Elvis Presley was born on January 8, 1935, in a small two-room house in Tupelo, Mississippi, to Vernon and Gladys Presley. Although history remembers him as an only child, Elvis was actually one of a pair of identical twins.

His brother, Jesse Garon Presley, was delivered about half an hour earlier but was born lifeless. Because of this tragedy, Elvis grew up without a sibling, never knowing his twin in life.

At that time, the Presley family had almost no money. They couldn’t afford a proper coffin, so Jesse was buried in a simple shoebox, tied with a red ribbon. He was laid to rest at Priceville Memorial Gardens in Tupelo, near the graves of their relatives, Susan and Noah Presley.

Despite never meeting him, Elvis carried his twin’s presence with him throughout his life. According to Larry Geller — Elvis’s close friend, personal hairstylist, and spiritual confidant — the story of Jesse deeply affected the singer. Geller later wrote that the loss of his twin was a profound and lifelong mystery for Elvis, something that shaped him emotionally.

During their very first serious conversation, Elvis spoke openly about Jesse. Geller noted that this was a subject Elvis rarely discussed, but on that day, he shared his feelings freely. It was clear that Elvis was troubled by the idea that he might have lived while his brother did not.

Elvis once explained it this way: being a twin always felt strange and painful to him. They had shared the same womb, yet only one of them survived. He often wondered why his brother never got a chance at life and why he himself was the one who lived. The question of “why me?” stayed with him for years, and he admitted that thinking about it sometimes overwhelmed him.