Try GOLD - Free
Born to shine
The Australian Women's Weekly
|XMAS 2022
Twins Olivia and Zoe have already overcome unimaginable challenges. This year, they'll celebrate their fourth Christmas thanks to a new development in the care of premature babies, and to the special bond they share.
For 28 weeks and five days Olivia and Zoe were as close as two souls can be. The girls are momo twins-monochorionic-monoamniotic twins meaning that from the moment they blinked into existence they shared one home (a single amniotic sac) and one life source (a single placenta). But while they were growing, the cord that kept them tethered to this world became knotted and they were born via emergency caesarean.
The sisters were separated at birth into two humidicribs at the Melbourne Royal Women's Hospital's Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. There, medical staff cared for them while their parents, Ann and Jason, watched fretfully. A momo pregnancy is always high risk, and the early birth added another layer of danger. It was during this time that Jason and Ann first witnessed the powerful bond that would sustain the girls through their early battles and beyond. When they were finally reunited, still tiny and fragile, Zoe reached out for her sister, Olivia, and wrapped her in a hug.
"It was incredible. It's called the rescue hug. Apparently, it happens with a lot of pre-term twins," Ann says. "There are so many things about twins we don't know. They have this intuition, like a mother's intuition, where they just know what the other needs."
It was when Olivia and Zoe were side-by-side that they were strongest. By the time their original due date arrived, they had cheated death more than once, surviving a perilous pregnancy, breathing difficulties and identical holes in their hearts.
As they've grown, so has their connection. Big sister Olivia, who is two whole minutes older, takes the lead, while Zoe is an enthusiastic follower of her sister's escapades.
This story is from the XMAS 2022 edition of The Australian Women's Weekly.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Australian Women's Weekly
The Australian Women's Weekly
Spotlight on Newcastle
It's a rising star of Aussie tourism and we have the inside scoop.
1 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
Got your back
Back pain brings down four million Australians every year, but what can get you back up again?
6 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
Is my phone spying on me?
Ever get the feeling your phone knows what you want before you do? The Weekly investigates just what our phones know about us, who they're telling and how to take control.
7 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
Is coffee cancelling your vitamins?
It may be a daily pleasure, but sipping your morning brew at the same time as taking your supplements could reduce their effectiveness.
2 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
On the horizon
This clifftop home, set against ocean views, has nurtured everyday adventures for a party of four (and their four-legged friend).
3 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
The Thornbacks by Chloe Wilson
A 'thornback' can refer to one of two things: A species of stingray known for the spikes or 'thorns' which grow on the female rays and harden as they get older, and a woman who is unwed and older than a spinster.
1 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
The most powerful thing about Artemis II wasn't the rocket ...
Australian of the Year and astronaut Katherine Bennell-Pegg writes exclusively for The Weekly about how women – and Australia – are shaping the world's next giant leap into space.
4 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
A fond farewell
As our columnist signs off on her time at The Weekly, she reflects on the milestones she's celebrated - and shared with readers - along the way.
3 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
'Our secret world of corals'
A Queensland mother and daughter were exploring their shared love of diving when they accidentally discovered the largest coral colony ever measured on the Great Barrier Reef.
7 mins
June 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
LET'S PARTY LIKE IT'S 1999!
The '90s are having a moment. Is it the fashion, the music or the movies we long for most? Or is it a sense of freedom to be unapologetically ourselves and laugh out loud about it.
5 mins
June 2026
Translate
Change font size

