A Redditor stumbled into the most awkward identity crisis since The Parent Trap. Imagine showing up to class, only to find out your twin has been spinning poverty sob stories in your name. That’s what happened when one of three identical brothers learned his sibling was posing as a scholarship student from a rough London neighborhood—despite growing up in Kensington with zero student debt.
The situation reached boiling point after several confused classmates approached the poster, congratulating him on scholarships he never received and designer jumpers they assumed were thrifted. The truth? Their brother Tom had built an entire persona based on financial hardship, all for relatability points. But when the lies started interfering with the brothers’ real lives, one of them decided it was time to spill the beans. Want to know what went down next? Dive into the original post below!

One triplet shared on Reddit how exposing his brother’s lies about their wealthy background led to a heated fallout at university









OP later posted an edit:


Meeting new people at university can feel like speed dating for friendships—you only get a few minutes to make an impression. But for some, especially those from wealthier backgrounds, fitting in can mean pretending they’re something they’re not.
That’s exactly what played out in this Reddit drama, where a rich student named Tom decided to reinvent himself as a scholarship kid from a working-class neighborhood. According to his brother, Tom even claimed to live in a private apartment thanks to financial aid. The kicker? He lives there because their parents pay for it. When the truth came out, Tom’s social circle reportedly crumbled—and he blamed his brother for “exposing” him.
This isn’t just about a sibling disagreement. Dr. Rachel Sherman, a sociologist and author of Uneasy Street: The Anxieties of Affluence, notes: “Affluent people often experience shame and guilt about their wealth, especially in settings where economic inequality is stark.”
Tom may have been trying to avoid judgment or exploitation by pretending to struggle financially. But when personal insecurities evolve into active deception—complete with fake scholarships and second-hand MacBooks—it creates harm, especially when others begin to believe the lie. One classmate even expressed interest in applying for the same (non-existent) scholarship. That’s more than harmless storytelling—that’s manipulation.
In fact, a 2023 survey by Rose Academies showed that 43% of university students reported feeling “pressure to appear less privileged” in social settings. While hiding wealth can be a defensive mechanism, outright fabricating a life of struggle invalidates the lived realities of students who are genuinely working multiple jobs or navigating tuition debt.
Tom’s brother didn’t just “out” him—he reclaimed the truth. The situation also highlights the pressures young adults face to be either aspirational or relatable. Somewhere between thrifted fashion and designer guilt lies the complicated dance of class, status, and authenticity.
Maybe the lesson here is that honesty doesn’t mean flaunting your wealth—it means not weaponizing poverty for social gain. If Tom had concerns about being taken advantage of, he could’ve drawn boundaries, not fables. The real betrayal wasn’t his brother’s “exposure”—it was the act of dragging everyone else into the lie.
Commenters supported the Redditor for not lying to support Tom’s false narrative, arguing honesty is better than pretending to be poor


Users noted Tom’s lies could hurt those genuinely struggling, calling his “scholarship” story entitled and disrespectful to real hardships




Commenters highlighted the impossibility of Tom’s plan with identical brothers, noting his lies unfairly involved them


Users criticized Tom for dragging his brothers into his “working-class fantasy” without their consent, disrupting their social start



One commenter shared a friend’s strategy of avoiding money talk to dodge gold-diggers, suggesting Tom could’ve been discreet without lying




Pretending to be poor might seem like a harmless quirk—until it affects real people. From fake scholarships to thrifted lies, Tom’s attempt at playing the “relatable rich kid” backfired spectacularly, leaving his brother to clean up the confusion. But was the exposure an act of betrayal, or just setting the record straight?
So, do you think OP should’ve just let his brother play pretend, or was it fair to step in once it affected others? Can privilege ever be hidden responsibly—or does the truth always find its way out? Let us know what you think in the comments!










