She recovered, but then struggled with depression and a visual impairment that therapy eventually corrected. “In the coming months and years, the couple will have to think about potty training, putting away the bottles and moving the kids from three daily naps to two. Jenny works about 10 hours a week, a couple hours at a time, usually during the lunch hours. The folks at Deal or No Deal gave the family a carriage specially made for the sextuplets.
The couple also hope to resume attending church on a regular basis. The couple took a five-day trip this spring - alone. “It’s so fun. Call Jenny Masche the Marathon Woman.
That’s when the babies start to rustle in their cribs, waking up by chattering to each other. m. Jenny feels that she is in better shape now than before she became pregnant. Jenny has thanks to give.
The babies “just ate everything off my body,” she said. And somehow during that first year of organized chaos, she also managed to train for and run a real marathon. That night is dedicated to school. Jenny carried the babies to 30 weeks and four days.
Blessed with an even temperament, Jenny takes in stride the ups and downs of mothering six kids at once. “That’s really hard for me. “We would like to think medicine had everything to do with these kids. Next Wednesday, the entire crew will be in New York to appear on the Today show.
“Back home, Jenny and Bryan get help from Jenny’s niece, Tiffani Mathews, who has moved in with them while she attends school to become a nurse. “It was way too long without the kids. For instance, when one is sick and wanting to snuggle all day, Jenny thinks the others may feel neglected. “It’s like, ‘How do I go from them being babies to little kids?’ ” she said.
The assistance allows Jenny to continue her own nursing career, splitting her time between a nearby urgent-care facility and a family practice. That trip was just for Bryan and Jenny. Kaznoski said they were born healthier than many of the premature single babies she has been involved with. A new phase of lifeNow, it’s on to toddlerdom, times six.
All of the kids are in the same room, each in his or her own crib. “I think it’s stressful and ask, ‘Why the heck are you doing this?’ ” Jenny said. “I feel like the last year has been a literal blink,” she said. Jenny, 33, hands a bottle to each, then changes their diapers.
Four of the six kids are crawling. “My days go by so fast. “You can hate every day or love every day. Jenny listens in on the monitor.