This woman was once very popular in France because she gave birth to six children at the same time, all of whom survived. 😱 The couple had a hard time managing so many children and finally breathed a sigh of relief when they finished school and went off to different universities. 😲
What the six twins look like today is shown in the article below the photo. ⬇️⬇️

In France, everyone used to know her name. The press called her “Baby Boomer Mom,” and magazines published photos of her newborns on their front pages.
Marie-Claude Adam, 28, became the first French woman to give birth to six children at once—a true medical miracle.
Marie-Claude married Daniel Adam when she had just turned 19; he was much older, more serious, and established. The family was well-off, so the couple didn’t plan on delaying the birth of children.
But no one expected the first pregnancy to hold such a surprise. At the 32nd week, following an emergency cesarean section, six premature babies were born—four girls and two boys.

They were all immediately placed in incubators. Despite the risk, the doctors were optimistic: the children had no serious pathologies, only a lack of weight.
Under the doctors’ supervision and care, they quickly began to gain weight and develop like ordinary children.
Raising six children is no easy task. The Adam family’s home resembled a small daycare. Marie-Claude devoted herself entirely to caring for the children. While Daniel worked and supported the family, she devoted all those years to motherhood.
When the children grew up, their organization was impressive. The girls were in the same class, the boys in a parallel class. Each had their own character, their own passions, but they always remained close.

Over time, everything changed. After graduation, the teenagers went their separate ways—different universities, colleges, and cities.
The house emptied, and the couple, who had lived for years in constant care mode, found themselves alone for the first time in a long time. Their relationship couldn’t survive this new phase. Soon, Marie-Claude and Daniel divorced.
Today, Marie-Claude is retired; she previously worked in a school. She is not only a mother, but also a grandmother. Daniel is also retired and a grandfather. They live in different houses and lead separate lives.

The six children—now adults—live in different parts of France. They speak from time to time, but rarely all meet together.
The whole family only gets together three times a year: in September for their father’s birthday, in November for their mother’s, and in December for Christmas. But even then, sometimes someone can’t make it, and one or two places are missing at the table.







