Thai woman dating identical twin brothers shares a six-foot bed with no jealousy; reveals how she will decide who is the father
A 24-year-old Thai university student has gone viral after revealing she is in a consensual relationship with twin brothers, sharing one bed and planning a DNA test to identify a biological father if she has a child. The unusual arrangement, openl...

She isn’t choosing between them. She’s dating both. Together. Everyone knows. Everyone involved says they’re fine. Fah shared details of her relationship with twins Sing and Suea on TikTok, where the revelation quickly rippled across Thai social media and beyond. Reactions swung wildly between outrage, disbelief, and fascination, with many viewers fixating less on morality and more on logistics.
A six-foot bed and one rule: no jealousy
Fah addressed the most immediate curiosity without hesitation. The three of them share a single six-foot bed. She sleeps in the middle. “It’s crowded,” she said casually, adding that it’s manageable. In winter, she noted, she stays warmer than anyone else, a detail that only intensified online disbelief.
The twins, she said, are shy and not prone to confrontation. Jealousy, she insists, has never been an issue. The two brothers never argued or got jealous because they both loved her, and she loved them too, Fah told thairath.
Also Read: A new way of firing? Employee loses job after receiving double salary while on vacation; boss mocked her when she explained there was no internet at sea to review paycheck
One pregnancy, two fathers and a DNA test
But biology, she suggested, wouldn’t dictate family roles. She hopes her child will call both brothers “dad”. It’s an answer that has unsettled critics and intrigued others, particularly in a society where family structures tend to follow familiar lines.
How the Polyamory began
Fah met Sing and Suea while working as a server at a roadside restaurant to pay for her university education. A month later, both brothers messaged her minutes apart. She says feelings developed for both at the same time. Neither brother asked her to choose. Neither stepped aside. Today, the twins work agricultural jobs and come from modest backgrounds. Fah manages the household finances and even opened bank accounts for both men so they could track their savings.
Arguments are rare, she said, mostly because neither brother likes conflict. If tension arises, she admits, like in major relationships, she’s usually the one who starts it.
Acceptance at home, outrage online
Family reactions were cautious at first. Then time passed. Nothing collapsed. No one stormed out. The relationship endured. Eventually, relatives stopped objecting and accepted what had once seemed unthinkable. Online, the criticism has been harsher. Accusations range from attention-seeking to moral decay. Fah says she’s told the twins to ignore the noise and focus on work and each other.
The fixation on beds, fathers, and boundaries may say less about three adults choosing an unconventional arrangement and more about how narrowly relationships are expected to look even when everyone involved insists they’re doing just fine.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.