How a Casual TikTok from Nakhon Phanom Sparked a National Conversation
What started as a breezy TikTok clip from Nakhon Phanom turned into one of those internet moments that refuses to be ignored. Fah, a 24-year-old woman, casually announced on the platform that she’s happily in a relationship with twin brothers — and she didn’t tiptoe around it. Her caption read, simply and boldly: “I have two husbands.”
As you might expect, the video went viral. Comments poured in from every corner: supporters applauding their honesty, critics sharpening their take, and everyone else somewhere in between, scrolling, reacting, and sharing. But beneath the spectacle, the story is oddly ordinary — a trio who talked openly, made choices together, and got on with their lives.
Meet the Trio: Fah, Sing, and Suea
Fah says she’d been single for more than a year and wasn’t actively searching for romance when the twins, Sing and Suea, reached out. The twins are one year younger than her and work in agricultural machinery services — think tractors, harvesters, six-wheel trucks and backhoes. According to Fah, they’re shy, don’t like cameras, and have never shown jealousy toward one another — a detail that made the arrangement easier to navigate.
The connection didn’t happen overnight. After some time getting to know each other, the three agreed to begin dating about six months ago, while Fah was finishing her studies. They even lived together in a dormitory near her workplace at first, which made the logistics simpler as they learned to share daily life.
Family, Finances, and Friendship
One of the most surprising facts to some observers: both families know about the relationship and reportedly have no objections. Fah emphasizes that the arrangement is a personal choice that harms no one. She’s not oblivious to the controversy — she simply chooses to pay more attention to the people who support them than to loud online criticism.
Financially, the trio have a system that works for them. The twins hand over their earnings to Fah to manage household finances — a mutual agreement, Fah says, not a power play. The three share responsibilities, pool efforts to earn a living and approach the household like a small cooperative. This pragmatic approach to money and chores undercuts a lot of the melodrama some viewers expected.
Intimacy and Communication: Not Taboo, Just Practical
For those curious about the intimate side, Fah doesn’t dodge the topic. She acknowledges physical intimacy between all three and says they’ve slept in the same bed since early on. But she’s careful to frame closeness and sex as parts of a broader relationship rather than the whole thing. The emphasis, she insists, is on open communication: they talk about work schedules, personal needs, and adjust naturally.
That communication, Fah suggests, is the glue. There are no strict contracts or rigid rules — just honesty and negotiation. If that sounds modern and messy and human, that’s probably why it works for them.
Why This Resonates (and Why It Riles People)
Part of what made Fah’s TikTok go viral was the combination of novelty and normality. On one hand, three adults deciding how to live and love together clashes with many cultural expectations. On the other hand, the day-to-day details — chores, finances, work, family acceptance — make the story relatable in surprising ways.
Of course, not everyone sees it that way. Social media amplified both support and criticism. Fah says she tends to ignore haters and focus on the steady backing they receive from friends, neighbors and relatives. In a world where people often air private grievances online, Fah’s calm acceptance of criticism is almost refreshingly old-fashioned.
A Stark Contrast
Tragically, not all stories about unconventional relationships end peacefully. In another recent case, a 60-year-old woman in Nakhon Pathom shot her 35-year-old husband after he returned to his ex-wife and asked his current wife to accept a throuple arrangement. The violent turn is a sobering reminder that jealousy, miscommunication and resentment can have devastating consequences when not handled with care.
Fah’s message seems the inverse: when people are transparent, respectful, and communicate, even unconventional relationships can function without drama. Whether you agree with their choices or not, the twins’ story raises broader questions about agency, consent and the many shapes that adult relationships can take.
Final Thoughts
At its heart, this is a story about three people making a deliberate choice and living with the consequences — good and bad. Fah’s TikTok was loud enough to start a national conversation, but quiet enough to show a private life that’s largely ordinary. For now, Fah, Sing and Suea are focused on work, family, and each other, proving that sometimes the simplest answer to online uproar is the least sensational: living your life.


















Wild story and honestly kind of refreshing to see people living their truth without too much drama. I worry about long-term complications but if everyone’s consenting it should be up to them. Social media will make it louder than it really is.
Agree that consent matters, but consent plus power imbalances is a red flag sometimes. Managing finances through one person sounds practical but also risky if it goes sour.
This is a moral free-for-all now, thanks internet. Traditional marriage has reasons, and stepping outside norms affects kids and communities even if all parties are adults.
Larry, not every deviation from tradition destroys society, and it’s condescending to assume their arrangement automatically harms others. We should judge by behavior and outcome, not by how many people are involved.
Seems exploitative to me; giving one person control of all the money is a recipe for manipulation. Twins have a unique bond that might skew fairness in that relationship dynamic. I think this will implode when jealousy or money problems hit.
You’re assuming bad faith from the start, but many households pool money successfully without abuse. The key is transparency and exit routes if things go wrong.
From a sociological perspective, cooperative households have existed worldwide, and economic pooling can increase resilience. But monitoring, dispute resolution, and external kin support are crucial for stability.
Exactly, so blanket condemnation misses the structural supports that make non-monogamous setups work or fail.
Hi, I’m Fah and I manage the finances because it’s what made sense given our job schedules, not to control anyone. We have shared access to accounts and we check big purchases together.
Thanks for replying, Fah — I worry less hearing you explain safeguards, but I still think outsiders should be cautious before praising this as a model.
This raises interesting questions about consent theory, family structure, and normative ethics. If all participants are adults and informed, the primary moral concern shifts to potential external harms like coercion or community impact. It’s an opportunity to study how informal norms regulate unconventional households.
You’re the expert so I’ll trust you, but can you explain in plain terms how this affects children or inheritance rights? Those practicalities worry regular folks.
Good point — legally this trio occupies a gray area in many jurisdictions, creating complications for parental rights and inheritance unless they take explicit legal steps. That’s why some couples draft contracts and wills even when their relationships are emotionally informal.
I’m in 6th grade and my mom told me about this video, I don’t get how three people sleep together and it is okay. It sounds weird and kind of like a soap opera.
It’s okay to be confused, Nina — adults have different ways of relating, and the important parts are consent and safety. Focus on school and learning about respect rather than sensational headlines.
Thanks, I guess adults are complicated.
This feels like narcissism dressed up as progress. Publicizing private arrangements invites performative endorsement and risks normalizing unstable, inequitable relationships. There’s a difference between tolerance and celebration.
Or it’s just people trying to live honestly without hurting others. Why does every alternative have to be framed as harmful?
People will always perform for attention, true, but some folks genuinely find structures that work. We should stop assuming everyone’s motives are the same.
I get that, but social norms exist for reasons and sweeping them away without thought can create collateral damage. I’m skeptical, not hateful.
Culturally this is very interesting — in some Thai communities extended family living and multiple caretakers are not unusual, but romantic throuples are taboo. The families accepting them is the surprising part. That acceptance matters a lot.
Acceptance by elders probably reduces social friction; if both families say okay, neighbors may follow suit or at least stay silent. Social sanction weakens fast when kin are supportive.
Family acceptance isn’t a panacea though, sometimes families say yes publicly but quietly pressure people to conform later. Watchful eyes and whispering can be destructive over time.
True, but public family blessing does buy them social space to make mistakes and adapt, which is better than being forced into secrecy.
Hi everyone, I’m one of the twins. We appreciate the curiosity and also the criticism that keeps us grounded. We don’t see this as a spectacle; it’s messy, practical, and built on hours of conversation.
I’m the other twin and just want to add that jealousy hasn’t come up because we’ve been open from day one and respected each other’s boundaries. It’s more work than people think.
Appreciate you commenting, but how do you plan for the future — kids, aging, and legal rights? It all seems precarious without legal recognition.
Good question — we’re discussing wills, guardianship for any future kids, and informal support networks; legal recognition would help, but we won’t let lack of it paralyze practical planning.
I like that you answered directly. So many stories go viral and the people never get a chance to explain details.
Thanks for asking, grower2 — our focus right now is stability, and we’ve taken small legal steps like joint bills and a basic written agreement about assets and childcare intentions.
It’s modern and messy and maybe a test case for whether societies can widen their definitions of family. I don’t endorse or condemn, but I’m fascinated. Stories like this force dialogue.
Dialogue is good, but I’m worried about younger people thinking it’s an easy lifestyle. The reality is compromise and hard work, not just romanticized TikToks.
Totally — the TikTok moment is the headline but the day-to-day is the real story, and that is often boring and difficult.