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Nadia Suleman is ready to share her parental journey according to her own conditions.
Sixteen years after welcoming eight babies to a hospital in the Los Angeles region, winning her name “Octom”, the 49 -year -old Suleman returns to the spotlight and shows what life is like growing the most long survivor October – Together with six additional children.
“I hoped and prayed one day to have the opportunity to actually share my true story, to have a voice when I did not have one at the beginning,” said Suleman on Friday, March 7, episode of ViewS “My children are now bigger. My October is already 16 and they encourage me greatly. “
In the entire six -part documentary series Oktomom’s confessionViewers will watch Suleman provide an intimate view of her history and her life today as a mother of 14 years. Along the way, she hopes to give viewers a look at the side of her family, which many have not seen.
Keep reading to see the biggest bombs of the series and watch Oktomom’s confession Life broadcast on Monday at 10:00 pm Et.
Whether it is driving in the car, training in a gym or shopping for groceries in a supermarket, Suleman prefers to keep his entire face and body covered for various reasons.
“I have been very consistent for decades since I was at the beginning of the 20s with sunscreen and I really deal with my skin from the sun,” she explained in the initial stage. “This is not the only reason. It certainly helps with my social anxiety. Nobody knows. They look and look at. This does not attract any attention because people do not want to watch and watch. “
While her children admitted that it may be strange to some, their mother’s public clothing is normal for them.
Days after welcoming eight children, Suleman reluctantly chose to participate in a television interview with former NBC News journalist Anne CurryS
“I felt terrible in myself. I gained 150 pounds throughout pregnancy, so at that moment I was still about 100 pounds more than normal, “she said. “They let me choose what interviewer, so I chose [for] Anchor for news and I didn’t know who she was. I have never watched anything she did. “
As for why she chose Curry, Suleman said “She is one of the only women,” which is on the list of available journalists and thought “I will feel comfortable talking to a woman.”
In the end, Suleman said he was not in the correct “frame of mind to be transparent or honest.” Instead, she felt she was “under attack” and she just wanted to reunite with her children.
During the documentation and in recent interviews, Suleman was summoned by Natalie’s birth name.
“I chose to go back to my birth name,” she explained, “because Nadia was intertwined with the pain associated with October at the time. “Future episodes promise to dive deeper into how and why Sulleman was able to emotionally move away from his Octomomal identity.
According to Suleman, the fact that she is a single mother has left her the goal of more solid titles and public outrage at what she thinks she would withstand if she welcomed her children with a partner.
“I guarantee that if I was more conventional and lead a more traditional lifestyle, the husband would act as a buffer in public hatred,” she said. “It would be far less difficult. There may have been a judgment, but it would not be a public outrage. “
To put it, Suleman said, “If I had a husband, there would be not much history.”
When she was 31 weeks pregnant, Suleman remembered that she was getting the horrific news, that one of her babies had stopped growing.
Not feeling any contractions, she hoped to wait until at least 34 gestational weeks before delivering her children. In the end, she had to make a decision.
“Or to save [Jonah’s] life [and] Within 24 hours, deliver all of them or allow it to stop growing and then pass and then allow others to become bigger, stronger so that they can fight, “she said. “I couldn’t let him die.” Syulemann days later welcomed eight healthy babies.
When she recalls the birth of her octaplets, Suleman described the delivery as “terrible”.
“I had to be induced. They made the epidural and the anesthesiologist approached me and said, “I’m sorry, but the tour of [your] The abdominal cavity is a little too large to allow all epidural to cover so [you] It may feel a little, “she recalled. “It was really euphemism because I felt everything.”
While numerous doctors – including an ultrasound technician – expected only seven babies to be delivered, Suleman had a “intuition of the mother” or a “bowel feeling” that she was expecting eight.
After the seventh baby was born, Suleman recalled the moment that “a resident went and examined the uterus to make sure everything was fine and he felt a hand.” Certainly, nearly 45 hospital workers working on Suleman’s delivery had to deliver a final baby.