LinkedIn Humble-Brag Hall of Fame, Issue #5

LinkedIn Humble-Brag Hall of Fame, Issue #5

Issue #5: The "I almost didn't apply" template hits satirical maturity — two NHEF scholars in the same cohort use opposite strategies on the same day, one of them opening with an explicit refusal to use the formula. Plus: Reddit catches a pre-scheduled fake grind post with forensic timestamp evidence, a LinkedIn user takes personal credit for making Elon Musk a trillionaire, and Yashi Kesharwani writes a 40-like meta-critique that performs the very thing it describes.

LinkedIn Humble-Brag Hall of Fame
15/6/2026 · 9:18
1 suscripciones · 5 contenidos
Four specimens this week. One template that turned on itself. One Reddit community that caught someone faking a late-night grind session with forensic precision. And a LinkedIn user who claimed personal credit for making Elon Musk a trillionaire.
The "I almost didn't apply" template — which this column has tracked since Issue #1 — reached a milestone this week: a Nigerian scholar opened her acceptance post by explicitly refusing to use it. That's the template-maturity threshold. When the people writing inside a genre start citing the formula to disavow it, the formula has fully crystallized.
June 8–15, 2026. Let's get into it.

Henry Li, 10,238 followers, Education/AI/Sustainability. June 12, 2026. 193 likes, 73 comments — highest comment count of the week. 1
"I just got into YC's Paris Startup School and Redwood's After Hours. I almost didn't apply. The acceptance rates are tiny. What were the chances? But I sent both anyway. Because the pain of regret is greater than the pain of rejection."
The template mechanics here are textbook. Announce the wins first. Follow immediately with near-miss framing to preempt the accusation that the announcement is pure bragging. Supply a philosophy in the final beat ("pain of regret") that reframes the decision as wisdom rather than luck.
What Li has done is stack two acceptances in one post — two bites of the "I almost didn't apply" structure in a single sitting. YC Paris Startup School and Redwood After Hours are treated as parallel achievements, each requiring its own moment of manufactured hesitation, resolved by the same insight. The effect is something like telling two stories of courage in the same breath and landing on the same moral both times.
The post closes with: "DM for a Paris referral link."
That sentence does not belong to the template. It's a product. The entire philosophical journey — self-doubt, submission despite long odds, epiphany about regret — was also, it turns out, a conversion funnel. The philosophy was the hook. The referral link is the offer.
This isn't unusual in the genre. But Li's version is unusually efficient: seven sentences of emotional arc, one sentence of monetization. The 73 comments are mostly congratulations, a few requests for the referral link. The template converted.
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Specimen #2: The NHEF cluster — same scholarship, opposite strategies

Mariam Oluwatoyosi Oyelaja, Nigerian law student, NHEF (Nigerian Higher Education Foundation) 2026 Scholar. June 12, 2026. 177 likes, 79 comments. 2
Aliyah Adunola AAT, Nigerian student, NHEF 2026 Scholar. June 12, 2026. 311 likes, 64 comments. 3
These two posts were published within hours of each other on the same day, by two scholars in the same NHEF 2026 cohort (110 selected from 1,850+ applicants, a 6% acceptance rate). They are worth reading side by side.
Mariam's opens with a near-miss:
"My thoughts went back to how I almost didn't apply. I genuinely believed they weren't looking for someone like me and I nearly didn't submit my essays because of it."
Classic execution. Self-doubt as the obstacle; submission as the act of courage; acceptance as the reward. The post names eight people in the acknowledgment section. The tone is warm and earnest, and none of it reads as hollow — the imposter syndrome described is real and common among applicants to competitive scholarships.
Aliyah's opens with a repudiation:
"I would be lying if I said I almost didn't apply. I would be lying if I said I struggled with imposter syndrome throughout the process. And I would definitely be lying if I said I was surprised by the outcome. I've anticipated this LinkedIn post before the application even opened 😅"
She then continues: "Okay, that sounds like I have pride but I am actually proud. I am proud of how far I have come, of the person I have become."
Aliyah's version is structurally interesting because it uses the same occasion — scholarship announcement — but builds its credibility on the absence of the standard template. She didn't hesitate. She didn't doubt herself. She expected to get in. And she's saying so directly, which is a different kind of courage than the kind the template usually performs.
The result: Aliyah's post got 311 likes to Mariam's 177. The self-aware inversion outperformed the sincere execution of the template. Whether that's because the inversion felt fresher, or because Aliyah's explicit pride struck a chord, or simply because her network is larger — the difference registers.
What the NHEF cluster shows is that the "I almost didn't apply" formula has reached the stage where working against it is itself a legible move. The template has become the reference point. You can either perform it sincerely, perform it knowingly, or explicitly reject it and build your post around that rejection. All three strategies now exist simultaneously in the same cohort, on the same day.
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Specimen #3: The pitch-inside-a-pitch

Crown Johnson, Nigerian creator and founder, 4,850 followers, 239 posts. June 11, 2026. 92 likes, 83 comments — a comment-to-like ratio approaching 1:1, which is rare on LinkedIn. 4
"Today, I'm launching something I've been building for weeks 🥹🤍 Honestly? It feels a little surreal. Because for the longest time, this wasn't a website. It was a question I couldn't stop thinking about."
The post continues for several paragraphs covering the doubt phase ("The moments I thought: 'Maybe I should just scrap this entire thing'"), the conviction phase, and the launch. Halfway through, a hidden "treasure chest" appears — a free resource on Johnson's website, framed as a gift to readers. Near the end: "first 2 slots at launch pricing… once they're gone, they're gone!"
The 1:1 comment-to-like ratio is worth examining. On LinkedIn, likes are frictionless — they take one click and register passive approval. Comments require intention. When comments roughly equal likes, it usually means one of two things: the post generated genuine dialogue, or the call-to-action mechanics pushed people to respond. Johnson's post contains both a community prompt ("I'd love to know: what's the one thing holding you back?") and a scarcity signal ("first 2 slots"). The comments are likely split between people who were moved by the story and people who wanted the launch pricing.
The phrase "it was a question I couldn't stop thinking about" deserves its own note. It's the post-startup-origin version of "I almost didn't apply" — the product origin story dressed as a psychological journey. What makes it structurally similar is the move from internal state (confused, uncertain) to external product (the launch) via the bridge of conviction ("When you really believe in what you're building, people feel it," as Kendall Kransdorf put it this week in a different post). The internal journey is the credential. The product is what the credential is selling.

Specimen #4: The permission slip

Trina Hoefling, adjunct faculty at USC Bovard College, 2,530 followers, 1,616 posts. June 10, 2026. 118 likes, 43 comments. 5
"Occasionally I give myself permission to do a humble brag. I was just notified that I've been promoted to adjunct professor, the top promotion available to me."
The post then quotes — in full — the promotion letter from Dean John R. Keim, Ed.D., CAO of USC Bovard College. Subject line, salutation, body text, signature, all of it.
The phrase "I give myself permission" is doing something specific here. It frames the brag as a controlled exception to a default of modesty — as if Hoefling has a rule against self-promotion, and this achievement is important enough to waive the rule for. The phrasing implies that the post you're reading cost the author something.
The quoted letter is the other mechanism. By reproducing the Dean's words verbatim rather than paraphrasing them, Hoefling moves the authorship of the achievement to an institutional source. She isn't claiming the promotion — she's presenting the document that claims it for her. The humble-brag is delivered by proxy. The modesty is outsourced to the fact of quoting rather than asserting.
This is a mature variant of the template. The direct version ("I got promoted") would feel nakedly promotional. The "I give myself permission" framing plus the quoted letter adds three layers of indirection: a disclaimer, a delegated claim, and an institutional anchor. The promotion itself is real and earned. The question is why three layers of framing are required to present it.
Compare this to Aliyah Adunola's post from Specimen #2, which contains no permission-granting, no disclaimers, no proxy: just "I am actually proud." One of these took more words to say a simpler thing.

The immune response

Reddit's r/LinkedInLunatics (1,037,969 subscribers) did forensic work this week.
The top thread, 932 upvotes and 383 shares, was titled "Fable wasn't even available late Friday night…" 6 A LinkedIn user had posted about working late on Friday night using Fable, an app. The original poster u/krasnomo investigated and found that Fable was not available at the time the post claimed to have been written. The post was pre-scheduled. The grind session was staged.
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u/PersuasiveStrategist offered the most compact response: "You know, there's a reason why it's called fable." 6 u/GreyBeardEng added a practical note: "HR: 'you are fired for moonlighting'" — pointing out that if the grind session had been real, the post would have exposed the person as working a second job during hours they were presumably being paid for the first one. 6
The second major thread, 406 upvotes, 140 comments: "Musk is a trillionaire, thank me very much." 7 The underlying LinkedIn post featured someone claiming a front-row seat at a Musk event and crediting themselves with contributing to his trillionaire status, via a four-step framework.
u/flipyflop9 summarized it in seven words: "That's a lot of words to just say 'I'm a loser.'" 7 u/ToiletWarlord made the structural comparison: "Same behavior like those OF fans, that buy the model and her boyfriend a vacation." 7 The thread identified a specific genre of LinkedIn humble-brag that isn't really humble at all — it's grandiose credit-taking dressed in proximity to someone else's achievement. The humility, such as it is, lies in presenting yourself as a supporting character in someone else's story, while simultaneously claiming that your supporting role was decisive.
The Fable thread is the more interesting specimen technically. It caught something the "I almost didn't apply" analysis never can: a post that was designed to be authentic but wasn't. The scheduled-grind fake requires the reader to accept that the emotional state depicted (late-night dedication, heads-down work) existed at the moment of publication. When the app wasn't live, the timestamp fiction collapsed. The template requires a performance. Reddit has started fact-checking the production schedule.

What sincere looks like

Yashi Kesharwani, a brand strategist with 15,701 followers, posted this on June 9 — in all lowercase, in short staccato paragraphs: 8
"i am so glad linkedin's corporate, stiff, humble brag era is over. because now i find better memes here than instagram. like there's actual emotion here now. actual people just saying things that have no business being on a site where you also put your work experience."
And: "this platform had the worst reputation for being stiff and corporate and deeply uncool. and it somehow became the most human one."
The post got 40 likes and 38 comments — an almost 1:1 ratio, the same signal as Crown Johnson's launch post. It carried the [1/365] tag, implying this is the first entry in a daily writing challenge. The format is deliberate: no capitals, no polish, no structure, no acronym hinge. The aesthetic is the argument. The post is saying "the stiff era is over" in a style designed to prove its own claim.
It also, of course, performs. The all-lowercase format is a choice. The poetic fragmentation is a choice. The "I'm starting a 365-day writing challenge" framing is a standard LinkedIn engagement move. Kesharwani is aware of all of this — which is probably why the post is slightly self-deprecating in tone ("no business being on a site where you also put your work experience"). The self-awareness doesn't make it not a performance. It makes it a performance that earns its own observation.
This is the most honest version of the meta-critique: instead of claiming to be exempt from the genre's mechanics, acknowledge that you're operating inside them and let the quality of the observation do the work. The 38 comments aren't there because Kesharwani escaped the template. They're there because the post had something to say about the template that the template itself doesn't usually say.
A practical frame for the "I give myself permission" variant (Specimen #4):
Before writing a post that announces an achievement, ask one question: does the reader need the permission-granting framing to trust the news, or does the news stand on its own? If the promotion is real and the letter is real, the letter already speaks. What "I give myself permission" adds is modesty-signaling, which is a different thing from modesty. The sincere version of Hoefling's post is the quoted letter, a brief sentence of context ("I've been promoted to adjunct professor at USC Bovard"), and whatever specific request or invitation follows. The achievement doesn't need to ask forgiveness before announcing itself.

Cover: AI-generated for this column. Posts sourced from public LinkedIn and Reddit, June 8–15, 2026.

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