Loving Lions
Partners & Spouses

Trust & Betrayal

They lie to me constantly

8 min read

Situation Recognition

Chronic lying becomes automatic in addiction - about money, whereabouts, substance use, feelings, and even trivial matters. You find yourself constantly questioning reality and becoming a detective in your own relationship.

Michael Wilson's Insight

"Addiction makes lying feel necessary for survival - they're not lying to hurt you, they're lying to protect their addiction. But understanding why doesn't mean accepting it. Set boundaries around dishonesty without becoming a lie detector."

Comprehensive Guidance

Why addiction causes chronic lying:

  • Shame about addiction behaviors makes truth feel impossible
  • Lies protect access to substances by avoiding consequences
  • Addiction rewires the brain to prioritize substance access over honesty
  • Each lie requires more lies to maintain, creating a web of deception
  • They often believe their own lies or forget what they've said

How to respond to chronic dishonesty:

  • Don't engage in detective work to catch them in lies
  • State what you know without demanding confessions: "I can see this isn't accurate"
  • Set consequences for dishonesty, not punishments for being caught
  • Focus on behaviors you can observe rather than stories they tell
  • Stop asking questions when you already know the answer
  • Don't enable lying by accepting obvious falsehoods

Implementation Steps

  1. Stop playing detective - gathering evidence damages your mental health
  1. State reality calmly: "That doesn't match what I observed"
  1. Set clear consequences: "I can't trust information that isn't accurate"
  1. Focus on actions, not explanations - what they do matters more than what they say
  1. Protect yourself from deception by verifying important information independently

What to Expect

More elaborate lies when simple ones don't work. Anger when you stop believing obvious falsehoods. Accusations that you don't trust them - which is accurate and appropriate. Honest communication may only return with sustained recovery.

Professional Resources

East Point Behavioral Health: (855) 887-6237 - Family therapy for dealing with dishonesty in addiction

Individual Therapy: Process the impact of chronic deception on your mental health

Al-Anon/Nar-Anon: Support groups for families dealing with addiction-related dishonesty

Key Takeaways

  • Addiction makes lying feel necessary for survival, but understanding doesn't mean accepting
  • Stop playing detective - gathering evidence damages your mental health
  • Focus on observable behaviors rather than explanations or stories
  • Set consequences for dishonesty, not punishments for being caught
  • Honest communication often only returns with sustained recovery

This guidance is educational and not a substitute for professional medical, legal, or clinical advice. If you or someone you love is in crisis, see crisis resources.