Westside Eagle-Observer

Identical twins give birth hours apart

- JANELLE JESSEN jjessen@nwadg.com

Identical twin sisters Alissa Barnes of Maysville and Shiane Barnes of Gentry gave birth to healthy babies just hours apart on March 14 at Siloam Springs Regional Hospital.

Alissa and her boyfriend Traey Burge’s son, Kenneth Ray, was born at 9:20 p.m., and Shiane and her boyfriend Kyle Clark’s daughter, Gypsy River, was born at 11:41 p.m., according to their mom, Shanon Barnes.

The 23-year-old twins were born just five minutes apart themselves and, even though the sisters have completely different personalit­ies, they have been doing most things in sync ever since, Shanon said.

“They are twins,” she said. “They have to do everything at the same time.”

The sisters couldn’t have timed the pregnancie­s and births if they tried.

Shiane was the first to realize she was pregnant and shared the news with her family on July 4. A few weeks later, Alissa, who already had two children, realized that she also was pregnant. At first, Alissa didn’t want to share the news because she didn’t want to take the attention away from her sister’s first pregnancy, she said.

The sisters grew closer during their pregnancie­s and even took pregnancy photos in matching outfits, something they hadn’t done in years, Shanon said.

Shiane’s original due date was March 13 and Alissa’s was on March 22, Shanon said.

Alissa had some health complicati­ons and on March 14 she went to the hospital early in the morning to have labor induced.

Shiane was hoping her daughter would be born on March 17 — a St. Patrick’s Day baby — but a few hours later her water broke at home and she called Alissa to ask what contractio­ns feel like. After consulting with her sister, Shiane realized she was having contractio­ns about five minutes apart and she came to the hospital, where she was admitted to the room next door to Alissa.

Even though the sisters weren’t far apart, they weren’t allowed to see each other or share visitors because of the hospital’s one visitor per person policy, enacted due to coronaviru­s concerns. Because each of the fathers counted as the one visitor, Shanon also had to stay home during the experience. After the babies were born, the two sisters weren’t allowed to see their niece or nephew.

The twins used FaceTime to stay connected throughout their labor, they said.

“All our mom could do at home was pace the floor,” Alissa

said. “I know she wanted to be there … and with technology, we were still able to pull up video and show off the babies at a distance.”

Once Shiane heard that Alissa’s baby had been born, the race was on to make sure the two cousins had a birthday on the same day. Gypsy was born with just 19 minutes to spare before midnight.

“I wanted their birthdays to be as close as they could,” Shiane said.

Alissa and Shiane haven’t always been close, but the pregnancy and birth have been a bonding experience, they said.

Shanon described her daughters’ personalit­ies as “night and day.” Alissa has always been artsier, while Shiane was a cheerleade­r and manager of the wrestling team in high school, she said.

“I feel like we have always been kind of competitiv­e, mom has always said ‘like night and day,’” Shiane said. “I think this will make us closer.”

Shiane said it has been a relief to have someone who has already gone through pregnancy twice, go through it again with her.

Alissa had a miscarriag­e last year and went through a period of depression, which also caused her to pull away from her family, she said.

“It was nice for her to call me, not only to ask me if everything is normal or if I’m doing OK,” Alissa said. “It was nice not to go through it by myself.”

As identical twins, the sisters share the same DNA, so both babies already look more alike and will share more traits than the average cousins, Shanon said. The two sisters are looking forward to raising their babies together, with a lifetime of shared birthday parties to look forward to.

“Their birthdays are forever together,” Shiane said.

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Identical twins Shiane and Alissa Barnes gave birth just hours apart at Siloam Springs Regional Hospital on March 14. Even though they were in rooms next door to each other, the sisters were unable to see each other or their new niece and nephew at the hospital because of policies put in place to protect patients from the coronaviru­s. The twins and their infants were united the first time at a doctor’s appointmen­t the following week. Pictured are Shiane and her daughter Gypsy River (left) along with Alissa and her son Kenneth Ray.
SUBMITTED Identical twins Shiane and Alissa Barnes gave birth just hours apart at Siloam Springs Regional Hospital on March 14. Even though they were in rooms next door to each other, the sisters were unable to see each other or their new niece and nephew at the hospital because of policies put in place to protect patients from the coronaviru­s. The twins and their infants were united the first time at a doctor’s appointmen­t the following week. Pictured are Shiane and her daughter Gypsy River (left) along with Alissa and her son Kenneth Ray.
 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Shiane Barnes, her boyfriend Kyle Clark and their daughter Gypsy River get ready to head home from the hospital after Gypsy’s birth on March 14.
SUBMITTED Shiane Barnes, her boyfriend Kyle Clark and their daughter Gypsy River get ready to head home from the hospital after Gypsy’s birth on March 14.
 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Alissa Barnes, her boyfriend Traey Burge and their son Kenneth Ray settle in at home after Kenneth’s birth on March 14.
SUBMITTED Alissa Barnes, her boyfriend Traey Burge and their son Kenneth Ray settle in at home after Kenneth’s birth on March 14.

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