Most people expect a little exaggeration in modern dating. Maybe someone claims they “love hiking” despite touching grass twice a year, or casually adds two inches to their height on dating apps.
But one woman discovered her stepbrother was taking fake-it-till-you-make-it to an entirely different level when he asked to borrow one of her fiancé’s luxury watches.
At first, the request sounded harmless.
Her fiancé collects watches and owns several expensive pieces. So when her stepbrother explained he needed one for an important job interview, she agreed to ask permission on his behalf.
Her fiancé approved immediately, assuming he was helping family prepare for a career opportunity.
Then the truth came out.
The watch was never for a job interview at all. It was for a date.
And not just any date. Apparently, her stepbrother had been lying to his current girlfriend about his income and career, and wanted the luxury watch to make the story more believable.
Suddenly, lending him the watch felt a lot less innocent.

Here’s how it all unfolded:












The Lie That Turned a Favor Into Something Else Entirely
According to the woman’s post, her stepsister accidentally exposed the truth while stopping by the house.
During casual conversation, she mentioned that the stepbrother was actually planning to wear the watch on a date, not to a professional interview as he originally claimed.
Worse, she explained that he had been lying to the woman he was dating about his financial status and job situation.
The watch was essentially a prop.
Naturally, the woman immediately called her stepbrother to confirm the story. He admitted everything.
That changed her decision instantly.
She told him not to bother coming to pick up the watch on Friday, since she no longer felt comfortable lending it to him.
Instead of apologizing for lying, he became angry and accused her of ruining his plans. According to him, he might now have to cancel the date entirely.
Then things got even stranger.
Her stepfather got involved and started pressuring her to reconsider, apparently treating the luxury watch like some kind of romantic life-support device holding the entire relationship together.
Which honestly raises some deeply concerning questions about the relationship itself.
Because if your entire dating strategy collapses without borrowed accessories and fake income claims, the watch is probably not the real problem.
Why Trust Matters More Than the Watch Itself
At its core, this situation was never really about the watch. It was about deception.
The stepbrother lied to his sister and her fiancé to gain access to expensive property. Then he admitted he intended to use it to continue deceiving someone else. That matters because lending valuable personal items depends heavily on trust.
According to Psychology Today, people often lie in romantic situations because they fear rejection, insecurity, or social judgment.
However, experts note that relationship-building through deception creates unstable foundations because the connection is based on performance rather than authenticity.
That dynamic feels painfully obvious here.
The stepbrother was not borrowing the watch because he appreciated watches or even because he needed confidence.
He wanted external symbols of wealth to support a fictional version of himself. And while insecurity can be understandable, involving other people in the deception without their informed consent changes things.
The sister also had another legitimate concern. If the watch was damaged, lost, or stolen during this elaborate charade, it would not even belong to her. It was her fiancé’s property.
Once the original reason for borrowing it turned out to be a lie, she no longer had any obligation to facilitate the situation.
Honestly, the most revealing part of the entire story might be the stepbrother’s reaction afterward. Instead of acknowledging that lying caused the problem, he blamed his sister for “making” him cancel the date.
That suggests he still saw the watch, not the dishonesty, as the real obstacle.
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
Many commenters pointed out that the stepbrother lied not once, but repeatedly. First to his sister about the reason for borrowing the watch, and then to his girlfriend about his lifestyle and income. Several people argued that someone willing to build a relationship around deception should not be rewarded with more help continuing the lie.






Others focused on the larger issue of trust. Lending expensive items requires honesty and goodwill, and the stepbrother had already demonstrated he could not be trusted with either.



![She Agreed to Lend Her Fiancé’s Expensive Watch, Then Learned Her Stepbrother Wanted It to Help Catfish His Date [Reddit User] − TOTALLY NTA. In fact, she should break up with him.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/wp-editor-1779867367224-23.webp)









A few commenters even suggested the date was better off canceled altogether.
The general consensus was blunt: the problem was never the missing watch. It was the fake life attached to it.



![She Agreed to Lend Her Fiancé’s Expensive Watch, Then Learned Her Stepbrother Wanted It to Help Catfish His Date [Reddit User] − NTA. Might not have been the way I'd have handled it but it teaches him a valuable lesson about honesty none-the-less.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/wp-editor-1779867390328-36.webp)

There is nothing wrong with wanting to impress someone you are dating. Most people try to put their best foot forward in the early stages of a relationship.
But there is a major difference between presenting your best self and inventing an entirely fictional one.
This woman did not sabotage her stepbrother’s date. He sabotaged it himself the moment he decided honesty was less important than appearances.
And honestly, if someone needs borrowed luxury items to maintain a relationship built on lies, the relationship was probably doomed long before the watch entered the conversation.
Would you have still lent him the watch after finding out the truth, or was canceling the favor the only reasonable response?

















