A woman having a quiet meal at a restaurant got the shock of her life when she looked up and saw what appeared to be her own face staring back at her from across the room. She pulled out her phone, zoomed in, and the internet has not recovered since.
The TikTok user, who goes by Tiara (@tiaraareneeee), posted the clip with a caption that said she was “literally looking at myself from across the room.” She panned the camera from her own face to the other woman’s, and even at an angle, the resemblance was striking. An on-screen text read: “POV: a stranger walks in with the same face as you.” The video has racked up 4 million views, according to BroBible.
The internet had a lot to say
The comment section split almost immediately into two camps. One side found the whole thing cute and wanted the two women to become friends. “I hope she sees this lol, y’all could literally be besties,” one user wrote. Another went full multiverse theory: “What if that was YOU in a different timeline.”
But a large chunk of the comments went in a very different direction, warning Tiara that this was no laughing matter. “This is not a good thing, you’re not suppose to meet your doppelgänger,” one wrote. “I met mine and my entire life changed!” Another told her flatly: “Girl, run! You aren’t supposed to meet your doppelgänger!” A third simply noted, “They say that you should never meet your doppelgänger.”
It might sound superstitious, but that warning has roots stretching back centuries.
What folklore actually says about doppelgangers
The word doppelgänger comes from German and literally means “double walker.” The concept, however, goes much further back than the word itself. Ancient Origins notes that across folklore and mythology, doppelgangers were generally viewed as bad omens, not fun coincidences. Seeing your own double was considered a sign of impending death. If a friend or family member spotted yours, it was taken as a warning that illness or danger was coming your way.
According to Atlas Obscura, both English and German folk traditions held that encountering your double three times meant death would soon follow. The belief was widespread enough to span cultures: Irish folklore called the phenomenon a “fetch,” Norse mythology described the “vardøger,” and ancient Egypt had the concept of the “ka,” a spiritual double said to exist alongside every living person.
The most famous real-world example is Abraham Lincoln. As documented in the 1895 book “Washington in Lincoln’s Time,” Lincoln reportedly saw two versions of his own face in a bureau mirror shortly after his re-election. One image appeared noticeably paler than the other. His wife interpreted it as a sign he would not survive his second term. He was assassinated in 1865.
How this one actually ended
Just like this woman who got violently sick on a 10-hour flight and accidentally unlocked first class, Tiara’s story ended better than it started. She posted several follow-up videos explaining that she never actually walked up to the woman herself. It was a friend who first pointed out the resemblance. Eventually, the doppelgänger was tagged in the comments by someone who knew her, which led to the two connecting on Instagram and later going live together.
The doppelgänger, identified in follow-up posts as a woman named Arye, reportedly admitted she had also noticed the resemblance during the restaurant encounter but had been too shy to say anything. The two have since referred to each other as twins.
Whether or not you believe the old warnings, most people in the comments seemed relieved the story ended with a friendship and not a trip to the emergency room. Although, as this Kansas City woman who filmed her Chili’s salad and found a grasshopper still moving in it can tell you, strange things do happen at restaurants.











