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WATCH *****CH 5*****______EXTRAORDINARY PEOPLE________COUPLE WITH 27 CHILDREN__{23 with SN}________

27 replies

RTKangaMummy · 17/04/2006 18:46

MONDAY 17 APRIL



Documentary

Extraordinary People: The Couple with 27 Children

9:00pm - 10:00pm

Five




VIDEO Plus+: 9120388
Subtitled





Documentary about super-sized family the Murphys. In addition to raising four kids of their own, John and Jeanette Murphy have adopted 23 children, all of whom have special needs. John and Jeanette have created an amazing environment for their children to grow up in, but things cannot last forever. When the Murphys are too old to look after the family or pass away, who will look after their 23 adopted children?











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Socci · 17/04/2006 18:47

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RTKangaMummy · 17/04/2006 19:16

Don't know

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Greensleeves · 17/04/2006 19:17

I agree, Socci - quite barking Grin

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nikkie · 17/04/2006 19:23

But someone must have 'allowed' the adopting?

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Socci · 17/04/2006 19:26

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Socci · 17/04/2006 19:28

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hulababy · 17/04/2006 19:31

More about them here:


This is the story of Jeanette Murphy, Supermum. The 53 year-old from Atlanta, Georgia is a full-time carer who has adopted 23 children with special needs on top of her own four birth children. Remarkably, the family of twenty-nine all live under one roof.

Jeanette and her husband claim they felt a calling to help children with special needs. Jeanette first became interested in mental disability in her teens when she became friends with a Down’s Syndrome boy who lived on her road. The experience inspired her to work as a counsellor in a home for disabled adults, and it was there that she met her husband, John, a nurse. John shared her dream of bringing children into their family and providing them with a safe and loving home. “We found that the people we were looking after had already been raised and had picked up bad habits that we couldn't change. We wanted to reach out to them when they were younger,” says Jeanette.

In 1983, when they already had two biological children of their own, the Murphys adopted Shannon. 5-year-old Shannon was severely brain-damaged and hyperactive; she was extremely demanding and needed constant care. Nevertheless John and Jeanette felt encouraged to take on more children, including sweet-natured “family favourite”, baby Jonathan, who had Down’s Syndrome and had been wrongly diagnosed as blind. After that, the church adoption services contacted them every year with details of another child, and the Murphy family grew steadily. Adoption centres soon started referring parents who were reluctant to abort but unable to cope with disabled babies to the couple.

In the film, John and Jeanette’s birth children are asked how they felt about the idea of the ever-expanding family. Not that they had much choice; the Murphy children had to accept each adopted child in order to fulfil their parents’ dreams. “I never felt neglected,” says Shaun, the oldest of the children. “I never felt they weren’t paying enough attention to the biological children... It was like a team effort.” The children contribute to everyday life in the home, which the Murphys hope will aid in the development of their social skills.

Looking after such a huge family is obviously no mean feat. The monthly food bill is around £9000 and it’s a 24/7 job. The extended family has to manage on community donations and disability payments. Their house is cramped, with bunk beds housing up to four children per room. But the Murphys’ unwavering life ethic has enabled them to develop a unique approach to caring for the mentally disabled. They are convinced that a loving family home is the best possible environment in which to nurture the potential of these children, many of whom have physical as well as mental disabilities. They consider it vital to teach the children real life skills rather than “pampering and babying.” One of their daughters, Angel, is blind and has a prosthetic leg, but she is in charge of bath time and helps to care for the other children. She was a frightened child when she arrived, but “now she’s fearless,” Jeanette proudly explains. “Our goal is for the kids to eventually get jobs and marry. If we ever have enough money we want to build a second house for the older kids, where they can live semi-independently.”

But it’s not all sunshine and rainbows at the Murphy’s house. Behind the family’s daily life, concern over the children’s health always lurks. Down’s Syndrome is accompanied by heart defects, and most of the children were born with life-threatening conditions. The Murphys had a big scare when little Emily’s pacemaker stopped working. “Once you experience something like this, you know that bad things can happen,” says Jeanette. In 1990, baby Jonathan was diagnosed with leukaemia; he endured three years of chemotherapy and painful surgery before he died. “When you lose a child, it feels like you’ve lost a part of you,” says Jeanette. “I've sat through 14 heart surgeries for 13 kids panicking every time a doctor rushed down the hall. Five of our children have died – three as babies – and my world fell apart every time. They were all so precious.”

Not everybody approves of the Murphys’ methods, and some are determined to bring them down. “A lot of people think it’s impossible, so we must be doing something wrong,” explains Jeanette. When their son Cody’s biological mother handed him over as a baby, his grandparents decided that they wanted custody themselves. The ensuing legal battle and accompanying media circus put the Murphys in the spotlight, but the Court of Appeal ruled in their favour.

Some of the children, such as 20-year-old Amy, who has a part-time clerical job, may gain a degree of independence. Others will need more care as they get older, and some have declined dramatically. John and Jeanette won’t be around to supervise them forever, but for now, the Murphys put their faith in God and take it one day at a time.

Jeanette is optimistic about the future of her clan. “I am happiest when I see them helping one another, like the other day when Mia, who is ten, fell down and scraped her knee. Cody and Nathan, who are 14 and ten, brought her inside for a plaster. I see how much love they have every day.”

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hulababy · 17/04/2006 19:32

\link{http://www.five.tv/programmes/extraordinarypeople/family/\Link here}

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Socci · 17/04/2006 19:35

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Socci · 17/04/2006 19:35

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Socci · 17/04/2006 21:59

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blueteddy · 17/04/2006 22:05

I watched this. Amazing people!

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busybusybee · 17/04/2006 22:05

arrrrrrrrrrrrgh I wanted to watch this but we havent got a tv aerial atm so I couldnt......

I have read the article hula pasted - I cant really understand why they didnt allow cody to go and live with his natural grandparents, why go through a court battle to keep a child away from his family, seems odd to me, especially as they have so many others

I work with people who have moderate to severe learning difficulties - 5 is enough for me! Cooking for 9-12 people most days of the week is a challenge (carers and visitors bump the number up!). Imagine cooking for 27!!!!!!!!!

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pupuce · 17/04/2006 22:09

Watched it, loved it... Socci I'm a tad surprise at your must be rich or nuts coment Sad
They are religious (which didn't surprise me) and they really looked well after these kids. SOme are thriving and some have many medical difficulties, the fater is a nurse and they ahev been through 14 operations ! They ahve lost 1 child to leukemia.
Wonderful family.
Not impressed by the gardparents of Cody... but I guess the programme was biases to the Muprhys. However am not surprised the grandparents felt this way....

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Socci · 17/04/2006 22:15

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pupuce · 17/04/2006 22:19

She had at least 1 if not 2 autistic kids (one severly) and she has resorted to home educating all of them as she didn't find that the school stretched them enough - it was not a SN school anyway.
Interestingly the "rich" grandparents who wanted to adopt Cody but their daughter wanted the Murphys to have him... they said he won't ever be able to achieve anything as maybe with them he would have as they could have been able to afford all the special schools... well she aims to have as many as her children well skilled for life and she was explaining that since she has resorted to HE she funds she has much more time to teach tems such skills. You can well imagine that with 23 kids.... you want them to make an effort to be self-sufficient within their possibilities. Some of the DS children were teaching other DS kids... it was lovely to watch.

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Socci · 17/04/2006 22:20

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pupuce · 17/04/2006 22:22

This family was completely self-reliant for their stuff (not asking any SN stuff).... money was clearly tight but they went on holiday once a year!

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RTKangaMummy · 17/04/2006 22:24

REPEATED**



THURSDAY 20 APRIL



Documentary

Extraordinary People: The Couple with 27 Children

11:00pm - 12:00am

Five




VIDEO Plus+: 2433339
Repeat, Subtitled





Documentary about super-sized family the Murphys. In addition to raising four kids of their own, John and Jeanette Murphy have adopted 23 children, all of whom have special needs. John and Jeanette have created an amazing environment for their children to grow up in, but things cannot last forever. When the Murphys are too old to look after the family or pass away, who will look after their 23 adopted children?





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pupuce · 17/04/2006 22:24

did you like it?

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RTKangaMummy · 17/04/2006 22:32

I liked the bits I saw

but am watching ITV1 and going to watch repeat

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Socci · 17/04/2006 22:38

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Jimjamskeepingoffvaxthreads · 17/04/2006 23:04

Didn't see it but I don't get it. Unless we have help in I cannot meet the needs of my 3 (1 severely autistic, 2 NT) as there is simply not enough hands to go round. So either the more able kids are doing a lot for the less able (which is fine up to point but they have needs too) or someone is losing out somewhere., or their definition of severe is different from mine.

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Pixel · 17/04/2006 23:47

I was very impressed by how capable the children were at doing things for themselves. Angel was great. Imagine being completely blind and having only one leg but taking yourself off outside to ride a bike?! It also struck me how there seemed to be no need for nagging or shouting. The whole house seemed very calm, although I suppose they could have edited out the meltdowns!


I agree it seemed a bit odd how they fought so vehemently to keep the little boy away from his grandparents but perhaps the parents had their own reasons for not wanting him brought up by them? I must admit I didn't take to the grandparents (it put me off when they talked about having him 'trained')but on the other hand I can't blame them for feeling bitter.

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RTKangaMummy · 20/04/2006 20:16



**




REPEAT TONIGHT

11.00pm

CHANNEL 5




***

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