Catch Up With Octomom And Her 14 Children

Published on 11/28/2018
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Setting The Record Straight

Nadya recently sat with a reporter from the New York Times to speak more in detail about her experiences. She explained, “I’m at work on a book,” one that’s 13 years in the making, and it seems clear she wants to finally set the record straight. “That’s why I want to do this interview. I’ve been writing this manuscript since graduate school.”

Setting The Record Straight

Setting The Record Straight

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Weaving Around The Kitchen

As the reporter interviewed Nadya, he was quick to point out how the children worked so well together as a family, especially in the kitchen. He explained, ‘the children moved in unison, weaving around the tight kitchen and adjacent living room, while their mother checked on their brother Aidan, 13, who has autism’. It’s hard to believe that they all live in a three-bedroom Orange County townhouse, but he noticed how everyone worked in harmony. ‘One kid chopped veggies, one boiled water, one readied the silverware and on and on. The older children supervised, as Amerah, 16 warned the kids, “Be careful with that,” while also thumb scrolling’.

Weaving Around The Kitchen

Weaving Around The Kitchen

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