Wednesday, October 2, 2019
My Mom is a Pathological Liar :: Personal Narrative, essay about my family
I think it was my mother who taught me the meaning of honesty. Not because  she was honest, but because she lied all the time. She felt that the easiest way  out of any given situation was generally the best way out. And, for her, that  generally meant telling a "little white lie." As a young child I thought it was  kind of cool. And, naturally, when I would come to her with a concern or  question wondering what I should do, she generally advised me to lie.     "Mom, I told Theresa that I would go over to her house, but now I would  rather go to Sue's house to play."     "Tell Theresa you're sick," she would advise. And generally I did. But I  didn't seem blessed with her lack of conscience. On many painful occasions  Theresa would find out that I really went to Sue's house without her. These  occasions taught me that it is more painful to be caught in a lie than it is to  tell the truth in the first place. I wondered how it was possible that my mother  had never learned that lesson.           I started thinking of all the lies that I'd heard her tell. I remembered the  time she told someone that her favorite restaurant had closed, because she  didn't want to see her there anymore. Or the time she told Dad that she loved  the lawn mower he gave her for her birthday. Or when she claimed that our phone  lines had been down when she was trying to explain why she hadn't been in touch  with a friend of hers for weeks. And what bothered me even more were all the  times she had incorporated me into her lies. Like the time she told my guidance  counselor that I had to miss school for exploratory surgery, when she really  needed me to babysit. And it even started to bother me when someone would call  for her and she would ask me to tell her that she wasn't there.           So, I started my own personal fight against her dishonesty. When I answered  the phone and it was someone my mother didn't want to talk to, I said, "Louise,  mom is here, but she doesn't want to talk to you.  					  My Mom is a Pathological Liar  ::  Personal Narrative, essay about my family  I think it was my mother who taught me the meaning of honesty. Not because  she was honest, but because she lied all the time. She felt that the easiest way  out of any given situation was generally the best way out. And, for her, that  generally meant telling a "little white lie." As a young child I thought it was  kind of cool. And, naturally, when I would come to her with a concern or  question wondering what I should do, she generally advised me to lie.     "Mom, I told Theresa that I would go over to her house, but now I would  rather go to Sue's house to play."     "Tell Theresa you're sick," she would advise. And generally I did. But I  didn't seem blessed with her lack of conscience. On many painful occasions  Theresa would find out that I really went to Sue's house without her. These  occasions taught me that it is more painful to be caught in a lie than it is to  tell the truth in the first place. I wondered how it was possible that my mother  had never learned that lesson.           I started thinking of all the lies that I'd heard her tell. I remembered the  time she told someone that her favorite restaurant had closed, because she  didn't want to see her there anymore. Or the time she told Dad that she loved  the lawn mower he gave her for her birthday. Or when she claimed that our phone  lines had been down when she was trying to explain why she hadn't been in touch  with a friend of hers for weeks. And what bothered me even more were all the  times she had incorporated me into her lies. Like the time she told my guidance  counselor that I had to miss school for exploratory surgery, when she really  needed me to babysit. And it even started to bother me when someone would call  for her and she would ask me to tell her that she wasn't there.           So, I started my own personal fight against her dishonesty. When I answered  the phone and it was someone my mother didn't want to talk to, I said, "Louise,  mom is here, but she doesn't want to talk to you.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.