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   Home  > Articles

Marital First Aid Kit

By Bryce Kaye

Intentional Deception Syndrome

Explanation

If you are in a relationship with someone who periodically lies for their own convenience, you have a very serious problem with the basic foundation of your relationship. Good relationships have truth as one of the highest priorities. Without truth there is a lack of trust. With a lack of trust, you usually wind up living in fear and shame (or the alternative of resentment and anger).

If the lying is in the context of a substance abuse problem, stop here and go to our explanation of the Drug Affected Syndrome. In some ways, there is more hope for change if substance abuse is involved. Many recovering people will stop lying as a natural consequence of working towards more spirituality in a recovering community. However, if your partner's lying and deception has not involved chemical dependence, then their behavior is probably more personality based. Do not make the classic mistake of assuming that a) if you try harder to please them that b) they will build up more affection for you and c) will stop lying because they love you more. They do not lie because of you. They probably lie because of a developmental problem within their own character. Nothing you can do by yourself alone will change what is a a long-standing problem. Rarely do we see a person who lies just a few times. If it has been a few times, you can usually count on it again in the future.

What can make a difference is a very intensive and lengthy therapeutic intervention. Such a program may require a combination of individual and group therapy for a year or two in order to have a reasonable chance of success. However, most partners who engage in deception are also very resistant to doing painful work for the sake of the relationship. In other words, it's a long-shot getting someone like that to truly take on the intensity of work required to realistically address the problem.

There are a number of possibilities that can lead to deceptive behavior. If your partner has only turned deceptive around a likely affair with a third party, go to our explanation about Third Party Affected relationships. If deception has episodically occurred in other contexts, the two most likely causes are either a) underdeveloped personality (technically the "super-ego") or b) poor development of healthy assertiveness and anger. Whatever the cause, it is not the responsibility of the non-deceptive spouse. The deceptive partner badly needs psychotherapy to address the problem at its source.

Intervention

Call to set an appointment with a counsellor for yourself.If your partner has been resistant to acknowledge his/her deceptions, then go to your first counseling session alone. Your counselor can help you to evaluate your options. If your partner acknowledges their problem but seems helpless to change their behavior, then go to the first session together.

Return to Diagnostics

Threat of Physical Violence

Emotional Starvation Syndrome


In this article
- Kit Contents
- Foreword and Instructions
- Diagnostics
- Drug Affected Syndrome
- When a relationship involves an affair with a third party
- Threat of Physical Violence
- Intentional Deception Syndrome
- Emotional Starvation Syndrome
- Pursuer-Evader Syndrome
- Initiator-Dependent Syndrome
- Delinquent Helper Syndrome
- Non-productive Conflict
- "Sneaky" Spending Behaviour
- Conflicting Levels of Sexual Interest
- Non-violent Raging Behavior

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