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57 Shocking Pieces Of Gossip People Are Revealing Anonymously On The Internet

57 Shocking Pieces Of Gossip People Are Revealing Anonymously On The Internet

Hannah MarderSat, July 11, 2026 at 8:31 PM UTC

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FreeformRecently, Reddit user KitchenSwillForPigsasked, "What is the juiciest bit of gossip happening in your life?" and some of these reveals were SERIOUSLY messed up. Here's the current drama going on with these folks, from long-held secrets coming to light to shocking IRL plot twists.

NOTE: This post contains mentions of sexual assault, domestic violence, child abuse, sexual harassment, and other disturbing situations.

1. "I had a friend who always left his current wife/girlfriend for the side girl. At his last wedding, the side girl was like a shadow hanging onto him and his wife. All the attendees were whispering about her and wondering WTF was going on. It came out that he slept with the side girl on the wedding night, with his new bride passed out next to them."

—u/USDA_had_no_choice

2. "A former colleague/friend is cheating on his wife with a woman who lives in Singapore. They met on Tinder a couple of years ago when the woman was on vacation in NYC. The girlfriend comes to NYC to visit him a couple of times a year and has no idea he's married because he's made up a convoluted excuse for why she can't see his apartment. He travels for work a lot, and has told his wife he's on a work trip when the reality is that he's jetting off to meet his girlfriend. They've gone on vacation to Europe together, and he's gone to see her in Asia. He's met all her friends and her entire family. His wife has no idea because he spoofs his location on his phone so he's never where she thinks he is. He's thinking about leaving his wife and kid for his girlfriend. The whole situation is completely wild."

—u/devilclown9

3. "A friend's friend slept with someone when they were on a break with their partner. Said hookup is now pregnant and wants to have a baby. My friend's friend is back with their partner, and they're planning to get married."

—u/a-bad-example

4. "A male coworker had an affair with a female coworker. They were both in 20+-year marriages. This carried on for almost a year before the female coworker's husband caught them somehow. He CAME TO THE OFFICE to confront her. Then he decided to give her a second chance. But it turns out when he told the male coworker's wife, THEY trauma bonded and started having an affair. Now the coworker affair partners are single and hate each other, and their ex-spouses are getting married."

—u/Responsible-Life-585

5. "My best friend discovered hidden cameras in her and her husband's bedroom. She had no idea he was filming her. All the time, filming, without her consent. She filed for divorce. What he doesn't know is that she also went to the prosecutor's office, and they are going to press charges. Do the crime, do the time, fucko."

"She's been really smart about everything. After she found the cameras, she took her and her kids (two older teenage boys) to her mom's to stay, because, of course, she didn’t know if there were other cameras. She and her sister then went back, checked everywhere and everything, and made sure there were no other cameras before bringing the kids back.

And she kicked him out immediately. Like, she packed his bag, put it on the porch, told him what she found, and sent him packing to his mom's. He's not allowed back in the house. He's whined, 'but whhhyyyyy,' and she's like, 'Because you recorded us having sex and recorded me naked without consent last time you were in here.'

Oh, and now he’s trying to hide assets so that in the divorce, she gets less. Fortunately, if you hide assets and they are discovered, the spouse gets like 80% of that instead of 50%. She hired a forensic accountant. She'll find them."

—u/IKnowAllSeven

6. "I just ended a marriage. He was cheating on his wife. I found out about a month into seeing him. I was never okay with it, but he kept promising he was going to leave her and come clean. He asked me to give him time, and also said that he was falling in love with me and wanted to build a future with me. Additional personal factors made me think that he and I could work (non-monogamy was fine by me, and our kinks matched up perfectly). It was a rookie mistake to give him a chance, I know, but I knew better than to let the promises go on forever. I held him to a specific timeline he promised and finally said that if he didn't tell her, I would."

"He scrambled, but to my surprise, told her and had that conversation. He said the next day that he wanted to dump me to 'try again' with her. I was upset, but there was the obvious suspicion in the back of my mind that he was lying.

So I spoke to her. Turns out he did not tell her at all. She dumped him instantly. He lost a six-year marriage by cheating and tried everything possible to keep her trapped in it, including burning down the extremely unlikely bridge to a new relationship and life that I was offering.

I don't really feel bad, aside from wishing I had told her earlier. I was too optimistic that bad people can change. I still think they can! Just that that particular guy was not going to try."

—u/betterthansteve

The CW7. "Someone I grew up with stole over $10,000 from a little girl's softball team she was coaching. She was also making these eight-year-old kids do community service on the weekend and pocketing the tips they made. She was put on probation for it all, but she's still a felon. She jumped states while this was happening for a man she met on PlayStation, WHILE SHE WAS MARRIED, and left her kids behind."

"Now she and her new boyfriend are scammers. They scammed his dying dad (he had cancer) out of a car they wrecked and stuck him with the payment, stole from another family member of his on her deathbed, and more.

Oh, and before she left the state, she got fired from her caretaking job for stealing from a young nonverbal man with autism. She then worked for a cleaning company, where she started stealing cash and items from old ladies' houses.

She also locked her kids in their rooms, and had just about every living rodent you can think of infesting her house. She tried to leave her pet cat to die, but someone rescued it!! The cat is okay!

Oh, and an extra tidbit is that she has two daughters from her first marriage (not the one that she left for the PlayStation guy, but her first one). While they were young, he was caught talking to an FBI agent about what he wanted to do to his CHILDREN! He promptly got arrested."

—u/Anxious_Piano9000

Related: "Funny Tweets That Absolutely Destroyed Me"

8. "My 44-year-old sister is dating her oldest daughter's (21) boyfriend's best friend (21). They keep taking pictures in fields together and making TikToks."

—u/eaglemama_75

9. "There's a kid in the same school class as my kid. They're under 12. Her grandfather is a bit of a career criminal in a dodgy area a few kilometers away. Not quite organized crime, but very adjacent to it. Tax evasion, shipment theft, money laundering. Not particularly dangerous, but if you got on the wrong side of him, I'm sure you'd pay for it with your kneecaps."

"Anyway, this child's mother is young, mid-20s at this stage, and the grandmother does most of the child-rearing. She's separated from the criminal grandad but still seems to do well out of the arrangement — he bought her house, pays for veneers, Ozempic, Botox, etc. Probably enough money to keep her silent.

It turns out that Granny has been screwing her daughter's boyfriend (the child's father) on the side. Now they've decided they want to make a go of it together and basically disappeared into the ether."

—u/seamustheseagull

10. "My uncle had my grandfather change his will AFTER his first shot ever of hydromorphine while in the hospital from stage four cancer (that he had no clue he had, until he fainted; he had not shown a single sign). My uncle made sure he and his crotch goblins were left with everything. I was raised by my grandparents, who both were very adamant that I was left not only the house, but everything, so I would 'always have a home.'"

"I got $1000, and nothing else. The land, property, etc.? Worth over a $500,000. That was 18 years ago.

It's alright — the pictures etc, my grandparents had already made sure I took. I did not fight the will. I was broken.

Fast-forward to about two months ago, and I got a call from said Uncle. He needed a kidney and knew I'd had genetic testing done. Guess who the only exact match is? Me.

I told him I would happily donate one of mine, provided he upholds the original will. And most importantly? Tell everyone what he did. All of it.

He asked how I could be so cold.

I told him simply that I was no longer the broken soul that needed help. My life exploded, while he stood by and laughed. I was not being cold; I was being just and fair.

The latest part? They wanted me to come alone, two states away, so I could 'say goodbye properly.' No, thank you. I pointed out that I have nothing left to say. But please let me know when and where to send the flowers."

—u/Adept_Contribution33

Netflix11. "Three brothers: the second brother's baby mama left him for the first brother and had another kid with him. This left a bit of an uncle-daddy situation. She then cheated on the first brother with a stranger and had another kid, who was adopted by the parents of the three brothers. So, we have two kids who are siblings/cousins, and their younger sibling is now their aunt. The baby mama is out of the picture, and the brothers have moved on. The first brother's new wife/baby mama then left him for the third brother. The parents of the brothers are livid at this point and are trying to mitigate the damage. This is my extended family, but I don't expect everyone to get together any time soon."

—u/trickledabout

12. Similarly: "My husband's youngest brother and his wife had a baby, then four months later, she was hooking up with the oldest brother. Now they also have a child, and they all raise the kids together, and no one knows which brother is each kid's uncle vs father. My mother-in-law pretends it's not happening, but those are the golden grandchildren. We're no contact."

—u/Prior-Pop-4683

13. "I'm helping my boss's girlfriend leave him. She's been staying at my place, and I've helped her find her own place, and I'm currently helping her find a new job. He's 13 years older than her, extremely controlling, and a piece of shit. I would have never known if it wasn't for the evidence she showed me on her phone. He's disgusting. He thinks her work visa has expired, and he's threatening to get her deported (he's her boss too), but he doesn't know she just received a letter extending her work visa for five more years."

—u/unexpectedmachete

14. "My boyfriend's mom was young when she had him. She was a party girl and was unsure of who the father was at the time. My boyfriend has believed this his entire life. Turns out his mom has known who the biological father is, and has known the whole time, but never told my boyfriend. For whatever reason, she decided to tell me. I've been keeping this secret because I've never been sure when to tell my boyfriend, and I don't think it's fair that I am the one to do it. I resent her for this."

—u/Fair_Hope_6978

AMC15. "My aunts share a baby daddy because he had kids with both of them. He was married to one, and cheated and had a kid with the other. There are still a couple of pictures floating around of the day the wife found out. The pictures are of each aunt looking FUCKED up because they got into a giant fist fight. They still haven't talked since, and their kids are in their 40s...one is in jail for selling drugs on the internet. "

—u/RedditIsMyTherapist

16. "My girlfriend did an ancestry DNA test. She's an only child; her mum struggled to conceive for a long time, and called her a miracle baby. It turns out my girlfriend had three half-siblings...hmmm. Her mom was in denial about it at first, but then eventually told her that she had gotten a donor without anyone else (including my girlfriend's 'dad') knowing about it. She was basically prepared to take it to the grave as well."

—u/jimbojonesFA

17. "DNA tests are basically generational trauma delivery services at this point. My cousin did one and found out our grandpa had a whole other family in the next county over, complete with three kids who all showed up as matches. The man died in '98 thinking he took that shit to his grave; now there's a Facebook group."

—u/Ok_Standard_3076

18. "A coworker who I've worked with for 13 years and was extremely well-liked, hard-working, and good at his job — he used to help everyone out with their work and was just a damn model employee — was fired for groping a female coworker. No one knows that's why; they all assume he finally quit since he was being asked to do more and more, but the woman he groped confided in me. She's frustrated because everyone keeps talking about how much they miss him. I miss him a lot, and I can't believe he did that, but I also have zero reason to suspect her of lying. It's shitty."

—u/Jeramy_Jones

ABC19. "My 76-year-old father did an ancestry DNA test. He found out his older sister is really his mother, and he was raised by his grandma. They all passed away years ago and literally took the secret to their graves. He's heartbroken."

—u/bunnyfoofoo49

Related: "Creepy Camping Stories That Will Make You Rethink The Great Outdoors"

20. Similarly: "My daughter did an ancestry DNA test, and I found out my Aunt is actually my sister. I don't speak to my family, so I don't know if anyone knows, but it wasn't worth breaking my contact with my mother to confront her about it. It explains a lot of my mother's attitude towards me growing up."

—u/International-Fee255

21. "Ancestry DNA tests bring some wild shit to the surface. I found out last year that the person I thought was my biological grandfather was not. Grandma had gotten pregnant by a man who already had a family, and my grandfather married her to give her cover. My biological grandfather has since died, and his family (understandably) wants nothing to do with my family. It all came to light when my estranged mother got into genealogy and did an ancestry DNA test. I'm frustrated that I will never be able to learn about that part of my history. I'm also relieved because my grandfather was a horrifically abusive piece of shit, and I don't share any biological link to him."

—u/frogparty247

22. "My married best friend and her husband are in a throuple with another married woman who just left her husband. We all know it's a ticking time bomb before my friend's marriage implodes and she ends up with the girlfriend. The bets right now are before Christmas."

—u/JollyControl6705

Legendary Pictures23. "About a month ago, out of nowhere, my freshly-turned 18-year-old stepson left in the middle of the night to go shack up with a 31-year-old woman who's just starting to get a divorce. He left his mom a text and never said goodbye to his 15-year-old sister."

"He graduated from high school at 17 in the spring of '25. In the past year, he's been living at home and taking community college classes. He recently started playing Dungeons and Dragons with a group of people of varied ages.

Because he's a relatively new driver, we have him on Life360 and can see where he is coming and going. We noticed he was spending more and more time at a particular DND friend's house. After a little while, he was just there pretty much all the time. He popped home to change for the gym and do laundry, and that was it. We were okay with this; if he were away at college, he would be living his life as a college student, so no big deal. Then his seasonal job had kicked back in. They'd given him a promotion and more responsibility. After about three weeks, he quit because it was too much for him. He blew off his dad, who had rearranged his weekend to be with him. He did a dine and dash at a family barbecue the next day. And so my wife (his mom) confronted him.

She asked him a lot of questions, and it got a bit heated. We found out that the woman who owned the condo he'd been hanging out at was 31 (he had previously said that she was in her mid-20s). Her husband had just left her, and they were just starting the process of getting a divorce.

She told him to go to his room and called his father. We didn't see him come out of his room for the rest of the night. The next morning, my wife woke up to a three-paragraph text about how he can never live up to his mom and dad's expectations, and he needed a place where he could go where he felt safe — things that we've never even heard him mention before. Also, the language he used in the text did not sound like his words.

My wife contacted a family crisis counselor who gave us some good advice. Since our kid left it as, 'I'll be the one who gets back in touch with you guys when I'm feeling ready,' that's exactly what we are doing. He never said goodbye to me, he never said goodbye to his younger sister, he never told his dad what he was planning to do...nothing."

—u/JacPhlash

24. "My former boss left his wife for a coworker after having an affair for over a year. They got married, constantly posted about being 'soulmates,' and acted like they had the perfect relationship. Last month, she left him for another coworker from the same office. Apparently, he was shocked that the woman he cheated *with* would eventually cheat *on* him. The office has basically turned into a reality show."

—u/One_Situation_5291

25. "My older sister eloped with some guy she met on a military base who was 20 when she was 27. They'd known each other for like two weeks before getting married. Her reasoning was some ass-backward religious excuse that basically translated to 'I'm a horny bitch, but I also say I'm Christian, so I can't have sex outside of marriage. To solve this, I will get married to the guy I want to fuck.'"

It's been just about two years since they got married, and my sister got pregnant a year into the marriage, so they now have my eight-month-old niece. My BIL is currently deployed, and my sister, SOLELY because she couldn't survive without sex and male attention for the span of his deployment, used 'volunteering' somewhere as a lie to go see some other guy on base she thought was cute. She says she wants to divorce her husband when he's back from deployment. Her daughter is currently staying with her MIL for a few months because my sister 'couldn't take being a single mother' and hates our parents, therefore refusing to let them take much part in helping raise her daughter. She's going to 'test out being a single mom' over Thanksgiving and Christmas, which is around when she'd have her daughter back from her MIL.

No one knows what's happening to my niece, though my sister INSISTS 'Hell no, I'd never give them MY daughter. We agreed on 50/50 custody.'"

—u/Sayasing

26. "I found out recently that my dad isn't my biological father, which is weird because…we look alike? Come to find out, the guy my mom had an affair with looks like my dad. I guess she had a type."

—u/SlightGrass

Fox27. "At a certain party, a certain family member revealed what I feel are some DEFCON 1 secrets after a few too many. Things that, if I discussed openly, will surely be catastrophic for the family and me. Basically, they revealed that my hyper-religious aunt didn't actually lose her husband in a tragic accident, as I was told my whole life. Instead, some guy she knew knocked her up, and when he found out, he took a long vacation to the Whoddafuckanoos. This also explains, partially, why my aunt seemed to fucking hate her daughter when she was a little girl. To prevent the absolutely ruinous situation that would've been having my aunt be an openly single mom in the '80s, one of my uncles went with my aunt to register the baby, pretended to be the father, gave a fake name, and signed the birth certificate. This has never been revealed to my cousin."

"I also found out that all those times my dad went out at night to get medicine for my mom were actually him bailing one of my uncles out of jail, or fishing him out of a bar. That's also why my uncle disappeared for some time; it's when he went to rehab (which my dad paid for, since my uncle was drowning in debt).

Also, apparently, because my mom and dad lived with my grandparents for some time, my dad gave my grandma his entire salary during that time. This was done so she'd handle the spending, and allowed my parents to save and eventually buy the house I grew up in. However, the money spent on the house was less than what my dad had given to my grandma. No one knows where that extra money went. Grandma died a long time ago and took the secret with her.

This relative seemed dead set on telling me every bit of radioactive secrets my family has, but I stopped him. Much as I appreciate understanding the family better, I think it's best that my generation and the next generations are given as clean a slate as possible."

—u/0dty0

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28. "I went to a wedding recently where the best man was the brother of the groom. Their mom hates the best man's wife. They have a one-year-old child, and she's currently pregnant. The best man is very irresponsible and a hot head. He was supposed to be driving himself and his wife to and from the wedding because his wife gets seizures and cannot drive. But he got shitfaced drunk, and when his wife tried to cut him off, he got pissed off and went to the groom's suite and destroyed it. He shattered the mirror, punched a hole in the pool table, snapped the cues, and caused over $1000 in damage. His mom and his wife got into a fight as the mom kept giving him alcohol and saying, 'Don't tell my son what to do.' The wife yelled that she was pregnant and had seizures, so she could not drive. The mom then screamed, 'Well, I hope one of those seizures kills you!' The wife took a beer bottle and smashed it over her head."

"The entire wedding — guests and all — were kicked out. The poor bride and groom lost their deposit and had to pay damages. They also got permanently banned from ever attending or hosting an event there. It was definitely the most eventful wedding I have ever attended."

—u/CrystalizedRedwood

29. "My brother-in-law's mom passed away. His father is in his late 60s. He went and married a 19-year-old girl and got her pregnant, just a few months after his wife passed away. He was married to his wife for over 30 years. Creepy and gross. 🤢"

—u/TiredMomma101

30. "Last week, my dad was staining his boss's deck for extra money on the side. He left a ball of rags. They combusted and burnt down his boss's vacation home, along with five other homes."

—u/meowmeowmagoo

Related: "22 Times People Had Terrifying Real-Life Experiences Like Something Out Of The Twilight Zone"

Paramount31. "Mid-divorce, I saw that my ex and his sister were messaging back and forth about how giddy he was to be stealing our newly purchased home out from under me with the girl he'd been cheating with. That's actually how I found out about the cheating. His sister then got married and bought a house, and now she's getting divorced. I hope she loses the house, too."

—u/Relevant_Duck_8552

"I hope he didn't steal that house off you."

—u/littlemissy145

"Unfortunately, he did. I put the majority of the money down, and he filed for divorce right after we closed. He bought me out for basically nothing, and I was too distraught to fight it. But my life has fully improved, and now I'm just enjoying the gossip, lol."

—u/Relevant_Duck_8552

32. "My cousin, who is already skinny, is getting Ozempic illegally from her friend, who is a pharmacist. The prescription is for the pharmacist. The pharmacist gives her prescription, after going through her insurance, I assume, to my cousin. I don't know who the pharmacist is; I would report them if I knew."

—u/fortifiedoptimism

33. "I held my ex down for four years throughout his prison sentence. Every day, we spoke. He'd call literally 10-20 times and message back and forth constantly. I had five figures saved up to begin our new life together. He got released, and turns out he was in a whole other relationship with some girl who wrote to him in there. He set up a home with her and moved in with her. My parents found out I was going to give him money (they had no idea about the other woman), and they put a full stop to it. I'm so glad that they did that, because I would have lost my mind had he taken the money I saved for us and used it to play house."

"I found out about her when she came to my residence around 6-7 a.m., screaming my name, running up the stairs, yelling, 'I know you're in there, I just wanna talk! It's me, Jane!' I had never heard of her before. She told me everything — she knew about me but had never told me. I threw up.

It's still fresh, and I am in a lot of emotional pain and torment, really. But I'm glad my parents were there for me.

Before judgmental comments ensue, this was a man I knew before and trusted very much. I was there for him from the day he was arrested to his release date. I made a mistake, but learned many lessons."

—u/Educational-Move7979

34. "My aunt found out my uncle had a whole second phone just for his side piece. She mailed his wedding ring to his mom like a bill."

—u/Electronic-Rate-6208

AMC / Viayoutube.com35. "This one guy I knew in college…let's call him Tom. He was known for sleeping around and had basically cheated on every girl that he's been with. Then one day, he met 'the girl of his dreams,' according to him, and he constantly told those close to him she was the girl he wanted to end up with. They were together for around two years when Tom figured out that she had been seeing other people for around a year and a half (basically ever since they met). He was devastated. The plot twist no one expected? She was the stepsister of his high school sweetheart that he initially cheated on when he came to college."

—u/Mountain-Voice-1402

36. "My friend is dating her ex, whom she split with 15 years ago. He is the father of two of her kids, and those kids don't want anything to do with him, as he has been absent all this time. Said ex is now the stepdad to my friend's youngest kid with her now ex-husband; the ex-husband is the stepdad to the ex's kids."

—u/CozJeez85

37. "One of my friends found out her twin was 'borrowing' large amounts for cash from their mother, who has dementia. The family has now divided into factions, with most of them no longer speaking to the money-grubbing twin."

—u/GabberZZ

38. "One of my close girlfriends is pregnant after having breakup sex with her ex after the night before they moved out of the place they were renting together…she repeatedly said during their relationship, 'he's not forever; he's just right now.' When she told me, I just stared at her…then she said, 'Isn't that actually kind of hilarious??!!' Lol no dude, it's not, it's a fucking life-changing future human being, and the baby daddy lives on a fucking boat…AND YOU BROKE UP WITH HIM. I can't even."

—u/isaydoit

Disney39. "A friend of mine was cheated on by her boyfriend. He went on to marry the girl he cheated on my friend with. We just found out they are getting a divorce because the wife caught him cheating on her with her brother's wife! She made him call their parents to tell them why they were divorcing."

—u/Jazzlike_Rip_996

40. "My aesthetician works with a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon whom she began dating. She moved into his mansion, and he paid $2M to finance her new business. She has zero interest in being with him anymore because he is a true weirdo and a bit of a letch. So behind his back, she got her own apartment and is going to move out and into the apartment once her business officially opens soon. She basically swindled him, and he has no idea what's coming."

—u/OnWarmLeatherette

41. "My friend's boyfriend's brother was found to have a completely secret family. His family knew he was living with a girlfriend and their five-month-old. Turns out he also has a whole ass wife with a TWO-MONTH-OLD and another on the way! The way my friend's boyfriend reacted to the news set off red flags; my friend did some snooping and found out her boyfriend also has another girlfriend. She lives with him, and she's pregnant. Turns out messy runs in the family."

—u/Realistic-Gap-1207

42. "I was helping my dad take my mom's clothes to Goodwill after the funeral. During one of the trips, he told me I wasn't their son! Surprise!"

—u/Subject_Issue6529

NBC43. "A woman I know is being charged with knowingly falsifying wastewater treatment results. From the justice.gov website, 'These falsified results, including exceedances of ammonia, E. coli, and phosphorous levels, were submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency and Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.' So this lady and others at the company knowingly endangered the health of the community for kickbacks. Greed at its finest."

—u/annbrys

44. "I no longer speak to my absolute best friend of 10 years because she decided that marrying a felon whom she reconnected with while he's been in prison for DV was a good idea. He has to serve 17 1/2 years before he's eligible for parole. That will be 2037. Good luck, girl."

—u/staypimpinn

Related: "All The Dark, Terrible, And Upsetting Things I Learned This Week"

45. "I never knew my birth father and was not raised by my birth mother. A recent DNA test revealed that I have 19 half-siblings. They were not donor-conceived. He was 15 and had his first five kids by the time he was 19, two of whom were born in the same year as me. There are 14 girls and five boys that we know about."

—u/Conscious_You_6163

46. "My roommate doesn't know that his Dad isn't his biological Dad; his grandmother told me while visiting. Why tell me? I have no idea."

—u/PsychologicalWin6770

FX47. "My cousin's dad is not her dad. My aunt had an affair going on at the time. As far as I know, only my mum, my aunt, and I know this (and I didn't know until my cousin and I were 37). I absolutely hate her not-father's fucking guts though, and if he makes one more snide little comment at a family BBQ or something about my dad (who he hates, and who now has alzheimer's and can't defend his own honor), I'm sorely fucking tempted to spill those beans."

—u/Helepoli

48. "I'm convinced a friend of a friend got pregnant on purpose with a guy she'd been seeing for a few months. She's 39 and insists she was on birth control and took Plan B (and that it was this 42-year-old guy's first time ever finishing in a woman). The whole year leading up to this 'miracle baby,' she had been stressing about not having kids yet, especially around the times guys would end things with her. She wouldn't even consider egg freezing (money isn't an issue). And she's also a notorious liar. Needless to say, when she told the friend group she was pregnant, the reaction was just shock and us all just looking at each other uncomfortably, lol."

—u/StoryStock6759

49. "My sister-in-law has been sleeping with one of her husband's friends for years, and almost the whole family knows except her hubby. Then, her side piece introduced my sister-in-law to his side piece that he hooked up with because my sister-in-law wouldn't leave her husband. Let's call side piece's side piece 'Angelica'. My sister-in-law and Angelica became buddies while both were still banging this guy. Now he's ghosted both my sister-in-law and Angelica, and my sister-in-law is complaining about it. They are all in their mid-50s, and this is not the first of hubby's friends she has hooked up with. The first was his best friend that she 'accidentally' ran into on an out-of-state work trip."

—u/Substantial-Low

50. "My soon-to-be ex-wife and her boyfriend stole my classic Mustang while I was at work, and have put over 1000 miles on it and done some minor damage to it. I have it on camera. Looks like the divorce is going to get more interesting."

—u/CFCalgaryMan

Disney+/Marvel51. "My mother is suing my second cousin for allegedly strangling my grandmother to death when grandma was on her way out. Meanwhile, my mom told me my grandma's certified nursing assistant was there, and that Grandma died peacefully. Then mom told me she herself overdosed my grandfather on morphine when he was in hospice to assist him out of this realm."

—u/FerretBusinessQueen

52. "My mother and father-in-law are perpetrating a smear campaign against my husband and me, partially because my father-in-law sexually harassed me repeatedly and allowed another family member to do the same. It's absolutely wild that they think this is a good idea, when husband and I are the only other two family members who know she had an affair 40 years ago, and one of her kids might not be the father-in-law's... How you go around telling people that we're shitty, when you have proof that we're not because we've never told your secret despite your treatment of us, is some special kind of evil."

—u/Regular-Message9591

"Do it, unleash it"

—u/bros402

"The poor sibling who'll get hurt and probably think we told just to get back at their parents 😭 We think the only reason we'll tell is if the sibling or their children ever get sick, so there's a situation.

The crappiest part, IMO, is that the parents never actually bothered to find out the truth, which makes us suspect they both lean towards the kid not being the dad and don't want confirmation. And my husband found out when he was about 12. His parents never talked to him about it except the day he found out, never got him into therapy, and just left him feeling isolated from his siblings, guilty for knowing, confused, etc., etc. And now they're treating him like shit for asking family members not to grab his wife, try to kiss her, make sexual remarks to her, etc. Parents of the decade!"

—u/Regular-Message9591

53. "My dead homie's wife found nudes on his computer of the girl he was banging while he had cancer."

—u/dannydirtbag

54. "A pillar of the community, business owner, and volunteer firefighter in a small town is about to be charged with multiple counts of fraud totaling well into six figures. A neighbor keeps a regular watch to see when he tries to bolt. One of his victims was the best man at his wedding. Those of us who know are aware he's really a piece of shit and have popcorn ready.🍿"

—u/neoengel

Netflix55. "My mom has Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. She's getting to a place where it just isn't safe for her to be by herself. My dad is an awful human being. We are trying to apply for Medicaid to help cover the costs of assisted living. My dad refused to cooperate with providing financial information unless the power of attorney signed over my mom's half of their house. He thinks we are working out signing the asset over. He doesn't know that we are filing for legal separation so she can apply as single and bypass the need for his cooperation. This will also cause him to lose the tax benefits of being married. We are all eager to get my mom safe so we can cut him out of our lives."

—u/happilycfintx

56. "My mom got scammed in a pig butchering scheme and heavily pressured my siblings and me to give her tens of thousands of dollars for months. She tried guilt-tripping us into thinking we were terrible people because we wouldn’t give her the money — which was for a stranger we didn't know, who apparently was the love of her life. She wouldn't listen to any of us when we warned her it was a scam. I eventually went no-contact. When she finally realized she got scammed (after losing pretty much everything), instead of admitting she was wrong, she said it wasn't her fault, and she wasn't thinking clearly because she was under a 'Nigerian black magic' spell. Just…no. WTF. 🤦🏻‍♀️"

"The money she was asking for was largely our inheritance from our dad, who passed away barely a year prior. She had divorced him over 16 years ago (she left him for someone else). Just to add another layer of complete fuckery on her part."

—u/mermaid_fairy

"Re: 'pig butchering scheme': I'm going to ask you how this works because I have never read these words together and I'm baffled but extremely curious."

—u/skresiafrozi

"It's a reference to how people used to fatten up the pig for 'harvest'. It is a financial scam where the scammer spends a good amount of time painting themselves as a friend or mentor to the target to set up emotional dependency before deploying the actual intention, which is to steal money. Sometimes, butchers pretend to love the 'pig' romantically.

Anyway, the scam is not immediate; that is why it's called pig butchering. It takes some time to 'fatten up the pig' and act like their friend so that when they finally start asking for money, it doesn't feel weird, because they've never asked you for money before and you've 'known them' for a while now. This is why those signs that say 'don't send money to anyone you don't know' don't register, because in their mind they DO know this person; they've been chatting about non-money stuff for months/years, and they don't clock that really, this IS still a stranger to them."

—u/call-me-the-seeker

57. And finally..."The juiciest gossip I have is that one of my grandmas has enough OnlyFans money to go meet her newest grandbaby next week."

—u/Rojodi

What's the most dramatic thing going on in your life right now, or a secret or piece of gossip that you're holding onto? Let us know in the comments or via this anonymous form.

If you or someone you know has experienced sexual assault, you can call the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673), which routes the caller to their nearest sexual assault service provider. You can also search for your local center here.

If you or someone you know is in immediate danger as a result of domestic violence, call 911. For anonymous, confidential help, you can call the 24/7 National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 (SAFE) or chat with an advocate via the website.

The National Alliance on Mental Illness helpline is 1-800-950-6264 (NAMI) and provides information and referral services; GoodTherapy.org is an association of mental health professionals from more than 25 countries who support efforts to reduce harm in therapy.

For help and support, ANAD’s eating disorder helpine is 1-888-375-7767

Your daily brain workout: Anyone Who Can Actually Complete This 25-Word Mega Word Chain Deserves A Medal And Bragging Rights Forever

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Source: “AOL Entertainment”

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