Lies are not revealed by body language. We watch for shifting eyes, nervous hands, awkward pauses, and all the classic body-language cues we’ve absorbed from films, TV, and pop psychology.
But what if the real giveaway isn’t body language at all, but the way a story holds up under pressure?
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📚 🔗 The Fastest Way to Spot a Liar Isn’t Body Language. It’s Their Answers
This piece offers a more useful way to think about lying, not as a performance you catch with your eyes, but as a story that starts to weaken when someone has to do more with it and stretch it further.
The difference between a truthful account and a made-up one often appears when someone has to move beyond short, controlled answers and start adding detail. A lie can’t do that easily.
If you’ve ever felt that something was “off” in a conversation but couldn’t explain why, this story will likely feel familiar.
👇 Read More:
📚 🔗 The Fastest Way to Spot a Liar Isn’t Body Language. It’s In Their Answers



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