Seems like RK and I agree here that white lies do have their place.
Atl brought up a good point, the follow on to it could be where do white lies turn into gray ones? Does anyone worry about PJ's second point about being caught in one? I know that there are times that I have worried about it, perhaps that is a sign that it might be a gray lie?
Originally Posted by discreetgent
I think it turns gray when it becomes material to the other party & their decision making or life choice process. Of course context plays a role and there are shades of gray. Think of it as much as anything as white lie qualifies as a "sin of omission"
I tend to like Gryphon's definition of white lies below. As a way of trying to answer the question when does it turn gray? Suppose your Wife/SO keeps asking you "if this dress makes me(her) look fat?" Well if this goes on over time and you consider her weight an issue your "No, of course not." gets gray and you are dodging an issue with someone important to you. Any single occurence is gray overtime it gets gray.
White lies, defined as lies told to avoid being hurtful or overtly rude by telling the unvarnished truth, are part of the lubrication system of society--without them there's a lot more friction. An example: "I can't come to your party due to a prior engagement" vs. "I would rather have bamboo slivers driven under my fingernails rather than spend three hours in the company of you and your excruciatingly boring friends." For this type of lie, getting caught is no worse than having told the truth initially; the other party is going to be offended either way. The lie gives at least the possibility of everyone saving face.
Originally Posted by Gryphon
The social engagement is another good example. One or two times it is white. Overtime it is gray. (assuming you care about the other party to begin with....if not it really doesn't matter*....so long as you don't preface your regrets by saying how much you really would love to attend...)
If you really care about the Gryphon, continuing to blame your regrets on a "prior engagement" gets lame after awhile. Have a heart to heart with G and explain to him his parties really suck or say you don't show because -no hard feelings - they just aren't your cup of tea.
I have to say sometimes not telling the white lie can be pretty liberating. I have a group of friends from school. We'd get together for a weekend at the lake every other year. Early on after graduation it was great. Then spouses and kids and changes in geography and careers started. Reality was if we shared an email once or twice a year that was a lot. Well one member of our group was pretty adament we continue the tradition. Two reunions pass and I told the very believable white lie "work." The third came around last year and I sent a very honest reply: I probably could make it if I prioritized it but don't care to....my life has changed, as have all of ours....we have different lives....but I won't be there... --- result it felt really good to me to be honest instead of hiding behind some excuse.
*I'd say the classic example of the white lie is at a restaurant and after your meal is served the waiter asks, "How is everything?" Now unless something was really bad or you really think he is looking for constructive criticism, the, "Great!" is fine. With close friends or family, that isn't acceptable.