BeExcellent
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2015
- Messages
- 5,375
- Reaction score
- 7,828
- Age
- 57
@Ronaldo7 yes I understand. Deception has its purposes of course but running a deception over the long term can eventually reach a point of diminishing returns.
Also known as the effort to keep up the rouse is more trouble than the benefits. Presumably this is the ideal jettison point. It can also be tiring and adversely affect one's reputation.
I'm old relative to the young guns here. I'd rather expend less effort and remain transparent (less mental energy expended in extending the deception), and instead keep options open by being non-committal and on a 'need to know' basis only.
As I said there are men here who deceive but who own their behavior (although certainly not to the recipients of the deception.)
OP is either asking a rhetorical question for sport or he is actually remiss about the outcomes his behavior has precipitated. If he is in fact remiss then he has behavioral choices to make going forward but in any case one must understand the potential consequences of his choices and move on from there.
Also known as the effort to keep up the rouse is more trouble than the benefits. Presumably this is the ideal jettison point. It can also be tiring and adversely affect one's reputation.
I'm old relative to the young guns here. I'd rather expend less effort and remain transparent (less mental energy expended in extending the deception), and instead keep options open by being non-committal and on a 'need to know' basis only.
As I said there are men here who deceive but who own their behavior (although certainly not to the recipients of the deception.)
OP is either asking a rhetorical question for sport or he is actually remiss about the outcomes his behavior has precipitated. If he is in fact remiss then he has behavioral choices to make going forward but in any case one must understand the potential consequences of his choices and move on from there.