There were lots of reasons to do group therapy at family camp. Feeling the energy of other people responding to your deepest problems, instead of just a therapist, has its power. My mam left my dad for someone else from family camp and then they all continued going to family camp together and working out their divorce in front of us - it was pretty rough. Some people kind of felt for a period that we had ruined family. We'd ruined it. No one would want to talk any moreand everone was afraid, everone would steal their wives. That became my new metric for reality.
In an era of fake news and 'alternative facts', the issue of truth and how it is presented to the world has never been more timely. But on a personal level, things are less clear cut. We all tell white lies and withhold info in the name of manners and politeness from time to time and some of the hardest truths can feel very difficult to tell. Micheal Leviton is a writer and musician from Brooklyn whose book, To Be Honest: A Memoir, tells his own story of growing up in a family who, according to Michael, never lied. His upbringing meant that by the age of 29 he could only recall having lied three times in his life. The challenges of being brutally honest on a daily basis have been the basis of much soul searching for the author and also serve as the foundation of a few entertaining tales in his book. He joins Intelligence Squared producer Catharine Hughes to talk about it.
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