3 Habits to Identify a Liar
David Russell
I help I.T. MSPs increase profits by improving systems to hire, manage, develop, and retain top performers in a championship culture.
Years ago we worked with LaRae Que , a former FBI agent and author of the book, SECRETS of a Strong Mind (2nd edition): : How to Build Inner Strength to Overcome Life's Obstacles .
LaRae spent twenty years as an undercover and counterintelligence agent for the FBI and served as an FBI spokesperson in Northern California for four years.
During her time as a counterintelligence agent, her primary goal was to identify foreign agents operating in the United States, find out what they were doing, stop them, assess their potential as an asset, and persuade them to work for the U.S. government.
To accomplish this, she had to develop the skills required of an undercover agent.
One of those skills was the ability to identify when someone was not being forthcoming with the truth.
Here are three habits you can develop to notice when people are not telling you the entire truth, or are outright lying.
The Truth, the Whole Truth, and Nothing but the Truth
First, let’s consider some of the people who lie to you occasionally or often:
Where should you start?
Start with the person you see most often in the mirror: You.
The person you can control the most is you.
This includes your unconscious and conscious selves.
The most important lies you want to catch are your own.
We all get tempted to lie, exaggerate, or leave details out and then justify our actions.? We can make better choices.
Therefore, start with yourself if you’re concerned about falsehoods and want to know how to spot a lie before it hurts you.
After you have taken a good look at yourself, observe the people around you.
First, watch for changes in behavior.
You want to catch a change.
LaRae advises the way to do this is to establish a baseline for a person’s typical, natural behaviors.
This enables you to understand when they are behaving differently.
One way to do this with people you do not know, is to start the conversation with general questions about the weather, a recent professional sports game…
Then, as you watch for these behaviors, look for clusters of irregular behavior.
If someone exhibits one or more of these behaviors a single time, then it may not be significant. ?The behaviors may be natural to them.
However, if you understand their typical behaviors and all of a sudden, they start behaving abnormally, then you should take notice and consider whether something is wrong.
1.? ?Listen to their voice
Everyone has a tone of voice and style to their speech. ?Here are some changes to consider that differ from their baseline communication style:
?2.? ?Watch their facial expressions
In addition to paying attention to facial expressions, be aware of the phenomenon of microfacial expressions.
Microfacial expressions are tiny changes in a person’s expression that occur within a second or a fraction of a second.
You can catch microfacial expressions if you watch for them, even though they occur so quickly.
Part of the reason is because the person often repeats them.
Here are common facial expressions or microfacial expressions that occur when someone is hiding the truth:
?3.? ?Observe their body language
?One of the most humorous indicators is when someone says “No” to an incriminating question, but their head is nodding “Yes.”
This difference can be cultural.? For instance, I’ve worked with people in India who sincerely say, “yes,” but shake their head “no.”?
Body language is one of the easier areas to watch because some of the behaviors are so extreme.
Are you interested in the different types of lies?
Dawson McAllister believes there are Eight Types of Lies that People Tell .
It’s another discussion on the intent behind lying.? That can be long, but important.? For instance, are certain lies acceptable because the intent is sincere??
Additionally, some extremists believe there is no truth. ?If there is no truth, then there cannot be lying because everyone gets to define their own truth. ?We believe the claim there is no truth is a lie because if there is no truth, then you cannot claim there is no truth.? It is doublespeak.
Hiring people like this may pose an issue…
We encourage you to develop a habit of looking for clusters of irregular behavior so you can lessen the times that someone takes advantage of you by lying.
Developing habits in the three areas above should be helpful.
If you want training, Paul Ekman has great micro-expressions training packages. ?We also read the book LieSpotting years ago and they provide additional content online.
Just remember: ?If you want to be your best, start with yourself. ?Often the most damaging lies are in our own head.