Denials are when someone says "No" to something you want, like when you ask for a cookie and your mom says "No" because it's time for bed.
Imagine you have a toy box full of cool toys. You really want to play with the red car, but your brother has it. He says "No", so that’s a denial. It means he won’t let you have it right now.
How Denials Work
Sometimes people use denials in bigger ways, like when you ask to stay up past your bedtime. If your parent says "No," that's a denial too, and it might mean no extra cookie either!
Denials can be simple or tricky. A small denial is just one person saying "No." But sometimes many people say "No", like in a game where everyone has to agree to something, and even one person says "No," the whole plan changes.
So remember: when someone says "No," it's a denial, and that’s just how things go. Denials are when someone says "No" to something you want, like when you ask for a cookie and your mom says "No" because it's time for bed.
Imagine you have a toy box full of cool toys. You really want to play with the red car, but your brother has it. He says "No", so that’s a denial. It means he won’t let you have it right now.
How Denials Work
Sometimes people use denials in bigger ways, like when you ask to stay up past your bedtime. If your parent says "No," that's a denial too, and it might mean no extra cookie either!
Denials can be simple or tricky. A small denial is just one person saying "No." But sometimes many people say "No", like in a game where everyone has to agree to something, and even one person says "No," the whole plan changes.
So remember: when someone says "No," it's a denial, and that’s just how things go.
Examples
- A child denies breaking the vase even though it's shattered on the floor.
Ask a question
See also
- What is Suggestibility?
- How Does Explained in 60 Seconds: The Psychology of Misinformation Work?
- Why Do People Believe?
- Why Do People Believe in Things That Aren't Real?
- Why Do People Believe in Miracles?