Woman Accidentally Overhears Friends Talking, Finds Out They Lied To Her For Years
Our friends are often the people we trust the most. We show up for them when they need it, and we hope they would do the same in return. So if they’re the ones keeping things from us, it can hurt in a way few other betrayals do.
One woman recently found out her entire friend group had been keeping a major secret about her twin brother for years. Completely blindsided, she took to Reddit to share what happened and ask for advice. Read the full story below.
One woman thought she could trust her friends
Image credits: Media_photos / Envato (not the actual photo)
But then she discovered they had all been hiding a secret about her twin brother for years, and now she doesn’t know what to do
Image credits: vadymvdrobot / Envato (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Image-Source / Envato (not the actual photo)
Image credits: FrequentlyToughLife
Honesty is one of the most important qualities people look for in a friend
Image credits: ohlamour studio / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
Honesty is at the core of all healthy relationships, whether we’re talking about friends, family or our significant others.
In fact, one study found that people ranked it as the single most valued trait in a friendship, above being ethical, pleasant or always available. And that makes sense, because you really can’t build a meaningful connection with someone if you don’t trust what they’re telling you.
You’d think that being honest with friends would come naturally, too. Easier than with family, at least, where there are all sorts of power dynamics at play. Most of us have, at some point, hidden a bad grade from a parent or kept quiet about something we knew they wouldn’t approve of. That kind of filtering feels almost built into family relationships.
Friendships are supposed to be different. These are people you actively chose to have in your life, people you see as equals. You can be vulnerable around them without worrying about getting told off. They support you, and you do the same for them. That mutual respect is what makes friendships feel so safe.
But ironically, that closeness can also make honesty harder. When you care about keeping a friendship comfortable and drama-free, it becomes tempting to smooth things over instead of saying what you actually think.
It starts small. Your friend tries on an outfit and asks how it looks, and even though you’re not really feeling it, you tell them it’s great. No big deal, right?
These little white lies feel harmless in the moment. The problem is that they set a pattern. And over time, that pattern can stretch to cover things that are much more serious.
That’s exactly what seems to have happened in this story. For whatever reason, this woman’s friends decided to hide the fact that one of them was dating her twin brother. Maybe they were afraid of how she’d react, or maybe they just kept putting off the conversation until two whole years had gone by.
Whatever their reasoning was, the result is that she found out completely by accident. And now, instead of feeling like her friends had her back, she feels blindsided and lied to by the people she trusted most. That kind of discovery is not something you just brush off.
When a friend breaks your trust, can the friendship survive?
Image credits: Meg Aghamyan / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
So does a betrayal like this automatically mean the friendship is over? According to clinical psychologist Eileen Kennedy-Moore, Ph.D., it really depends on the degree of the breach.
In an article for Psychology Today, she explains that some trust violations just leave us feeling annoyed or let down. Those are the ones you can usually talk through. You say what hurt you, you ask for what you need going forward, and you move on. Sometimes working through a rough patch like that even brings friends closer together.
But then there are the violations that hurt much more, the ones that make you question whether your friend genuinely cares about you at all. When someone you trusted hides something major from you for years, it can shake the entire foundation of how you see that relationship. Coming back from that takes a lot more than a single honest conversation.
Whether this woman decides to forgive her friends or walk away, the situation still holds a valuable lesson. Even the most painful experiences in our friendships can teach us something about what we need from the people around us and what we’re willing to accept.
What do you think she should do? Is this something worth forgiving, or would this be a dealbreaker for you? Share your thoughts in the comments below.
Readers said the woman should confront everyone involved and maybe reconsider whether these people are really her friends
Explore more of these tags
So the brother 'doesn't like' his sister hanging out with his guy friends but will happily s***w her girl friends.
Was there a tldr? That was so long and convoluted that my brain glazed over and stopped reading in self defense.
Tldr: Bro doesn't want his sister to hang out with his friends but is f*****g one of her friends. Sis is mad about it.
Load More Replies...Huh? Why? Is it actually interesting and important and I'm the only derp who doesn't get the fuss? It turns out I never knew about more than 80% of the dudes my sister dated; was that a huge important thing and I was to have thrown a shitfit about it? Is it too late for me to throw a shitfit now?If I were to do so, what would my motivation be? Am I too much of a dinosaur to understand what's going on?
Load More Replies...So the brother 'doesn't like' his sister hanging out with his guy friends but will happily s***w her girl friends.
Was there a tldr? That was so long and convoluted that my brain glazed over and stopped reading in self defense.
Tldr: Bro doesn't want his sister to hang out with his friends but is f*****g one of her friends. Sis is mad about it.
Load More Replies...Huh? Why? Is it actually interesting and important and I'm the only derp who doesn't get the fuss? It turns out I never knew about more than 80% of the dudes my sister dated; was that a huge important thing and I was to have thrown a shitfit about it? Is it too late for me to throw a shitfit now?If I were to do so, what would my motivation be? Am I too much of a dinosaur to understand what's going on?
Load More Replies...








































































26
18