PA
I didn't expect that I'd often be found dodging potholes in the road or swearing my head off as I attempted to fit my buggy through a medical centre's door.
Little did I know that there would be plenty of places I wouldn't attempt to visit, or shop at, or that if I did, I'd leave destruction in my wake.
Such is the lot of the mum of twins, triplets or more. Thanks to the simple logistics of getting from A to B with more than one child of the same age in tow.
Not for us the luxury of always walking on pavements, easing ourselves into our local family doctor's surgery or browsing in Primark without knocking £50 worth of tops to the floor. And that's a lot of tops.
The first year of having twins passed. But I recall plenty about our trips out and about, and how often they were thwarted, sometimes thanks to something as simple as the insufficient dimensions of a gate or a walkway.
Sometimes I used to say in as loud a voice as I could muster "Come on girls, they don't want our money in here!" and bound out of the store (usually Primark) with my head held high.
My friends with twins have had similar experiences.
Jackie, mum to twin sons, aged eight, says: "I felt quite helpless when my boys were first born. People didn't understand this, but I was frustrated at asking for help a lot, then saying I was sorry for asking.
"Having to do everything twice was hard and I was exhausted. I seemed to be forever apologising. When people parked their cars on the pavement and I walked in the road, I even apologised if someone came the other way, when they looked at me as if to say what are you doing?
"I couldn't fit on the pavement. When I think about this now, I can see I wasn't thinking straight actually, there's nothing wrong with having two babies at once, and it wasn't something I did to deliberately inconvenience other people."
Last year on holiday as I sipped a cappuccino in a seaside cafe while the rest of my family tucked into cream teas, there was quite a spectacle going on. It took me right back to those early days.
On another table a new mum and dad of twins were attempting to also enjoy coffee and cake while their babies slept.
Instead they were answering questions about their cute bundles who remained oblivious to the fuss.
"You've got your hands full," came the inevitable observation, quickly followed by the sometimes equally popular: "I'd rather you than me."
Plenty of us have been there.
The mum looked tired, the dad looked tired. The coffee looked tired by the time they came to drink it. They spent too much time responding to the well-meaning banter of strangers instead of making the most of their time together.
As they got up to leave, so did we.
"I'm sorry," the mum whispered to me as we met in the foyer, fumbling to get her buggy down the steps and worried that my way out was blocked.
I put my hand on her arm, gave it a little rub and smiled the biggest smile I could.
"Please don't apologise," I soothed, trying not to imagine how overly forward I must have seemed. It's not every day I go round rubbing people on the arm.
Pointing to my girls, I added: "That's where you'll be in 11 years' time." The woman also smiled.
"Eleven years?" she said, "I'm struggling with four days."
I didn't really know what to say so I offered another smile and platitude.
"Looks like you're doing brilliantly to me, look after yourself."
And with that of course she was gone, now struggling with the buggy through the cafe door.
Hardly an earth shattering exchange, I'm sure you'll agree. But there in those few moments we witnessed the day to day preoccupations often (not always) felt by parents of baby twins - other people's curiosity, trying to grab some peace, talking to strangers and getting up and down steps.
And the obligatory apology for getting in someone else's way.
When my daughters were younger, I said sorry all the time, just for us being there - not for anything they'd done as they sat contentedly in their buggy or tootled around as toddlers.
Sometimes I didn't venture out and I ruled out travelling on many occasions for fear of inconveniencing other passengers as well as the rigmarole needed to get on and off.
I wish I'd realised that my two babies in a buggy weren't an "inconvenience" to anyone and if someone viewed them that way, then that was the miserable so and so's problem not mine.
I hope an over forward rub of the shoulder and a sympathetic smile went some way to helping a new mum relax in Wales last year.
The next time someone apologises to me for the audacity of having a double buggy in the same room as me, I think I'll tell them the same thing:
Don't be sorry for having twins!
Have you got twins? Does this ring bells for you?
What's the most irritating situation you've been in - shop aisles too small, double buggy trapped on the station platform?
- Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt<p> Brangelina were already parents to adopted children Maddox, Pax and Zahara, and biological daughter Shiloh, when they welcomed twin babies Vivienne and Knox. Speaking three weeks after the birth, Angelina said: "It is chaos but we are managing it and having a wonderful time." With six children in the house, we're not surprised it was chaos!</p>

- Celine Dion and Rene Angelil<p> Celine Dion and hubby Rene already had a nine-year-old son when they decided to try for another baby. It took six IVF attempts and one miscarriage before the Canadian singer finally announced that she was expecting twins. Little Nelson and his brother Eddy were born last year and Celine described having twins as "tiring but an intense joy".</p>

- Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick<p> SJP and husband Matthew were unable to conceive naturally and turned to surrogate mum Michelle Ross in order to expand their family. They welcomed twin girls Marion and Tabitha in 2009. The <em>Sex and the City</em> star later explained that "meeting" the babies rather than giving birth was like "suspended animation". She added: "Time stands still. It's so difference, and equally extraordinary."</p>

- Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony<p> J-Lo and Marc Anthony welcomed twins Max and Emme in 2008. Lopez denied rumours that they had turned to IVF, insisting their babies had been conceived naturally. Last year she said of motherhood: "I can't help but be a different person now that I've had kids. That really does change your whole perspective on life for the better. I definitely feel like I've grown up."</p>

- P Diddy and Kim Porter<p> J-Lo's ex also went on to have twins. The rapper's identical twin girls D'Lila and Jessie James were born in 2007 and P Diddy was present at the birth, even helping to cut the umbilical cords. "To be honest I can't get over it," the big softy said of his newborns. "No matter how many times I'm here looking at them, holding them and kissing them, I just can't believe they're here."</p>

- Marcia Cross and Tom Mahoney<p> <em>Desperate Housewives</em> actress Marcia began IVF treatment just one week after marrying Tom Mahoney. Twin girls Eden and Savannah arrived in 2007, four weeks early. Cross had been diagnosed with pre-eclampsia and gave birth via caesarean section. Having longed for children for years, Marcia said of being a mum: "It's so much better than I even imagined."</p>

- Julia Roberts and Danny Moder<p> A-list lovely Julia gave birth to twins in 2004 at the age of 37. Hazel and Phinnaeus were born more than a month early but were soon home with mum and dad. Twins run in Julia's family - her great grandmother and two sets of cousins are twins. Roberts, who now has another little boy, said of her children: "They are really angelic and wondrous."</p>

- Dennis and Kimberly Quaid<p> Actor Dennis Quaid and his wife Kimberly welcomed twins Boone and Zoe in 2007 but it was a traumatic time for both parents and babies. The newborns were left fighting for their lives after being given a near-fatal dose of blood thinner Heparin. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center later agreed to pay Quaid $500,000 as compensation for the blunder and Dennis and Kimberly later launched a campaign to improve labelling on drugs bottles.</p>

- Holly Hunter and Gordon MacDonald<p> <em>Raising Arizona</em> star Holly Hunter was 47-years-old when she gave birth to twin boys in 2006. The notoriously private actress has since stated that she will not discuss her children with the media and she wasn't joking... we can't even confirm their names.</p>

- Rebecca Romjin and Jerry O'Connell<p> <em>Ugly Betty</em> star Rebecca Romjin and hubby Jerry O'Connell welcomed twin girls Dolly and Charlie in 2009. Rebecca insisted on taking time off after the birth as she wanted motherhood to be her job for a while. Earlier this year, she revealed that her girls were developing very different personalities and described having twins as like a "crazy social experiment".</p>

- Kate and Jon Gosselin<p> In 2000, Kate Gosselin gave birth to twin girls, Cara and Madelyn, 35 weeks into her pregnancy. The couple turned to fertility treatment as Kate was unable to conceive due to polycystic ovary syndrome. However, they got more than they bargained for when they opted for further treatment as Kate went on to give birth to sextuplets. Books and reality TV followed but the pressure of having eight children clearly took its toll because Kate and Jon went through a particularly bitter divorce in 2009.</p>

- Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon<p> After what seemed like the longest pregnancy in history, Mariah Carey finally gave birth to twins on April 30, which is also the couple's wedding anniversary. Little Monroe and Moroccan both weighed under 6lbs but are now at home with mum and dad. And getting them to sleep is no problem. Mariah recently tweeted: "I just finished singing 2 them (softly!) Feeling so blessed. LYM :) x0x0."</p>




















