We speak here of telling the truth and of lying, especially to ourselves.
If we are to be successful traders, we know that we must develop clear vision and see things for what they are, and not deceive ourselves about the nature of the world. Clear-eyed, sagacious, aware. Not a bad combination for anyone.
But we have to understand that clear-eyed undistorted vision is rare.
We are not born that way. (Despite our romantic fantasies about the pure unalloyed vision of children, they do not come into the world equipped with non-distortion glasses.) Nobody steps onto life’s stage with a manual that tells them how to use their brain, or how to get the most out of it.
We all know what lying is – it is an untruth. We lie when we tell someone that something is so, when it is not. Without getting into a big discussion about relationships and white lies and dissembling and social fictions and other minor manifestations of the fabric of our daily lives, we can agree that in general lying is a bad thing. Our lives are much less complicated and more manageable and enjoyable if we can tell the truth, and where lying does not play much of a role.
That is certainly the case for lying as conventionally understood, in common life.
But in the arena of consciousness where enhanced awareness is the goal, we apply much more stringent standards.
There is a special form of lying that is universal and rampant. It corrupts our perceptions and causes all kinds of problems. We constantly engage in this form of lying, and we normally do not recognize when we are doing it. And yet it is very harmful to our efforts to develop self-awareness, and to our desire to be conscious of ourselves, and of the world around us. This form of lying is not at all helpful in our efforts to become great traders.
This kind of lying is fundamentally lying to ourselves; it involves thinking and saying things that we do not know to be true. We assume we know, and we say we know, and we think we know, but we do not know. This hidden lying distorts or conceals from ourselves the true state of affairs and makes it much harder for us to perceive accurately either ourselves or the world about us. Unless we get a handle on this kind of lying, we will not make the kind of progress we would like to make. It will be much harder to become aware, and that is our major overall goal, to develop high levels of personal awareness.
So, we lie when we say or think things that we do not know to be true.
And in like fashion we also lie when we accept as truth the ill-founded statements of others.
What are some examples of this hidden lying? You need not look far afield. Monitor your conversation with a friend, or your own thoughts, or the statements in a newspaper, or on television. What do you really know about the accuracy of most statements, when this enhanced standard of truth is strictly applied? Not much, I’ll wager. Most people constantly say things that are not true, and repeat as fact the assertions of others, which are equally capricious. People constantly indulge in sloppy evaluation and base even the most important decisions on the flimsiest of information. (Of course we understand also that when one is in the grasp of a huge power-based organization, such as fascism, communism, religion, the military, political movements of all kinds, gangster organizations, in short all environments of power, one may have to lie to survive. But this is likely to be a conscious lie, of which we are aware.)
Here is an excellent exercise to train your mind to this higher standard:
Listen with precision. Ask yourself constantly, “Where does that come from? Who says so? What standards of proof do they apply? How is this known? Where is the substantiation for that statement? How do we know that is correct? Apply these standards to your own thoughts also. Notice your casually held opinions, and your firmly held opinions, and then ask yourself on what basis you believe these things to be true. Do you actually know anything? You may be surprised at how little you can actually verify.
Another technique is to assume that a statement is a lie from the get-go, and then try to disprove it to yourself that it is in fact a lie, or the reverse.
The Stoics had this down pat. They would say, “Apply words in a precise manner, and call objects and actions by their rightful name. Avoid hasty conclusions and unwarranted induction. If you have an acquaintance that you have seen drink a large amount, say he drinks a lot, not that he is a drunk, unless you also have the full picture and can make that judgment. If a child breaks a dish, say that she has broken a dish, and not that she is clumsy, unless you have the full picture. If you find a dollar in the street, say that you have found a dollar, and not that you are lucky.”
This business of saying as true that which you don’t know to be true is ubiquitous. Once you become alert to it you will likely be amazed at how often, and how easily, we lie in this manner. It may take a little while but if you monitor yourself and the world around you with this standard in mind, you will begin to develop a sense of peace and wisdom that is most welcome and refreshing.
The reason this is refreshing and gives you energy is that the mind is not burdened with holding up a phony façade built out of all these hidden lies. We need not develop and maintain so many conclusions about things that may or may not be true. We merely accept those things as true which actually are, and let the rest go.
In our personal life we will see this hidden lying crop up in exaggeration, in boastfulness, in moments of higher-than-average emotion, such as euphoria or depression. We will detect it as a reflection of our desires, needs, and fears. It lurks in our prejudices and in our cultural standards, and in our family histories and filial connections. We will come to see it as a reflection of some contaminant to our clear vision and awareness.
I’m talking about this hidden lying now because in trading we are concerned with how a market level breaks or holds, and how change occurs on the margin, at the edge of change. This is exactly the place where hidden lying is the most dangerous to our economic interests while trading and to our personal awareness as individuals. This is the very place where we must be the most vigilant in our observations and the most skeptical about the authenticity and accuracy of our information.
Typically in the market price moves to a key level that will hold or not hold and we have an opinion about what will happen. Typically this opinion is not based on the most objective of information – that is to say there are elements of lying in the way we developed our opinion. Because we are fundamentally lying to ourselves, we talk ourselves into thinking that the area in question will hold, and take risks based on that idea. A clear-eyed assessment would reinforce the fact that we do not know if the line will hold or break, and we need to watch and see what actually happens, as opposed to skewing our belief one way or the other absent actual factual information.
Simply put, we lie to ourselves because it is convenient, it is comfortable, and we are used to it. The solution is also simply put (though perhaps not so simple to implement): don’t take anything on faith; verify everything yourself.
My friend Charlie likes to say that lies are sweet, and the truth can be very, very bitter. Experience bears this observation out; many lies are perpetuated because the alternative truth is unwelcome or seemingly repugnant. But there is another aphorism we could set forth here: lies are expensive, and the truth is cheap. When we lie to ourselves, we must maintain that lie, and maintaining a lie means we must put more and more resources into that lie as we move further and further away from the underling reality. But once purchased, the truth is cheap. You only pay for truth once, and then it is yours forever.
Expert traders become expert at spotting lies that are moving away from the underlying truths, and take advantage of that fact. A stock that is overvalued is a lie that is moving away from the truth of its underlying value. Central bankers propping up a currency against the reality of a deteriorating trade balance are investing in a lie, and traders can take advantage of that activity. But if you wish to spot such opportunities in the world. then you must train yourself to discern truth at the highest level, which is also the place closest to home where truths and lies live and hide — in your own thoughts, inside your own mind.
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