There are plenty of people who are blessed with outstanding skills. They’re mostly the hub of people’s interests. Purposely because of their special characteristics, twins evoke so much allure and admiration. That’s why we couldn’t resist the photos of these twins sisters we came across on the internet who look so much alike. Just take quick survey anywhere in the world and ask women if they’d love to have twins as offspring.
The response would be overwhelmingly in the affirmative. In the modeling industry today, there are these identical twins who are amazing enough to identify who is who among them, and these beautiful two models are using that to promote their modeling career. Ruth Legacy one of the twins earlier posted some pictures of herself and that of her twin sister Wear, both dressed in indistinguishable and amazing outfits. At first, it seems these twins are conjoined twins, but in an actual sense, they manipulate their posture in order to freak and confuse the viewers. Moreover, people have been commending the photographer that took the shots.

He really knows the right angle to accomplish what they expected. However, if one closely took his time to check these pictures very well, you’ll come to realize that one of the twins is closely behind the other and has folded her arm rightly behind the other while the other twin behind the first twin positions her other hand forward. All these are just to gain the attention of their fans and make it look real to viewers. These confused pictures have really gained them more fans all around the country. These beautiful twins have actually put up with their natural attributes as an advantage to confuse the world as if they are conjoined twins.
Also, to encourage the disabled about how important they are to society, these twins have actually taken their natural features as an advantage, as you would think that they are conjoined twins. Like, for instance, take a look at the picture above. You’d think that they’re both conjoined, but the truth is that they just know how to pose so well that you wouldn’t even notice that they’re not conjoined. In this picture, one of the twins is sitting behind her sister, while the other, who is seated behind, also has her arm tucked behind her twin as well. Even at that, the attention to detail that they possess makes these pictures look so realistic that you might be tricked into thinking that they’re conjoined.
Another inspiration journey for these twins life on a hobby farm in the suburban outskirts of Des Moines, Iowa for 17 year old triplets Madeline, Mackenzie and Macy is pretty much like an extra helping of Americana, with a healthy side of sweet corn and a milkshake filled to the brim. Their days are filled with schoolwork planning for College and after school’s activities and jobs. Madeline runs track and is in show choir. Mackenzie found her calling via Future Farmers of America, and Macy spends every spare hours she can working the counter at the Dairy Queen with her best friend. I take the orders because nobody likes to take orders because if we’re busy, you’re the person who has to deal with people.
So I’ll take the people’s money and hand out their blizzards and Liberty makes the ice cream, says Macy. Naturally, there are chores. This is the Midwest and the farm, after all, and there are animals that tend to man lies in charge of the trash, too. We have two dogs, three cats, and like ten horses, Macy says. My pony is Nancy Midnight Nancy, and Macy’s horse is Smoke and Madelines is Lulu.
Mackenzie adds, going into more detail, Nancy had a pig disease when we found her, and my mom has a thing where if she sees a sick animal, she can’t leave it alone. And of course, there’s the hanging out with friends and going for rides and cars in small Midwestern town. We either drive around or watch movies, or we usually go eat together because it’s the only thing to do in town, Macey says. My driveway looks a lot like a used car lot, the girl’s mother, Darla, says, laughing and noting that each of her daughters has her own car and hectic schedule. There are five automobiles at any given time.
All in all, it’s a life that many American teenagers would recognize and understand immediately, except when strangers come up to them in public and begin peppering them with questions they’ve had to answer their entire lives. I don’t really like to be known as the girl that was conjoined to her sister, Macy said at school. We want everyone to know us as normal kids. America’s miracle Babies McAsey and Macy made national news as infants. Though they in Madeline were born as triplets, Mackenzie and Macy were conjoined, sharing a pelvis and a third leg, a set of circumstances that’s incredibly rare.

In September 2003, the pair were separated at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, in a bogglingly complex, 24 hours surgery that required an army of specialists and support staff, and that followed intense planning at seemingly endless levels. It was in the vicinity of 100 people once you count the various shifts of nurses, radiology technicians, surgeons just for the or portion, and then the countless other people involved in post op, says James Stein, chief medical officer at CHLA and Ford Theodore Miller Murphy, chair of surgical oncology.
He was the lead doctor on the baby separation surgery. They needed so many of the CSLA staff because the decision to separate Mackenzie and Macy affected seemingly almost every aspect of the tiny children’s bodies. It was making sure we could safely separate the liver and the intestine where it joined together and separate the pelvis and still get the pelvis closed into a ring and then close the abdominal wall, Dr.
Stein says. Because they shared a lot of skin and muscle, we had to get that closed as well. From the anesthesia standpoint, there was a whole piece of having two babies asleep at the same time and then in separate rooms for a period of 24 hours. And then beyond that, it came down to the post office care and taking care of them in the neonatal ICU and rehab, getting them ready to head home. Darla, who had just adopted the triplets at that point, remember the constant shuttling back and forth to the hospital from what was then their home in Riverside, California.
It was a lot of driving to La, she says. A lot of paperwork. But on the day of the surgery, I would say there was just a sense of peace. I was never worried. I just had a sense that everything would be okay because I had immense confidence in the team.
They were just above and beyond to make sure everything was in order and safe, and that gave us a lot of comfort. Dr. Stein credited the deep bench fielded as a reason why everything from planning to post office went so smoothly on so many levels. It’s something a major children’s hospital is able to pull off, and I think we were uniquely positioned with the expertise and the various subspecialties general Pediatrics, neurology, orthopedics plastic surgery to be able to take care of this, says Dr. Stein.
Everything leading up to it. Our radiologists had to come up with ways for the types of visualization we needed to make those critical decisions, we needed to plan for surgery. We had a Corps of nurses who were so dedicated to figuring out how this could work, it really covered this whole organization. Neither Macy nor Mackenzie remember anything about the surgery, but Madeleine said she still has fuzzy memories of visiting her sister before and after at CHLA. I remember a scary elevator with doors that opened both ways, she said.
I remember Dr. Stein a lot. He was just a super nice guy and always really fun to interact with him and be around him. But though their memories of CHLA are vague at best, the triplets now juniors in high school credit the hospital and the people who took care of them for giving them inspiration for what they do with their own lives. Mckenzie intends to become a lawyer who fights on behalf of farmers.
Madeline wants to become a nurse anesthesiologist and Macy, who had a longer post operation recovery than Mackenzie, is going to be an ultrasound technician. I was sick for a while and had to have all my ultrasounds done a lot, and I found it fascinating how they figured out what was wrong with people, Macy said. Back in Los Angeles, Dr. Stein said the family left a lasting impact on CHLA, too. We continue to talk about the story as a big event for us and that it really elevated us and internally our ability to work together and take on the most complex problems, he says.

One of the really enjoyable parts of being in a place like Children’s Hospital is being able to take in the most complex cases out there and have both the personnel and infrastructure, as well as the approach to teamwork to make all that successful. There are still lingering issues, of course. Mackenzie just had surgery to treat worsening scoliosis, and both use crutches again, shedding the prosthetic legs that they used to wear when they were younger. Because standard prosthetic legs hang some weight on the hip bone, the girls with their reconstructed pelvis, had to instead resort to using bulkier, less mobile devices that weighed £25. And then there are the questions.
I’m glad it’s not an every month thing where people come up and say, hey, I want to know what’s going on with you, because it’ll be boring, Macy says. I’d rather have people ask questions than stare, says Mackenzie. I don’t mind people asking questions. She’d probably rather talk about her new position as an officer with Future Farmers of America. Though we’ve been told time and time again that we’re really good at explaining it, especially to little children, Madeline said.
I tutor first graders, and we brought Madeline in once and explained what happened and what the surgery was. One asked her, can you read your sister’s mind? We explained that they were stuck together at the pelvis and showed them where the bone was and know they can’t read each other’s minds. Madeleine couldn’t help but chuckle, though. Sometimes we do consider telling them that they can, she admitted.