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Liars, Beware! Lies Harm Your Love Life and Health (Says Study)

06/09/2018 - 08:01 AM

Caitlyn Hitt explores a study that examines why lying is bad for your health, originally posted on YourTango [1].

Photographer: Diggy LloydRestrictions: Editorial and internal use only. No advertising or print.Product Credits: Model on left: Club Monaco jacket, Joie dress, YaYa publicity ring and earrings, Target sunglasses. Model on right: Banana Republic sweater, Gap pants.

Liars, it's time to add a new resolution to your list.

You know how you make healthy New Year's resolutions every year like, "eat more broccoli" or "actually use my gym membership"? You might even make these resolutions before the new academic year picks up in September, or before your schedule gets more hectic in the Fall after the lazy days of August. Well, this year, add a new one to the list: "don't tell lies."

Anita Kelly, a psychology professor at the University of Notre Dame [2], gathered a group of participants ranging in age from 18 to 71 and randomly divided the group in half. Half of the study subjects were instructed to stop telling any sort of lies. The other half, the control group, didn't get any special instructions. Both groups came into the lab weekly to submit to a polygraph test about the number of lies they told that week and to answer questions about their health [3] and relationship status.

"We found that the participants could purposefully and dramatically reduce their everyday lies, and that in turn was associated with significantly improved health," Kelly said. Researchers found that the no-lies group not only reported feeling less tense and melancholy, but also experienced fewer minor health issues like sore throats and headaches. Although the control group didn't have specific instructions to stop lying, researchers found that during the weeks in which they told fewer lies, they also experienced fewer mental and physical health issues.

The study also found that lying affected participants' personal relationships [5]. Those in the no-lies group found their relationships and social interactions improved — and better relationships mean better health. "Statistical analyses showed that this improvement in relationships significantly accounted for the improvement in health that was associated with less lying," said Lijuan Wang, the study's co-author.

At the end of the study, participants found that not lying was not as challenging as they thought. Food for thought when you next think about "embellishing" the truth to your partner, even if it's a white lie.

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Source URL
https://www.popsugar.co.uk/fitness/Why-Lying-Bad-Your-Health-45226963