The Lies & Stories That Determine Our Lives
Lies. Lies. Lies.
Lies are all around us.
We tell ourselves lies all the time. They form the beliefs we internalise & therefore guide our decisions & actions.
Others tell us lies. They want us to believe a certain story about their product, or about their lives.
We lie to ourselves. We get lied to.
This is because we need these lies, these stories we tell ourselves, to operate as a collective in a complex world. As Yuval Noah Harari points out in Sapiens, without Homo Sapiens’ unique ability to form communities based around certain stories, such as religion, we would never have been successful:
*“Sapiens rule the world, because we are the only animal that can cooperate flexibly in large numbers. We can create mass cooperation networks, in which thousands and millions of complete strangers work together towards common goals. One-on-one, even ten-on-ten, we humans are embarrassingly similar to chimpanzees. Any attempt to understand our unique role in the world by studying our brains, our bodies, or our family relations, is doomed to failure. The real difference between us and chimpanzees is the mysterious glue that enables millions of humans to cooperate effectively.
This mysterious glue is made of stories, not genes. We cooperate effectively with strangers because we believe in things like gods, nations, money and human rights. Yet none of these things exists outside the stories that people invent and tell one another. There are no gods in the universe, no nations, no money and no human rights — except in the common imagination of human beings. You can never convince a chimpanzee to give you a banana by promising him that after he dies, he will get limitless bananas in chimpanzee Heaven. Only Sapiens can believe such stories. This is why we rule the world, and chimpanzees are locked up in zoos and research laboratories.”*
Let’s use the example of money:
People believe that little bits of green paper are worth something. They trust them because they believe the government will guarantee them. They trust the government because they believe it has legitimate authority. If people started to stop believing in money, modern society would break down & cease to function.
Money is just a story we tell ourselves. It is a lie. It is not necessary a bad thing, but it is just important to be aware that we collectively tell ourselves a story about money that doesn’t have any inherent truth to it.
We Need Lies
We need these lies. Without them society wouldn’t function. I need you to believe what I tell you. You need someone to believe what you tell them. We need to believe what society tells us, or government, or our neighbour.
None of it’s true. We can never know what is really true. Every belief we have stems from our specific socio-political context.
We think slavery was barbaric. In two centuries time, they’ll think that eating meat was barbaric.
But don’t worry. You don’t need to go into a spiral of self-doubt, nor question your very existence. We have to believe something, or we can’t really operate.
Simplicity from Complexity
We live in an ever-more complex world. As a result, it’s become easier for us to tell ourselves bad lies.
Good lies would be those that are, to the best of our knowledge, help pursue your own, as well as society’s, interests. A good lie would be to recycle, because you want to protect the environment & feel good about it.
A bad lie are those where you are un-informed or mis-informed. Where you think you are pursuing only your own interest, or where somebody else has manipulated you into thinking something despite the facts. A bad lie would be buying an expensive cleaning product that is supported by fake scientific data, for example.
There are so many things. So many decisions. So many ridiculously complex things we need to do ever day that we simplify to cope.
We can’t read up the relative pros & cons of one shampoo, spending weeks reading into the scientific data, testing it ourselves, running peer-reviewed trials & studies, etc. We just want to buy some shampoo. Ideally in under a minute.
So we tell ourselves a bad lie. We make a snap decision based on appearance, based on first impression, on what someone said last week about it.
We follow the company’s lie: We believe the story they told us about their rigorous testing method, the fruity-ness of the ingredients, the foamy-ness of their foam.
The Pursuit of Better Lies
You can’t always tell yourselves good lies. But you can tell yourself better lies.
The world is complex. It’s only likely to get more so. You can’t inform yourself about everything. You can’t question everything.
But you can pursue the truth in things that matter. Maybe don’t worry about the shampoo, or the toothpaste brand.
But do worry about the big things:
Is the career path you’ve chosen based on bad lies? What about that relationship? The people you hang out with? Your rampant consumerism? That new car?
(Most of the lies I’ve written here come courtesy of the lies Seth Godin passed on to me in his thought-provoking book All Marketers are Liars.)