The Psychology Behind Why We Keep Secrets
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“During these experiments a child is led into a laboratory and asked to face one of the walls. The experimenter then explains that he is going to set up an elaborate toy a few feet behind the child. After setting up the toy, the experimenter explains that he has to leave the laboratory and asks the child not to turn around and peek at the toy. The child is secretly filmed by hidden cameras for a few minutes, and then the experimenter returns and asks the child whether he or she peeked. Almost all three-year-olds do, and then half of them lie about it to the experimenter. By the time the children have reached the age of five, all of them peek and all of them lie.”These children appear to have broken two social rules. They disobeyed, and then they lied about disobeying. They obviously saw no harm in peeking at the toy; they probably saw it as something fun like playing hide and seek. They still had curiosity, and pure child-like curiosity is a quality of the heart. Curiosity is the life force that drives us to crawl, stand, walk, learn, and dream. Love, curiosity, and creativity don’t exist in the same perspective as rules, beliefs, and secrets. We can’t hold two contradictory thoughts in mind at one time. What the children lacked was the ability to predict that someone would ask them if they peeked. They lacked the belief that they could be judged. We are Born Innocent People have been so conditioned to believe that they are born sinful that they often look astounded when I say it is not true. These children prove my point. They are innocent; they have no ability whatsoever to predict a consequence for peeking. They can’t think about their actions being judged because their mind is focused on curiosity and fun, not judgment and consequences. We learn that there are consequences for disobedience from punitive-minded adults in our lives that teach us to obey their rules. Most of those rules are just conveniences for their benefit. We follow their logic, beliefs, and rules at the exclusion of our feelings because we were trained to do so. Sadly, this experiment proves that not many of us made it past five before our curiosity and innocence were squashed. We are not born with a sense of right and wrong; it is a man-made invention. We borrow beliefs and rules from adults and authority figures in our life. We don’t realize as children that right and wrong is highly subjective. Right and wrong separates us, and as innocent children we cannot understand separation. We have to learn it. And sadly, people go out of their way to teach it to us. Once it is learned, we try to find ways to heal the separation. We miss the oneness. Affairs and “don’t tell anyone” secrets appear to cure our pain of separation because we focus on the secret bond where judgment doesn’t exist. These children demonstrate the incredibly important moment in our lives where we traded in curiosity for obedience. We traded our innocence for rules. We trade our oneness for separation. And if we borrowed the need to please, we will spend our life trying to fit into other people’s finicky definitions of good so we won’t be judged. All Roads Lead to Judgment There is only one way to please everyone, and that is to keep secrets about the rules we break so that people think we followed their rules and don’t judge us. We fear judgment so much that we allow it to take our power, our authenticity, and our freedom. The real cure is to stop allowing other people to define what is good and bad for us and to start following our hearts again like little children. But that takes courage because the judges get brutal when we trust our hearts and not them. I dream of a time when we all drop our unnecessary rules, beliefs, and judgments -- a time when parents applaud their children’s curiosity for peeking behind the curtain. When that happens, the children will also tell the truth about peeking. We’ll laugh as we join them in their playfulness instead of whipping them with obedience. When their heart-felt curiosity is honored, their innate desire to live without secrets will follow. The truth will set us all free.
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