Truth Is That Parents Lie to Kids

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This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin. This'll just take a minute.
When I was pregnant, a friend gave me a book called Great Lies to Tell Small Kids.
In it are gems like "wine makes mommy charming" and "men don't go bald naturally, they like getting their hair cut that way."
Now, if you filled with horror at the notion of pulling a toddler's leg like that,
a new study in the Journal of Moral Education shows the parents regularly use deception to influence their kids.
We can all recall lies our parents told us to get us to do something, or to stop doing something.
"If you cross your eyes they could stay that way" comes to mind.
But in the current study, researchers found these parental fibs are hardly few and far between.
And even parents who preach to their kids about the importance of being honest admit to lying to them as well.
The researchers plan to extend their studies to see whether all this lying undermines children's trust.
Until then, well, keep telling junior that if he spins around really fast, then stops, his face will skid around to the back of his head.
It could keep him busy while mommy becomes even more charming.
Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin.

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