Houston Chronicle

The Octomom has proved us all wrong.

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LAGUNA NIGUEL, Calif. — The 9-yearolds have matching button noses; toothy grins; roaming, smiling eyes. Noah and Josiah are Nordic blond and fair, Nariyah and Maliyah olive and deeply brunette, and their four brothers — Jonah, Jeremiah, Isaiah and Makai — run the gamut.

“Hand me the spoon,” said Maliyah, standing at the stove. “I’m already mixing the potatoes,” Josiah said.

The children moved in unison, weaving around the tight kitchen and adjacent living room of their three-bedroom Orange County town house as their mother checked on their brother Aidan, 13, who has autism.

One kid chopped veggies, one boiled water, one readied the silverware and on and on. “Be careful with that,” warned Amerah, 16, supervisin­g while thumb scrolling.

Twelve-year-old Calyssa colored quietly while “the eight” hustled like “Top Chef ” contestant­s. A fat gray-striped cat named Penelope slinked by. Two teenage brothers were playing Fortnite in another room.

A boogie board was propped up on a wall with chipped paint; a giant stuffed Minnie Mouse rested along a row of couches. A pumpkin-spice candle flickered at a dinner table, which despite the size of the family somehow had only two chairs.

There are 14 siblings in all, so many that they eat in shifts. Some sleep on a couch.

The octuplets are small for their age, but they’re polite, they cook, they’re vegan, they read two books a month, and they do their homework without being prompted. Despite all of the horror stories in the tabloids since the birth, they’re model fourthgrad­ers. How did she do it?

ORIGIN STORY

In 2008, Natalie Suleman was implanted with 12 embryos by Dr. Michael Kamrava, a Beverly Hills

fertility specialist who had also implanted her for all six of her previous in vitro pregnancie­s.

It was hard to believe the octuplets all came from the same father — an unidentifi­ed sperm donor — and even harder to process that Suleman didn’t know she was having so many babies at once. But that’s what she says.

It took 46 scrambling doctors and nurses to perform the Csection when Suleman went into labor at 31 weeks. The babies weighed between 1 pound 8 ounces and 3 pounds 4 ounces. Six boys and two girls. Never before had so many been born at once and survived, a medical marvel overshadow­ed by its treatment in the supermarke­t glossies.

Suleman played the callous broodmare, a cartoon character called Octomom. She spent hundreds of thousands on plastic surgery to resemble her idol Angelina Jolie, the magazines accused: a single mom on food stamps, a crazy who’d do anything to build a family. In other words, a character perfect for our so-called reality era, when circus sideshows become the main act.

It wasn’t surprising that Suleman cashed in. But when the money ran out, she turned desperate: a short-lived pornograph­ic film career, stripping, boxing. A lawsuit by Gloria Allred followed accusation­s of child endangerme­nt and exploitati­on, and Suleman went on “Oprah” and “Dr. Phil” to shore up her side.

Public interest eventually waned, and tasked with caring for so many, Suleman said, she turned to booze and Xanax from 2011 to 2013, before briefly checking in to rehab. During this time, friends and family helped take care of the children.

“I was pretending to be a fake, a caricature, which is something I’m not, and I was doing it out of desperatio­n and scarcity so I could provide for my family,” she said on the phone in October. “I’ve been hiding from the real world all my life.”

“I’m at work on a book,” she said, one 13 years in the making. She hopes it will set the record straight. “That’s why I want to do this interview. I’ve been writing this manuscript since graduate school.”

“I was the classic victim,” Suleman said at her home last month. A victim of having an alcoholic father, she said, a victim of having been an only child, hungry to fill that void. A victim of fate, since she couldn’t conceive naturally. Most of all, she said, “I was misled by my doctor.”

Suleman said she only wanted twins, but that Kamrava, a graduate of Case Western Reserve University with 30 years of experience, pushed her to consent to implanting additional embryos while she was strapped to a gurney and under the influence of heavy narcotics.

“He told me we lost six embryos; he said they were expelled out of me, and that’s why he wanted to implant another six,” Suleman said. Kamrava has maintained that she pressured him into the multiple rounds of implants.

Suleman, who grew up in nearby Fullerton, has a bachelor’s degree in child developmen­t and worked for a state mental hospital for three years before suffering an injury that resulted in over $80,000 in disability payments. A subsequent family inheritanc­e of $60,000 helped fund her IVF.

The octuplets’ birthday is in January. They’ll be 10. Suleman said the doctor has had no contact with her or the children.

Kamrava, an Iranian national, lost his U.S. medical license in 2011. Unable to practice, he left the country after a failed medical board appeal in 2016. At least two doctors believe that he is teaching his methods abroad. (Attempts to reach Kamrava were unsuccessf­ul.)

“Most doctors would not do something like that just because the patient will do it,” said Dr. John Zhang, who faced similar criticism for helping create a three-parent baby this year.

Medical guidelines suggest a woman in her 30s should be transferre­d no more than two embryos at once, but it’s not law.

‘THEY CREATED THIS CARICATURE’

“I was selfish and immature,” said Suleman, now 43. She doesn’t admit fault, she wouldn’t change the past, she loves her angels too much. But she admits to an ever-consuming “need for more.”

“I never wanted the attention,” she said, somewhat contradict­orily. She said that hospital staff breached her records and sold her out to the media: “There were helicopter­s flying over the hospital while I was giving birth.”

Her answers kept zigzagging. “I have PTSD from all the reporters coming in over the years. I would take whatever I could back in the days, and I would let them in. I was spiraling down a dark hole. There were no healthy opportunit­ies for Octomom. I was doing what I was told to do and saying what I was told to say. When you’re pretending to be something you’re not, at least for me, you end up falling on your face.”

Suleman won’t reveal how much she was paid by the National Enquirer or Star, maintainin­g: “Octomom was media-created. I believe most media is filtered and fake. They created this caricature.”

With a nervous laugh, she said, “Once I finally ran away from all of the pretending, I was able to be me.”

But physically at least, that “me” has been irrevocabl­y transforme­d.

“My back is broken because of the last pregnancy,” Suleman said, damage exacerbate­d by years of running half-marathons. The whole family, she said, would run a 5K after Thanksgivi­ng.

Sipping alkaline water and crouching at the foot of the table, she listed her ailments with a kind of pride: “Four out of the five discs in my lumbar spine are ruptured, herniated fully. Think of a jelly doughnut being squashed, and it hits nerves, causing bilateral sciatica. And I have irreparabl­e sacral damage. And I have peripheral neuropathy. I haven’t felt my toes on my foot on the right side for many years, and my fingers are numb all the time every day. The pregnancy caused it. The eight. My size, my abdomen was all the way out here.” She stretched a hand for emphasis.

Suleman said that she is working full time as a counselor but then added that she is focusing on family and relies on government assistance and “internatio­nal photo shoots.” As with other statements she made, it was hard at times to get an entirely clear picture.

She doesn’t date, she said, and she doesn’t have contact with the men who donated sperm to achieve her dreams. She did have breast augmentati­on, which she regrets, but she called the Angelina Jolie accusation­s false. So is the child endangerme­nt. She said Protective Services is among her strongest supporters. If they believed she was a danger, they would have taken the children. (According to Suleman, her representa­tive beat Allred’s suit; Allred declined to comment.)

SUPER EIGHT

The woman does have clear social phobias, but she isn’t the monster the public may expect. There’s a fragility that makes one want to root for her, and there are her children, who appear to be thriving. “They’re the only surviving eight octuplets in the history of mankind,” Suleman said, beaming. “I’ve raised them to be wide-awake.”

Their mother’s sex tape, her drug use: “We talk about everything,” Suleman said. “They know; they went through it with me. It’s a huge weight lifted off of all of them when I went back to who I was. We were struggling financiall­y, but it was such a blessing to be able to be free from that. Those were chains.”

For a time, her manager was a pornograph­ic film star who led her into the XXX world; if Suleman puts that in her book, it could be a great guilty read.

“I wanted to quit, but my manager said, ‘If you do, I’m reporting you to welfare for fraud.’ I gave my bank account to her to control because I was so overwhelme­d and busy managing my family. Checks that were forged — minimum $60,000 was stolen in six months. And she was selling stories left and right. She was a predator.”

What about their father? “Maybe the kids will meet him at 18, the donor,” Suleman said. “I don’t know.”

“She’s been fighting for our family for 10 years now,” said Amerah, who’s like a second mother to the eight, which is what everyone calls them. “No matter what, she’s never going to give up, and I know that,” Amerah said.

The children themselves live largely insulated. “Most of my friends don’t know about the eight,” Amerah said. “When they were born, I was in elementary school. I would get questions about everything. But I would answer and say it’s my mom and my family. I was a little confused about that. I get that you’re interested, but I wouldn’t intrude on your family, why intrude on mine?”

Joshua, the 15-year-old gamer, said: “Some of my friends don’t have any siblings, so they want to know what it’s like. It’s nice to have someone to play with, but it can be overwhelmi­ng at times.”

Days begin at about 6:20 with a one-woman car pool — in a battered Ford E-350 Super Duty van she calls “the dump truck” — and caretaking. After school: cleaning, chores, bed by 8:30. Saturday family fun nights with vegan junk food and TV are a treat, but most outings aren’t as a group.

“She’ll get anxiety, everyone staring, so she’ll take whoever’s behaving the best. There’s ups and downs,” said Amerah, who hopes to be an orthopedic surgeon and have a large family of her own.

“Not 13, 14 kids,” though, she said. “Four. That’s big enough.”

 ?? John Francis Peters / New York Times ?? Natalie Suleman, otherwise known as Octomom, at home with “the eight”: Noah, Jonah, Josiah, Makai, Nariyah, Maliyah, Jeremiah and Isaiah in Laguna Niguel, Calif. Suleman made headlines almost 10 years ago when she gave birth to eight children at once.
John Francis Peters / New York Times Natalie Suleman, otherwise known as Octomom, at home with “the eight”: Noah, Jonah, Josiah, Makai, Nariyah, Maliyah, Jeremiah and Isaiah in Laguna Niguel, Calif. Suleman made headlines almost 10 years ago when she gave birth to eight children at once.

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