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Pseudologia fantastica

Grandtheftcow

Grand Wizard of TK
Pseudologia fantastica, mythomania, or pathological lying, is one of several terms applied by psychiatrists to the behavior of habitual or compulsive lying. It was first described in the medical literature in 1891 by Anton Delbrueck. Although it is a controversial topic, one definition of pathological lying is the following: "Pathological lying is falsification entirely disproportionate to any discernible end in view, may be extensive and very complicated, and may manifest over a period of years or even a lifetime."

Epidemiology

Although little has been written about pathological lying, one study found a prevalence of almost 1% in 1000 repeat juvenile offenders. The average age of onset is 16 years, and its occurrence is equal in men and women. Persons who are considered pathological liars have average or slightly below average intelligence, with better verbal IQ than performance IQ. Forty percent of cases reported central nervous system abnormality (characterized by epilepsy, abnormal EEG findings, head trauma, or CNS infection).

Characteristics

The defining characteristics of pseudologia fantastica are that, first, the stories are not entirely improbable and often have some element of truth. They aren't a manifestation of delusion or some wider form of psychosis: upon confrontation, the person can acknowledge them to be untrue, even if unwillingly. Second, the fabricative tendency is long lasting; it is not provoked by the immediate situation or social pressure as much as it originates with the person's innate urge to act in accordance. Third, a definitely internal, not an external, motive for the behavior can be clinically discerned e.g. long lasting extortion or habitual spousal battery might cause a person to lie repeatedly, without the lying being a pathological symptom. Fourth, the stories told tend towards presenting the person in question in a good light. For example, the person might be presented as being fantastically brave, knowing or being related to many famous people.
 
Fourth, the stories told tend towards presenting the person in question in a good light. For example, the person might be presented as being fantastically brave, knowing or being related to many famous people.

If 99% of a species' population have it, is it still called a disease?
 
Can this be contracted on a temporary basis? It would explain your stint as an admin.
 
When I was in high school, I had a friend that was a pathological liar.

She lied about having a twin sister, and would even go as far to pretend to be her on occasion (like on her bus - her "twin" would get on her bus, but by the time she got to school, it would be the girl again), she claimed that she had diabetes, but she never tested her blood sugar/took insulin/anything like that, and by the time we were in 11th grade, it was "gone." She also claimed that up until she was 13, she lived in the Bronx and was in a gang. She also lied about getting her license and said that she got it early because she had a kid (which wasn't a lie - she got pregnant when she was 15).

The only one that we ever caught her in 100% was the license one - I went to her house to pick her up because she said her car was broken down, and her mom was there and said something along the lines of "don't you wish she'd get her license?"
 
I one saw Highbrow 7 (that was his name) take it in the rear from Optimus Prime, no word of a lie.
 
I one saw Highbrow 7 (that was his name) take it in the rear from Optimus Prime, no word of a lie.

I saw that too! You didn't recognize me, but I was standing about 3 feet from you (the guy in the green mac)
 
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