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In The Ways We Lie, by Stephanie Ericsson, and Anton Chekhov’s, The Lady with the Dog both have messages about lying. Ericsson discusses a few of the many types of lies or deceit, such as white lies and facades. Chekhov, on the other hand, does not particularly talk about lying, but the characters lie and deceive each other. Although it is easier to lie than to tell the truth, I claim that people should tell the truth all the time because lying is morally wrong, and it leads to unforeseen consequences.
After lying for a while, people become so used to a society full of lies, they cannot stop lying. Ericsson talks about the effects of constantly lying. She says, “Our acceptance of lies becomes a cultural cancer that eventually shrouds
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Gurov is an example of a person with multiple sides to him. Chekhov writes about Gurov: “He began to feel an overwhelming desire to share his memories with someone. But he could not speak of his love at home, and outside his home who was there for him to confide in?” (Chekhov 472). Because everybody in Yalta knew he was married, he could not tell anybody about his feelings toward Anna. Adultery was immoral at the time, so he could not tell anyone about his affairs(?). This makes it hard for him to keep a secret because he wants to tell someone, but he cannot. He had to live a lie in order to keep his secret—act different towards different people. I say that it is better to tell the truth the first time around because it is better than suffering the consequences of being caught as a liar. EXPLAIN MORE. For example, when my cousin’s boyfriend asked her to go to a movie with him, she told him she was out of town. Later that night, they ran into each other at the same restaurant. While the chances of that happening are very rare, there is a slim chance of it happening, as it did with my cousin. In the end, her boyfriend stopped dating her, as expected. Here, my cousin had to pay the consequences of lying, just as Anna would have to face if her husband found out about her