Patients say it all the time. ‘Tell me straight up. I just want to know what’s wrong with me. Tell me I can handle it.’ But doctors don’t dodge your question because they are mean. They do it because when you say you want the truth, you have no idea what you are talking about.
They say the truth will set you free. That is not entirely true? We admit it jestingly, but this old axiom has more meaning than most people know.
Truth is horrible and frightening. The truth is more than you can bear. The truth is sickening, most of the times.
Sometimes not been privy to realities simply does the trick. There’s a lot of parts of life we are literally blind do, and not supposed to know all the about. A lot of the things around us remain unseen. That’s why we have in our field a vision, what scientists call the Blind Spot. It keeps you from not seeing those things you need not see.
You are entitled to know the truth and people are supposed to be straight to you. But be careful what you ask for. Because when you find out what’s really going on, you many never recover. It could hurt you.
The truth sometimes sucks! The truth hurts!
In an area of personal criticism people have a certain view of themselves they will like to uphold. They would not want to maintain an image of someone they don’t want to be. So when others point out negative traits that don’t fit their preconceived view of themselves, the results could be devastating.
You shouldn’t always rub it in peoples face. That’s the ugly truth about truth-telling.