There’s a real psychological technique for spotting lies, but it’s not magic—it relies on contradictions and mental load. Here’s how it works:
🧠 The Two-Question Technique
1. Ask for a story in reverse
- Example: Instead of “What happened yesterday?” ask, “Can you tell me what happened starting from the end?”
- Why it works: Lying requires more mental effort than recalling the truth. Reversing the story often causes inconsistencies in timing, details, or sequence.
2. Ask for unexpected details
- Example: “What did you do immediately before that?” or “Who else was there, and what were they doing?”
- Why it works: Truthful people can usually recall these naturally; liars may hesitate, contradict themselves, or invent details that don’t align with their story.
🔎 Key Psychological Principles
- Cognitive load: Lying is mentally harder than telling the truth. Unexpected or reverse-order questions increase the load, making lies harder to maintain.
- Consistency: Truthful stories tend to be coherent, detailed, and consistent across tellings.
- Non-verbal cues: Liars may show hesitation, eye movement changes, or subtle nervous gestures—but these are less reliable than contradictions in their story.
⚠️ Important Notes
- No method is 100% accurate. People can be nervous even when truthful.
- Use these techniques as tools to spot inconsistencies, not definitive proof of lying.
- Focus on what they say more than how they act.
If you want, I can give a short “2-minute script” using this technique that maximizes your chances of spotting contradictions without confrontation.
Do you want me to create that?