They're sisters, they’re all four years old – but, remarkably, these three little girls are not triplets.
The eldest, Cara, was just nine months old when she became a big sister to twins Laura and Jenna.
Her
mother, Tessa Singh, 40, had become pregnant again within 12 weeks of
her birth, and the twins were born prematurely at 28 weeks.
It means for three months of each year, the sisters are all the same age.
Mrs Singh said: ‘People can’t believe it when I tell them all the girls are the same age, yet they aren’t triplets.
‘I can’t quite believe I’ve given birth to three girls in just nine months. I’ve certainly had my hands full.’
Mrs
Singh, a teacher, and her hairdresser husband Daynie, 39, had their
first daughter Cara in July 2008. They started trying for another baby
three months later.
Mrs
Singh said: ‘We had wanted to have babies close together so we thought
when Cara was three months old that we should start trying as we didn’t
know how long it would take.
‘If
it was going to take a year or so to fall pregnant, then we wanted to
start trying straight away. I actually fell pregnant the first time we
started trying, which was a bit of a surprise.’
The
couple, who live in Chorlton, Manchester, were in for a further
surprise when Mrs Singh went for a 12-week scan and the sonographer told
her she was expecting twins.
She
said: ‘I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I was in complete shock.
I’d had a lot more morning sickness with this pregnancy, but I had never
imagined that I could be carrying twins. There are no twins in either
side of our families.
‘I
was actually offered counselling by the hospital after I’d found out. I
think they thought that three babies in under nine months was a bit too
much to cope with.
‘We discussed it and decided that it was daunting, but as long as we were organised, then we would be able to manage.’
But in April 2009, when Mrs Singh was 27 weeks pregnant, she went into premature labour.
She
said: ‘It was so frightening that the babies were on their way at such
an early stage. We didn’t even know if they would survive. We really
thought that we were going to lose them.’
Doctors
at Royal Oldham Infirmary managed to hold off the contractions for a
week. Then the twins were delivered, each weighing only 2lbs.
The
girls were transferred to St Mary’s Hospital in Manchester. Jenna
suffered two bleeds on the brain, had a hole in her heart and had a
collapsed lung.
Mrs
Singh said: ‘It was a terrifying time for us when the twins were first
born. They were so tiny and so poorly. At one point we said goodbye to
Jenna, but amazingly she managed to fight on.’
Jenna was diagnosed with cerebral palsy and the doctors warned Mrs Singh that she may never walk.
But she has proved the medics wrong, something that Mrs Singh believes is down to her close relationship with her sisters.
She
said: ‘They have such a strong bond. Cara was only nine months old when
the twins were born, so she has never known life without them there.
‘It
is as if they are all triplets. They are never apart from each other.
She has just as strong a bond with the twins as they do with each other.
They always want to sleep all together on one bed.’
‘Jenna
has been helped so much by her sisters. It has given her the goal and
incentives to keep up with them, which has helped her enormously.’
She added: ‘It may have been a shock to give birth to three babies in nine months, but I wouldn’t change it for the world.’
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