Abby and Brittany Hensel, who documented their lives in a TLC reality series, have transitioned from a duo to a trio.
Abby, the left-side conjoined twin, married Josh Bowling, a nurse and United States Army veteran, in 2021. They live in Minnesota, where the Hensel twins were born and raised.
Abby and Brittany, 34, have been living private lives since their 8-episode show âAbby & Brittanyâ aired in 2012. But itâs been a happy life for them in Minnesota, where they were born and raised.
According to the âTodayâ show, which obtained marriage records for the spouses, the sisters are both fifth-grade teachers in their home state.
Abby and Josh kept their marriage under wraps from the public eye until 2023, when they shared photos of the wedding ceremony on their TikTok, @abbyandbrittanyhensel. A wedding guestâs resurfaced clip revealed an intimate moment from the lovebirdâs wedding on Facebook.
A 20-second clip posted on Heidi Bowlingâs Facebook captures the couple dancing and kissing at the wedding reception. Abby and her sister wore an all-white, sleeveless bridal gown and laced-back dress, while Bowling wore a grey suit.
Bowling is seen staring into his blushing brideâs eyes while Brittany supports her sister.
The duo originally appeared on âThe Oprah Winfrey Showâ in 1996, explaining their lives as conjoined twins.
They were born as dicephalus conjoined twins, a rare condition when two heads are on a single body with one genital system; two, three or four arms, two hearts and two legs.
The Helsen twins share a bloodstream and all organs below the waist. Abby controls their right arm and leg and Brittany controls the left side.
When Abby and Brittany were born in 1990, their parents, Patty and Mike Hensel, opted out of separation surgery because doctors said there was a small chance the girls would survive the operation, âTodayâ reported.
âHow could you pick between the two?â their father Mike said, during a 2001 interview with Time magazine.
Although they battle complications of life as conjoined twins, they havenât let it slow them down from achieving benchmark goals such as passing their driverâs license test at 16, graduating from college, traveling to Europe and becoming educators.
So far, thereâs word if they plan on expanding their family.
In the 2003 documentary âJoined for Life,â Abby and Brittany discuss the possibility of raising children one day.
âYeah, weâre going to be moms,â Brittany said. âWe havenât thought about how being moms is going to work yet. But weâre just 16 â we donât need to think about that right now.â
And the couple doesnât have to rush adding children into their life because Abbyâs husband has a child from a prior relationship, according to the Daily Mail.
Bowlingâs Facebook page reveals how the blended family embraces each other with family photoshoots, an ice cream outing and celebrating the holidays.