A viral tweet about an old letter is making netizens relate and laugh hard at the same time. The viral tweet is about a sister who wrote a funny letter to her father asking him to put her brother to jail forever.
The tweet was shared by the brother himself who thinks it is hilarious.
The viral tweet
Every sibling has their little fights, specifically when they were younger. Sometimes, these fights turn a little violent.
In the case of the siblings in the viral tweet, it seems like the younger sister was pissed off that her brother was always hitting her.
In the funny letter, she said, "Please put Krish Parmar in the jail forever as he is hitting me for no reason."
Aside from this, the younger sister also shared that she wants her brother to be in jail because he jumps on her and says, "Mari nakhis hu tane," which means "I will kill you."
The letter becomes funny when the younger sister even indicated that she is the "Sister of Stupid Krish Parmar." The young girl even urged her father to do it as soon as possible.
The funny letter was from years ago
Based on the replies of the brother, Krish Parmar, on the tweets sent to him, the letter only came to his attention a month ago.
He said that his sister Anaya is already eleven years old and that she probably wrote the letter when she was only eight or nine years old.
Krish said that his family kept the letter and even had copies of it.
Siblings can relate
In the brother's tweet, some netizens shared that they had the same experience as Anaya.
Others sympathize with Krish as they were also accused by their siblings as annoying.
Some Twitter users also said they have seen the same story with their children.
Netizens think the younger sister is hilarious.
In the viral tweet, that already has more than four thousand likes, netizens shared how they find the letter funny.
One Twitter user even joked that the brother is lucky that Anaya did not report it to authorities.
Another user noticed that the young girl who wrote the letter followed a formal letter format.
A netizen also recognized a second copy of the letter that was described as a strong-worded one.