Don't pull the wool over my eyes
Meaning
To deceive or mislead someone, preventing them from seeing the truth.
Origin
The vivid image behind 'pulling the wool over someone's eyes' draws directly from the literal act of obscuring vision. Imagine a thick piece of wool, perhaps from a sheep, used to blindfold someone or obstruct their view, making it impossible for them to discern what is happening. This physical act of rendering someone temporarily sightless to gain an advantage or commit a deception became a powerful and easily understood metaphor. By the 19th century, this visual shorthand had fully migrated into common English idiom, evolving from a potentially real act of blinding into a universally understood expression for trickery and deceit, warning others not to be fooled.
Examples
- I've been in this business long enough, so don't try to pull the wool over my eyes with those inflated figures.
- She tried to tell me the dog ate her homework, but I knew she was just trying to pull the wool over my eyes.