In a world where friendship often dances on the edge of trust and humor, one person dared to blur the lines with a playful deception. What began as a simple prank—claiming to be an “Appletarian,” a devotee to apples alone—quickly spiraled into a test of belief, patience, and the bonds that hold friends together. The relentless commitment to this fruity facade stirred emotions, shifting laughter to frustration, and curiosity to concern.
As days turned into a week, the joke transformed into a poignant experiment in human nature. Friends grappled with disbelief and growing worry, their reactions a raw testament to how deeply we care when something seems amiss. It was more than just apples on a plate; it was a mirror reflecting trust, skepticism, and the messy beauty of connection.

AITA for pretending to be an “Appletarian” (eating only apple derived foods/drinks) for 3 weeks as a prank, causing my friends to have an intervention for me?














As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.”
This situation highlights a significant boundary failure rooted in a lack of consideration for relational impact versus personal amusement. The OP prioritized maintaining the integrity of their elaborate, three-week-long deception over the emotional well-being and trust of their friends and girlfriend. While the OP views this as dedication to a ‘solid joke,’ the behavior crosses the line from harmless teasing into manipulation. The friends and girlfriend reacted based on perceived reality—that the OP was engaging in potentially dangerous behavior (severe dietary restriction)—leading to a natural escalation toward intervention. The OP’s decision to maintain the ruse until the planned intervention, rather than admitting the truth earlier, demonstrated a disregard for the significant emotional labor and concern invested by others.
The breakup with the girlfriend, specifically citing embarrassment during a date night, underscores how the OP’s actions directly impacted shared social perception and intimacy. For future interactions, the OP must establish clearer internal boundaries regarding humor: a joke is generally considered successful only when all participants ultimately find it funny or harmless. When a prank evokes genuine distress, concern, or requires sustained deception that affects social function, the humor is negated by the relational cost. A constructive recommendation is to practice ‘pre-mortems’ before initiating long pranks: asking what the worst-case scenario is for the *other* people involved, and ensuring that the reveal is immediate upon any sign of genuine negative reaction, rather than waiting for a dramatic climax.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.


























The original poster (OP) feels their commitment to a long-running prank about restrictive eating was solid and that their friends and girlfriend should have appreciated the effort. The central conflict lies between the OP’s desire for a successful, elaborate joke and the genuine concern and eventual distress caused to their social circle, leading to serious relationship consequences.
Given the significant negative reactions, including an intervention and a breakup, the core question is whether the duration and depth of deception involved in a prank justify the emotional investment and distress caused to others, or if a joke loses its value when it damages trust?







