TLDR: When a young boy asked Sadhguru about lies, the spiritual teacher moved beyond simple moral judgment to examine the deeper psychology of dishonesty. Lies are not born from malice but from survival instinct and the gap between how we wish to be perceived and how we fear we actually are. Understanding why someone lies—whether out of fear, shame, or the desire to protect themselves—opens a pathway to addressing dishonesty with compassion rather than punishment alone.
What Makes a Child Lie?
The question of lying is one that most parents and educators face at some point. A young boy brought this question directly to Sadhguru, and rather than offering a pat moral answer, Sadhguru used the moment to unpack the psychology beneath dishonesty.
Lying is not an isolated moral failure. It is a symptom of something deeper: the fear that the truth about ourselves will be rejected, punished, or judged harshly. When a child lies, they are making a calculation—usually an unconscious one—that the truth poses a threat to their safety, their standing, or their emotional well-being. A child might lie about breaking a vase not because they lack moral fiber, but because they fear the consequence: anger, punishment, or loss of approval.
This mechanism doesn't disappear in adulthood. Adults lie for similar reasons. The job applicant who inflates their credentials, the employee who misrepresents their progress on a project, the friend who says they enjoyed a dinner when they didn't—all of these lies are rooted in the desire to protect themselves from judgment or negative consequence.
How Does Fear Drive Dishonesty?
At the core of most lies is fear. Fear that we will be seen as inadequate, foolish, weak, or unworthy. Fear of punishment. Fear of abandonment. Fear of shame.
In children, this fear is often learned through repeated experiences. If a child is harshly punished for mistakes, they learn that honesty leads to pain. They then begin to lie as a survival strategy. The irony, which Sadhguru's teaching illuminates, is that harsh punishment for dishonesty often creates more lying, not less. It reinforces the child's belief that the truth is dangerous.
The spiritual dimension here is significant. In many spiritual traditions, truth (or satya in Sanskrit) is considered a foundational virtue. Yet the path to truth is blocked when someone is operating from fear. A person in fear cannot be fully honest—not because they are inherently dishonest, but because their nervous system is in survival mode. In survival mode, the mind calculates: What do I need to say or do to stay safe?
This is why Sadhguru's approach does not begin with condemnation. It begins with understanding the soil from which the lie grows.
What Does a Lie Reveal About a Person?
A lie is like a window into the internal world of the person telling it. It shows where they feel vulnerable. It shows what they value most (their image, their safety, their approval). It shows what they believe will happen if the truth comes out.
When someone lies repeatedly, or about certain topics, it often points to a specific wound or insecurity. A person who lies about their accomplishments may carry deep doubt about their worth. A person who lies about their feelings may have learned early that their emotions are not safe to express. A person who lies to avoid conflict may have grown up in an environment where conflict was dangerous.
Understanding this does not excuse the lie. But it reframes the work required to address it. If you want to reduce lying in a child or anyone else, you cannot simply punish the lie and expect transformation. You have to address the fear beneath it.
Can We Build Trust Instead of Demanding Honesty?
One of the implicit teachings in Sadhguru's response is that honesty cannot be forced. It can only emerge when someone feels safe enough to tell the truth.
This is revolutionary in the context of parenting and education, where the default response to a caught lie is punishment. Yet punishment is precisely the wrong tool if the goal is genuine honesty. Punishment reinforces the message: "The truth is dangerous. Do not tell it."
Building an environment where truth flourishes requires something different: safety, non-judgment, and the clear message that mistakes and failures are not threats to belonging or love. A child who knows that they can tell the truth about a broken vase, a failed test, or a hurt feeling without losing their parent's love has no reason to lie.
This does not mean there are no consequences. It means the consequence is aimed at repairing the harm or learning from the mistake, not at shaming or hurting the child as punishment for dishonesty.
How Does Lying Affect Consciousness?
From a spiritual perspective, chronic lying has an effect on one's own consciousness. Every lie creates a small internal split: the version of yourself that you are presenting, and the version that you are hiding. This split is exhausting. It requires energy to maintain the fiction. It creates distance between you and others. It hardens the sense of separation.
Over time, someone who lives within constant lies loses touch with their own truth. They become confused about who they actually are, because they have spent so much energy presenting a false self. They may no longer know what they actually feel, want, or believe, because so much of their internal life has been hidden or suppressed.
This is why, in many contemplative traditions, truth-telling is not just a moral practice but a spiritual one. It is a way of aligning the inner and outer, of bringing consciousness into integrity. When you speak the truth, you are not fragmenting yourself. You are whole.
Where to Go From Here
If you are struggling with a child who lies, consider first: What fear might be driving this? What would they lose if the truth came out? Can you create an environment where the truth is safer than the lie?
If you find yourself lying regularly, pause and ask: What am I protecting? What do I fear will happen if I am honest? Is that fear actually true, or is it something I learned long ago? Can I take one small step toward greater honesty in my relationships?
The work is not to shame ourselves or others into honesty. It is to understand the fear beneath the lie, and then to systematically build the conditions—internal safety, self-acceptance, trust in others—where truth can naturally emerge.




