
But a lot of people are going about doing that all wrong. Lying is actually a normal developmental milestone that starts when kids realize they can know things that other people donβt. Lying is also often a stress response, meaning itβs a symptom of another problem and can even happen involuntarily.
BUT ALSO, some people, and Autistic and ADHD folks in particular, are being accused of lying when thatβs not even whatβs happening.
Neurodivergent people perceive the world differently. Yβknow, because weβre literally wired differently. But I see people assuming their ND kids and partners are lying *all the time* instead of considering the possibility that our different wirings simply led to different perceptions.
Lying is when the person knows that what they're saying is not the truth. If a person truly believes that what they're saying, that their *own perception of the world,* is the truth, that's not really lying, is it?
And itβs not that Autistics and ADHDers are incapable of lying, of course, or that nothing should be done about it if lying truly does become a problem. Youβre gonna wanna be sure thatβs what youβre dealing with before you try to do anything about it, though.
Youβre also gonna need to understand that itβs about more than βmoral failingβ and βbad characterβ if you donβt want to make it worse. Because what do you think is gonna happen when you heap a bunch of stress in the form of shame and punishment onto a person who is already struggling with lying as a stress behavior??
And so I present this list of possibilities to consider when your personβs version of events isnβt lining up with yours (or their teacherβs, or their siblingβs, or whomever else it may be).
Related note: If βinconsistencies in reportingβ are coming from school, please keep in mind that teachers often donβt see everything that happened to your child with their own eyes (because their attention is pulled in many directions), and that bullies who will rile your kid up on purpose and then lie about what happened are an unfortunate reality for many ND kids. In other words, please donβt assume that your child is the one who has it wrong when their version of events differs from othersβ without also considering the reliability/motivations of the other witnesses.