Avoid Exaggeration
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January 2008 Posts

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Communication
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Avoid Exaggeration

Saturday, January 19th 2008 @ 12:46 PM    post viewed 2490 times

Exaggerating, or taking a truth out of proportion, is one of the evils of communication. Learn why people exaggerate, how to detect it, and how to avoid doing it yourself.

Exaggerating, or taking a truth out of proportion, is one of the evils of communication.  Here are some of the top reasons why people feel the need to exaggerate:

1) they want to sound more interesting
2) they want more sympathy from the listener
3) they want to embellish their point and make it more convincing
4) they want to use the power of numbers to get the point across, even if it means lying about the numbers

The fact is exaggerating is lying, or "stretching the truth".  No good ever comes from lying.

Here are some forms of exaggeration that you should avoid.

Obvious Exaggeration. This is where the listener knows immediately the speaker is exaggerating because the statement is impossible.  Example, "There's like a million people downstairs waiting for you." This is a somewhat childish statement that does not give the listener a true idea of the actual number and often leads to the follow-up question, "How many...really?"

Absolute Exaggeration.  This is where the speaker uses words such as, "all", "everybody" or "always".  These statements are often made out of desperation or anger and do not give the listener a true sense of the situation.  For example, "Everybody is upset about today's meeting". Chances are all 68 staff members are not upset, just a few are.  What the speaker is doing is making assumptions based on a few samples, or in many cases, her own opinion.

Indirect Exaggeration.  This is where the speaker will answer a question or make a statement in an attempt to lean the listener to an idea or way of thinking.  For example, if a husband and wife are talking about going out or staying in for the evening and the wife says, "Well, it is almost six o'clock so we will have to wait anywhere we go." This indirectly tells the husband that she does not want to go out.  Why?  For one thing, the wife is using absolute exaggeration by stating there will be a wait "anywhere".  In addition, the time is actually 5:35, not quite "almost six o'clock".  People tend to "bend time" on their side when they want to indirectly make a statement or prove a point.

The one area where exaggeration is appropriate is in comedy.  Comedians, writers, and others who are looking to use humor, find exaggeration a useful tool.  If you do use exaggeration for this reason, just be sure it is obvious to your audience and not deceptive.

Avoiding exaggerating will keep your statements honest and people will respect you more for it.  In addition, it is better communication to say what you mean and avoid follow-up questions.  Knowing when others are exaggerating and seeing through their statements to the real meaning will also help you to be a better communicator.

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Comments

Guest
a guest said on Sunday, June 7th 2009 @ 9:40 PM:

Do not give the listener a true sense of the situation Last Thursday I was in a conversation , to discuss and strategy about a situation , when I related the issue , I said that the person in the situation call me several times , to request the information. The person how will take the decision ask me about exactly how many times , then I have to accept that the person call me only one time , the I said that the person in the situation call one of our coworker several time , the he call the coworker . The coworker said that the person in the situation call she only one , then I was surprise with my self about what , I am doing , and decide to understand why , I am doing that . I think because I want add pressure to my point in the issue. But that no ok , because I really overacted and cause other to overact and maybe take a wrong decision.

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Samah Mohamed Ali
guest
a guest said on Saturday, November 14th 2009 @ 7:33 PM:

Wow!

This is great, and so honest! If I had Twitter I probaby would be the first to tweet it!

Thanks for writing it!


And the website is very interesting too, keep it up!

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Tee
guest
a guest said on Saturday, January 30th 2010 @ 12:25 AM:

Today I was told that I exaggerate every story and it is seemed as "lying". I never noticed it as a problem when I exaggerated it was all jokes and gossip and laughter until my friend said it made her sick. It makes a story interesting and its not a lie when your stating the truth. For example, I drove the car in a zig zag pattern on the highway. I drove the car like a maniac with no control over the wheel. True! Who in there right state of mind drives a car in a zig zag pattern on the highway. No one

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Avoid Exaggeration