Anonymous wrote:I went to school with a set of twins who all the way through high school stayed as the twins. They looked identical, shared the same wardrobe, and had the same hair style. They talked the same, did the same sport, and rally had no identifying features. They were always together and they loved being identical twins.
It was a little strange that neither ever wanted to be an individual. No one could tell them apart and they played that up to be as similar as possible. I haven't seen them since high school but always found it strange how they had no individual identity. They had an older brother and he always said he couldn't tell them apart either. They were always referred to as the "last name" twins or if we were speaking just one of them we used their last name. No one even tried to use their first names.
Anonymous wrote:I went to school with a set of twins who all the way through high school stayed as the twins. They looked identical, shared the same wardrobe, and had the same hair style. They talked the same, did the same sport, and rally had no identifying features. They were always together and they loved being identical twins.
It was a little strange that neither ever wanted to be an individual. No one could tell them apart and they played that up to be as similar as possible. I haven't seen them since high school but always found it strange how they had no individual identity. They had an older brother and he always said he couldn't tell them apart either. They were always referred to as the "last name" twins or if we were speaking just one of them we used their last name. No one even tried to use their first names.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can you insist that family and friends get the names right?
In a large family / friend situation -- I think by answering to either name they are just being polite.
+1 Your girls are being polite.
There is nothing polite about pretending to be someone else. It's polite to just say "I'm Susan".
Have you never met twins?
Right?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you ever asked them if it bothers them that even family members and close friends confuse them sometimes? If yes, then you can brainstorm ways to look different like haircuts/dye, etc. I wouldn't insist that my 7 year olds correct older relatives all day when their best friends can barely tell them apart. What's the point?
My first cousin has identical twin daughters. The daughters are now in their early 40s and I am Facebook friends with them. When they were little, none of the family could tell them apart. I did not see them very often, but it was absolutely impossible to distinguish “Larla” from “Larlette.”. And not just impossible for me. Their own grandmother had trouble and she saw them frequently.
Fast-forward 35 years. The twins and I were at a funeral of an elderly relative and I had not seen them in-person for years. Yet, for some reason, I thought I could figure out which twin was which, since I am Facebook friends with both of them. I had a nice conversation with each twin separately and used their names. I was pretty proud of myself! Only later did I realize that I had switched them! I knew this because they were tagged in a family photo after the funeral and I recognized that I had confused them. I felt absolutely horrible and apologized to them each, via Facebook, and both were gracious. They laughed it off. They could have corrected me in any of our conversations, but I think they were simply trying to be nice. And to this day, they look identical, they style their hair the same way and have the same hair color, I don’t know how people tell them apart at all. But they seem to have adapted just fine.
Anonymous wrote:OP, reading your additional responses it sounds like they LIKE being very identical right now. It's a special bond they have. As long as both are on board, I don't think you have a problem right now.