Is Your Spouse Lying? Why Lies Are So Hard to See
Part 2: Why It’s So Hard to Finally Realize Your Marriage Is Abusive or Deceptive
Based on The Lies We Tell and the Clues We Miss by Bella DePaulo
People ask: “How could you not have known?”
It’s a question laced with judgment — the implication being that if you were smart enough, paying enough attention, you would have seen the abuse or deception sooner. But psychologist Bella DePaulo’s research reveals something important: the very love you had for your spouse was working against you. You weren’t oblivious. You were doing exactly what every trusting human being does. And that’s precisely why lies in marriage are so hard to see.
The Brain Is Wired to Believe the Person You Love Most
Dr. DePaulo’s research documents a well-established psychological phenomenon called the truth bias — when judging messages as true or false, people default to believing they are true. But here’s what makes it especially relevant to marriage: the truth bias is stronger for the people closest to you. Research consistently shows it is greater for relatives and close friends than for strangers — and spouses sit at the very top of that hierarchy.
In fact, DePaulo found that spouses are lied to less often than any other adult relationship category — people lie in fewer than one in ten interactions with a spouse, compared to one in three with dating partners. Because honesty really is higher in marriage, your brain isn’t being irrational when it assumes your spouse is telling the truth. It has learned from thousands of interactions that this person is usually honest. The truth bias isn’t naivety — in normal marriages, it’s an accurate read of reality.
When Abuse or Deception Enters, That Very Accuracy Is Weaponized Against You
An abusive or deceptive spouse exploits the trust you have rightfully built. Your brain keeps applying its normal “probably true” filter — because it has been correct before — even as the lies become more serious and more frequent. This is a key reason why lies stay hidden for so long. DePaulo also notes that people in close relationships actively steer away from each other’s “sensitive and taboo topics,” reducing opportunities to expose the truth. In an abusive marriage, that avoidance is often enforced — through anger, stonewalling, or the subtle punishment that comes when you ask the wrong question.
What You Were Experiencing Had a Name — and It Wasn’t Stupidity
DePaulo writes that intimacy depends on feeling “understood, validated, and cared for.” An abusive spouse consistently produces the impression of those things — just enough to keep the truth bias functioning. The moments of warmth, the apologies, the “I’ll change” promises: they all feed the same mechanism that makes you keep believing. The lies stayed invisible not because you were inattentive, but because you were inside a relationship specifically designed — by the dynamics of love and trust — to make them hard to see.
Taking a long time to see your marriage clearly isn’t a personal failing. It is the predictable outcome of loving someone deeply in a world where that love was not being honored in return.
A note on “catching” a lying spouse: Research shows that surveillance apps, spy tactics, and exposure strategies are rarely the answer — and in dangerous relationships, they can increase risk. If you’re in a relationship where deception, manipulation, or abuse is present, the most important question isn’t “Can I prove it?” but “Am I safe?” If you need help thinking through your situation, see my Escape Plan Checklist and 12 Ways to Document and Protect Yourself.
This is Part 2 of the series Is Your Spouse Lying? — based on The Lies We Tell and the Clues We Miss (2009) by Bella DePaulo, social psychologist and deception researcher.
Is Your Spouse Lying? 4-Part Series


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