Can You Keep a Secret?
Most of us have been asked this question by a friend at least once in our lives. Seems like a simple yes or no, right? Wrong. Although it's astronomically unlikely that anyone would ever ask me this question again, if anyone actually asked me, "can you keep a secret?", my response would be, "that's complicated", and I would then explain to them what I'm about to explain to you.
But before we get into it, I'd like to tell you about our new merch!
Yeah right. Lol.
Okay, so anyway...
I've made my position on lying clear somewhere or other on these forums, but let's recap it here. I believe that lying is on the continuum of violence. What I mean by this is that lying could, from a certain point of view, be considered violence is most mild form. This means that, in my opinion, the only times when lying is permissible and ethical is in situations when physical force could become necessary to defend yourself or others from harm. If you're faced with a dangerous assailant of some type, you're going to try lying your way out if possible before it comes to blows. This interpretation would obviously account for all situations in which dishonesty is necessary to protect people from harm and danger. As an example, if you were sheltering Anne Frank in your basement, and the Nazis came-a-knockin', you're obviously going to lie to them.
It is my strongly held belief that truly healthy interpersonal relationships cannot exist without complete honesty. I believe that lying is completely corrosive to all interpersonal relationships, even well intended, so-called "white lies". Lying to spare someone's feelings can be tempting, and it may seem compassionate, but it only establishes that the person can never truly be trusted to give an honest opinion. Lies, even the most well-intended, create needless complications and potential hurt feelings. A commitment to complete honesty opens many doors in one's life, and grants incredible liberty and clarity. If you simply decide that you're never going to lie, it cuts drama and toxicity out of your life and reveals who your true friends are. The people who can't handle honest relationships will fade away, and your remaining relationships will be greatly strengthened. There is something indescribably powerful and wonderful in simply knowing that you can truly trust a person, and that they can trust you. Knowing that a given person will never lie to you, nor you to them, is deeply profound, and is absolutely vital for a truly connected, healthy relationship.
Now, I'm not going to get into the ethics/necessity of lying in the context of business, governance, or foreign policy. Ideally, we should live in a world of corporate and government transparency, and complete global cooperation. Instead, we live in a competitive world. I don't see how complete governmental and international honesty would work in the world that we have. It's unfortunate, but it's just the way it is right now. Hopefully, if we survive, maybe we'll have a better world in future centuries. I'm speaking mostly about interpersonal relationships here.
When hearing this view on lying, most people will immediately recoil and try to defend the position that all people lie, that white lies are necessary, and that some amount of lies are even necessary in a marriage, and that if you don't believe that, then you're just a naive fool who's never been married and doesn't understand how the game is played. I'm not going to spend a great deal of time addressing this, other than to say that viewpoint is demonstrably, categorically bullsh*t. Full stop. If you don't believe that a healthy marriage means and honest one, then you're the one that understand how relationships really work. People also claim that honesty is difficult, and that lying is easier. That's also completely false, and a greatly confused viewpoint. Honesty is much easier. Really. I can honestly say that there's nothing difficult about honesty. You just say what you think and feel, and what you believe to be true. You don't have to invent, concoct, or organize stories, think up excuses, or keep track of your lies. You just speak your mind. What could be simpler? A belief that honesty is more difficult simply boils down to fear--fear of what others will think if they know the true you. But wouldn't you rather weed out the people who don't actually like the real you and find out who your friends really are, rather than surround yourself with phony friends who only like you based on lies? I certainly would. Honesty is remarkably easier, simpler, and more refreshing than most people believe.
But does a commitment to complete honesty mean that one has to broadcast every single thought in their mind and open every second of their life for all to see? Of course not. Good Celestia no. And this is where I finally explain my answer to the opening question. I don't believe that secrets are ever ethical. This is because there is something vastly different between secrecy, and privacy. Privacy is the honest and ethical withholding of information that no one else's business. There is nothing dishonest about privacy. Privacy is simply declining to provide information because it's your own personal business, and not something that others need to know. We are all entitled to privacy. It's our prerogative as human beings to decide how much of our lives to share and with whom. One need not ever tell a falsehood in order to maintain privacy.
On the other hand, secrecy, I would argue, is the unethical, deceptive withholding of information. There is something fundamentally suspect about secrecy. To me, secrecy inherently implies deception. The key difference between privacy and secrecy is that on top of withholding information, you have the added layer of denying that there is any information being withheld. It seems to me that the only reason to keep a secret would be for some kind of nefarious purpose, or because you don't want others to know who really are, or what you've done, and if that's the case, then you should reexamine your life. If you're withholding information in an interpersonal relationship, and denying that there's any information being withheld, then that is by definition deceptive, unethical, and harmful, and that's what secrecy is. I believe that there are many cases in which people confuse or conflate secrecy and privacy. There many be cases in which a friend asked you to keep a secret, but it was actually just a case of privacy, which is harmless.
If a friend asked me if I could keep a secret, I would have to explain to them the difference between secrecy and privacy, and then ask them which it is that we're talking about. If if's privacy, then I can take it to my grave if that's your wish. Here's an example: let's say I have a gay friend who's still in the closet, and they come out to me, but they ask me not to tell anyone else because they're not ready nor comfortable. No problem. That's no one else's business anyway. It's private. I have no problem keeping my mouth shut about that for as long as I live, should they never decide to come out to anyone else. That wouldn't be a burden to me at all.
However, if the information they want to divulge is something intetionally deceptive that could hurt someone, then that's where we have a problem. You wanna tell me that you're cheating on your partner, or you've gambled away your life savings and are hiding it from your partner? No, I can't and won't keep that secret. That would weight on my conscience.
It is often said that everybody has secrets. Not true. I don't. I have private matters, but not secrets. I cannot engage in secrecy. I think The Office put it best: "secrets, secrets, are no fun; secrets, secrets, hurt someone."
Wait, wait--I have one more. Privacy is good, secrets are bad... unless they're Victoria's!
Okay, I'm done.
Edited by Justin_Case001
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