On November 19, 1997, Bobbi McCaughey and her husband,
Kenny, made headlines when she safely delivered the world's first surviving set
of septuplets in Des Moines, Iowa. The arrival of Kenny Jr., Alexis, Natalie,
Kelsey, Nathan, Brandon, and Joel — born at 2.5 pounds to 3.4 pounds — was
heralded as a medical miracle.
Now, the McCaughey septuplets are 18 and preparing to
head out on their own for the first time. The seven seniors at Carlisle High
School are all busy making plans for life after graduation. Brandon has
enlisted in the Army, starting June 1, while the other six have college plans.
(They also have an older sister, 19-year-old Mikayla, who got married last
summer and lives nearby.)
"It will be pretty drastic," their mom, Bobbi,
told the Des Moines Register. "Everyone gone all
at once."
Bobbi and Kenny had pursued in vitro fertilization after
the birth of their daughter Mikayla. But when they learned that she was
carrying seven embryos, the religious couple chose to keep them all — which
thrust them into a controversial spotlight.
But after the babies' safe delivery, it's been a
relatively normal road to adulthood, except for the media requests the family
fields each year around the kids' birthday. Or the fact that they live in a
seven-bedroom house that was donated when the kids were born. Or the free
vacations and food and college tuition they've been given. Or the time they met
President George W. Bush.
"My fear has always been that they see our jobs and
think that's all they need for nice stuff," Kenny, who works at a
metal-coating company, told the newspaper. "I've given them the cold, hard
truth slowly. No way could I afford this home on my salary. If you want
something, you have to work for it."
Bobbi is employed as a para-educator for special-needs
children — in addition to the work of raising eight children. Both she and
Kenny have tried to instill that work ethic into their kids.
The children have all held jobs (they have to buy their
own cell phones!) and saved money for college. But they won't necessarily need
it: at birth, several universities offered them free college education. At
least three of the kids — Natalie, Nathan, and Joel — plan to attend
Hannibal-LaGrange University in Missouri, one of the schools to offer tuition.
Natalie intends to study elementary education, while Joel and Nathan will both
pursue computer science.[yahoo news]
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