Identical twin sisters whose kinship is so strong they share the same sexual identity can’t bear to be apart for more than 24 hours — with their girlfriends even living with them in the same apartment.
Lyndsey and Louise Scott, 23, were born in Liverpool, United Kingdom, and for 18 years, the two never spent more than 24 hours apart.
“If one of us had a sleepover the other one would come or we both wouldn’t go. We shared a room for 18 years. We’re 99 percent the same,” Lyndsey told the Daily Star.
The two’s unison is so intact that Lyndsey says being around her sister is like “having another brain,” with the pair sharing the same taste in fashion, music — and even allergies.
“We’re allergic to the exact same things – when I was a baby I took penicillin and my head doubled in size so Louise has never been allowed to have it,” she told the outlet.
The girls are so attached that when Louise enrolled to study at the University of Liverpool in 2017, it prompted her sister Lyndsey to move into her sister’s dorm so that their “bond like no other” wouldn’t be disrupted.
“We love the idea of being twins,” the sisters said, conveying how attached they are to one another.
But their “fun and chaotic” bond was disrupted in 2018.
Louise decided to study abroad in Kingston, Canada — and for the first time in 18 years, the dynamic identical twin duo spent four long months apart.
“Now we live and work together. We’ve experienced everything in life together,” Lyndsey told the outlet.
The twins, who are lifestyle content creators, now live and work together in Liverpool with no plans of separating.
They continue strengthening their relationship and even include their romantic lives into the equation.
Both sisters are openly gay, with Lyndsey’s girlfriend Rose, a 25-year-old inspiring actor living with the twins in their apartment.
Lousie’s partner, Jenuelle, a 21-year-old who works in music management, is always staying at the apartment.
The girls revealed how important it was for them to find partners that would get along with not just one of them but both, seeing how the twins are not willing to have any further disruptions in each other’s lives because they are “99% the same.”
Identical twins share a deep understanding of each other that outsiders can not comprehend.
Studies have found that Identical twins are more likely to feel a closer kinship and experience less conflict than fraternal twins or normal siblings, according to the International Association for Relationship Research.
“For 23 years of our lives we’ve always had the exact same haircut and hair color except for when Louise went rogue and got rose gold,” Lyndsey said.