Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Armchair Anonymous: DNA Testing
Episode Date: February 21, 2025Dax and Monica talk to Armcherries! In today's episode, Armcherries tell us about a crazy DNA testing story.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch ...new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Anonymous.
I'm Dan Shepard and I'm joined by Lily Padman.
Hi.
Fuck me, guys.
You gotta listen. You're so lucky.
You gotta listen to this one.
This is dynamite.
This is the most I've retold.
Really, ever?
Oh, I've walked everyone I've seen since this episode
through this episode.
Yeah, there's a few.
Oh my God, well that's a couple.
All of them are incredible,
but there's one that seems impossible and it's not.
Yes, 12 people maybe this has happened to. Some of them are incredible, but there's one that is, seems impossible and it's not.
Yes, 12 people maybe, this is happening too.
Yes, this is an incredible over-delivered episode.
Please enjoy crazy DNA testing stories.
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I would define reclaiming as to take back what was yours.
Something you possess is lost or stolen, and ultimately you triumph in finding it again.
Listen to Reclaiming with Monica Lewinsky wherever you get your podcasts. Hi. Hi. Hello, April. Are you in a hotel room? I am actually at a place called Deloitte University.
I'm in learning and development, and I'm actually here all week delivering five different learning
programs.
Which one do we need to know the most?
I just wrapped up my first week of school.
I'm going to be doing a lot of work on my own.
I'm going to be doing a and I'm actually here all week delivering five different learning programs.
Which one do we need to know the most?
I just wrapped up one called Future Forward.
It was so fun.
Lots of very interesting activities,
lots of conversation about what the future
of our workplace looks like,
how to be agile and adaptable, all the buzzwords.
Deloitte, the big accounting firm?
That's right. We have our own hotel slash university. Wow, that's incredible. It's gonna be agile and adaptable, all the buzzwords. Deloitte, the big accounting firm?
That's right.
We have our own hotel slash university.
Wow, that's incredible.
When you're there for the week teaching,
they give you a hotel room?
They give us a hotel room.
Is there room service?
There is not room service.
Oh!
But I will say they feed us well.
There are break stations on every floor.
There's a huge market, a place called The Barn.
Oh, that sounds nice.
They've won me back.
Do the hotel rooms have tissue boxes?
There is in the bathroom.
I should have thought ahead and brought it over close to me.
Old me would have needed that, not new me.
Not you anymore.
Because I don't want my nose anymore
and I don't cough anymore, no matter how bad I want to.
I noticed today you wanted to clear and you didn't.
Yeah, I don't think I have yet since I've sat down.
It was great.
Much less editing for you, Mark.
Exactly, he's taking one.
Yeah, but we're gonna lose something from it probably.
I bet the guest feels more comfortable
that I'm so gross and disgusting,
like, oh cool, it's laid back.
This guy's a gross monster.
I think we're still giving off laid back vibes.
Laid back vibes.
Laid back vibes, I'm tank top I suppose.
Okay, so you have a 23andMe and or slash DNA story.
April, let us have it.
Okay, so I am one of four girls, so three sisters.
I know my poor dad.
Your lucky dad.
Yeah, he's gonna live six years longer because of that.
That's right, girl dads are the best and he really is the best.
So I'm the second in line.
And what first caught my attention as a child
is that all of my sisters have blonde hair
and blue eyes or green eyes.
My dad has this bright blonde hair
and these really bright blue eyes.
My mom, red hair, green eyes.
Okay.
I came out dark, dark head of hair, really dark eyes.
Second born, we can kind of chalk that up to like,
okay, there's some genes in there
that are going further back, like it happened.
Although if we are led to believe
what we learned about Mendelian-
Punnent squares.
Yes, the two greens and the blue
should have all been recessive
and we shouldn't have been able to have brown eyes
with that mix.
But there could be big R, little R, big R, little R making two little Rs. So then there
could technically be a combination that-
But since brown is dominant, you have to have two little Bs to get blue. So the mom had
two little Bs and the dad had two little Bs. No one had a big B to give. Again, they might
have oversimplified it for us.
I thought about all this growing up.
There's also the fact that my sisters
are all very rambunctious.
They love to dance, very social.
I was like the anti-social child.
Monica, I love to read Harry Potter,
kind of off in my corner, very introverted.
So just felt very different.
And then tack onto that throughout our childhood,
we would go out to eat at restaurants or even in school, people would ask us how we were related.
We had the same last name, obviously, they knew we were. When we said sisters, everybody often asked, are we full blood sisters?
This is mid late 90s, early 2000s. So that sort of got me questioning, I do feel different. What's going on here?
So I did ask my parents a couple of times,
is there something I need to know? Was always told no. I asked my grandparents, I was always told
there was nothing more I needed to know. But I never let this go as a topic. So the running joke
in my family to me was that I was the milkman's baby. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Good. You guys have heard
the phrase. So fast forward, I've asked this question to my mom, even into my adulthood.
Yeah, because you're like, I'm an adult now. I can handle it if you had a fling.
Right. And there's something fun about the mystery of it all. But same answer every time.
I have two children. Shout out to Brody and Brynn, their little armchairs in the making.
Oh, we love that.
I'm looking at both of them and I'm like, they really look like me and my husband.
And they really look like each other. Biologically speaking, now I can look at my dad and my mom
and say, something's not adding up here.
So I decide at 30, I'm going to take a DNA test.
I don't tell anyone, I get the DNA test, I take it,
it comes back several weeks later,
and there's nothing earth shattering.
I get some third, fourth cousins,
but there is one person who comes up, he's a first cousin, and I don't earth shattering. I get some third, fourth cousins, but there is one person who comes up.
He's a first cousin and I don't recognize the name.
So I messaged the guy and he responds back a couple of days later,
and he tells me that he's actually adopted.
Oh, okay.
That's confusing.
Not a lot to go on.
Yes, I was going to say your results
independent of any other information are useless.
You need your three sisters to take it, or your mom or your dad.
The only thing you could have done
is figured out through this cousin.
This is where in the TV show
that you take the hair out of the hairbrush
and you put it in your pocket.
Oh, sure, sure.
I was trying to crack this nut without anyone knowing,
just so I could have the results myself,
but not break open any big secrets of the family.
I was trying to be very, Jim, you are very mindful.
My two younger sisters look just like my dad. Older one looks like my mom. So I talked to to be very, Jim, you are very mindful. My two younger sisters look just like my dad.
Older one looks like my mom.
So I talked to my younger sister and she said
she's gonna take the same DNA test.
And a few weeks go by and we both get the email
and we say, okay, we're gonna call each other
before we open it.
And we opened it.
We are half sisters, niece or aunt.
Wow.
What would be more confusing, you're a little sister's aunt.
Wow.
I gotta try to figure out that on the family tree.
What's the feeling when you open it and you see it?
I felt like this is my lifelong mystery solved.
I knew that something was up the whole time
and I was right.
My family is still my family.
My mom and dad divorced, by the way, when I was 18.
So they're not together anymore.
And I think maybe she doesn't know who my dad is,
or maybe she's just not 100% sure and that's why she never wanted to tell me. There are some secrets she doesn't want to confess
to. But now I have these results. I know for sure there's nothing more to hide. And I want to know
who the person could be. So I call her up. And I say, Mom, Misty and I took a DNA test. And guess
what? We're half sisters. She really took it like a champ and she was very matter of fact. She said, okay, his name is Jim. He was 10, 12 years older than me.
He was going through a divorce. He's got two other kids. I mean, it's just bombshell after
bombshell. She knew this guy. They dated for a little bit, but here's the real kicker.
She met him because she was working at a pharmacy and this man drove
the Borden's dairy milk truck.
He actually was the milkman.
Oh, wonderful.
It's got a bow on it.
And that was the part of the conversation that I stopped and I laughed and I said,
do you mean to tell me that I really am the milkman's baby?
Clearly she was still actively married to your dad because kids came before and
after you, but it was an extramarital experience.
There was a separation.
She was only 21 when I was born.
Oh wow.
Yeah.
She's horny.
Of course.
Very young, very much haven't figured out life yet.
Now did your dad know?
There's a little bit of some drama here.
My mom says that he knew, but when I went and talked to him, because really I wanted
to thank him for knowing that I wasn't his biologically, but still raising me the same
as my sister, never treated me any differently.
He got really emotional when I had the conversation with him because he said he really didn't
know that she had sort of alluded to it once, but then took it back and never bought it up again.
I got to really work through.
If I found out Delta wasn't biologically my daughter, obviously
I couldn't love her less.
Exactly.
Nothing there would happen, but would I have any heartbreak that I have
nothing to do with that magic?
Oh, see that's your ego. Yeah.
I would feel deceived, not by the kid,
but by the partner.
The sexual partner.
Yeah.
You know, I just adore her so much,
I don't think I'd really give a shit.
I don't think your feelings towards her
would change at all.
Correct, and I almost think I would be grateful
that Kristin had chosen what she did
because I feel this way about her and I love it so much.
And I think I would agree with the decision.
But we're not divorced.
And your folks were divorced when you told them this?
They were not together when I told them.
And I'll tell you, my grandparents are actually
who had the hardest time with it
because I'm so close to them.
And of course this is my grandpa on my dad
who raised me side.
He will still find old pictures
of distant relative family members
that he thinks I resemble.
Oh, he's still living in another reality.
Yeah, that's okay.
I love him.
He's my pop off and that'll never change.
Yeah.
So did you go find Jim?
I found him.
I got to give my younger sister a little surprise.
I didn't actually mean to tell her in that way.
I just messaged her to ask her for her dad contact info
and I didn't give her a reason why
and she joked back to me and said,
why are you my long lost sister?
Oh my God, the cliches are coming through.
Lots of jokes that kept coming through.
Careful what you joke about.
I did get to meet him
and kind of hear about his family history
and very pleasant guy,
but my life worked out the exact way it was supposed to because he even said he wouldn't have been in a place I did get to meet him and kind of hear about his family history and very pleasant guy,
but my life worked out the exact way it was supposed to because he even said he wouldn't
have been in a place to be a really great father for me at that time in his life. So it really
worked out. Well, you have a great attitude about all this. You just took it as I was
validated. I knew so it's a victory. I don't feel sad about it. I appreciate that. Now I know there's
a history of breast cancer
in the family, never knew that before.
So these are good things to know.
That's true.
Thanks for sharing that.
Yeah, that was great, April.
Of course, thank you guys so much for having me.
Would it be okay, can I take a picture of us?
Of course. Of course.
I'm gonna look in the camera.
And I'm gonna flex.
I'm not really, but a little bit.
All right, everybody stay tuned.
Wonderful.
Oh, so nice to meet you.
Good luck with the rest of your week of teaching.
Thank you so much.
Bye. Bye.
Oh wow, tasty. What a nice woman.
So good person for that to happen to you.
Great reaction.
Because that could really take someone down.
Yep.
I would have a very hard time with that.
Luckily I look like my parents almost exactly.
You know, I know enough to know
I don't really know how I'd feel about it,
but certainly when I think about it,
it wouldn't bother me either.
I wouldn't be mad at anyone,
but I would feel untethered.
I don't even know who I really am.
Yeah, but you and I both are so identical to our dads,
and that's the only one you can find out.
What if that wasn't my dad?
Then your mother has a type.
I guess she obviously fucked a guy
that was identical to your dad.
And same with my mom, that means she fucked
my grandpa or something.
Well, I'm just saying I'm such a shepherd, it's insane.
But I just think then that would be very telling
for nurture, obviously they are my parents.
So none of this is helpful,
so knock on wood they're my parents.
Also, I just read something recently
that made me upset that is a ding ding ding to this.
Green eyes are the most rare.
You didn't know that?
I just wanted it then.
My mom has green eyes.
I want it.
Okay, I'll ask her, I guess.
Can you check with her on how she did that?
You could have had them.
I think I'm right about that eye thing.
You're right.
You have to have both recessive.
You can only pass on a recessive.
Because they both have little R's.
Yeah, little B's.
I like R's.
I think there are more genes than just one
to determine eye color,
so I think it was given to us a little simplistically.
I think so too,
but that was so fun making those little squares.
Yeah.
Hi, can you hear us?
I can hear you, can you hear me?
Beautifully, what name are we gonna you hear us? I can hear you, can you hear me?
Beautifully, what name are we gonna use for you?
I couldn't decide.
Honestly, everything felt silly,
so whatever you guys want.
Okay, you ready for a wild one?
Yeah. Brooklyn.
I get it.
Doesn't she look like a Brooklyn?
Oh, I like it.
You have a candle, you've set the scene.
This looks like a spa.
Are you just out of a treatment?
Are you just out of a Swedish or a deep tish?
I really wish.
Are you allowed to tell us what part of the country
you're in, Brooklyn, even though we're using a fake name?
I am in New Jersey.
Almost Brooklyn.
Which is super weird because I kept getting
Cedar Point ads today.
I don't know if it has anything to do with you,
but I live nowhere near there.
It definitely has to do with us.
You're probably six hours away
worth the drive in my opinion.
Oh my God, do not do that.
Just go to your nearest Six Flags.
There's one close though.
Someone wrote in the comments,
they didn't acquire Cedar Point.
They merged and the current CEO
is the CEO of Cedar Point.
It's Six Flags over Cedar Point.
Everyone shut your mouth.
Okay, sorry Brooklyn.
Okay, so you're in New Jersey
and you have a tasty DNA story
because you don't wanna use your real name.
Yes, just to accept the scene,
my parents met when they were 13.
They had me when they were 21,
my sister when they were 24,
so they were always the cool young parents.
And everyone was always like,
oh my God, your parents are still together.
They're so young. So fast forward 2019 and my dad was diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis.
What on earth is that? It is an autoimmune disease that essentially fuses your spine
together. So it's super painful. It's not anything that's curable. So at that time,
he was going to a lot of doctor's appointments. The day after Christmas in 2019, we knew he had a doctor's appointment.
I'm home, I'm cleaning up after Christmas and dad calls and he says, I need you to come
to the house right now.
I was like, okay, is everything okay?
I don't want to talk about it, just come over.
I immediately called my sister.
I said, did dad call you?
And she said, yeah, what the hell's going on?
I said, I don't know, I'm on my way.
In my head, dad's dying of cancer.
Sure, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is awful.
He was supposed to be at the doctor.
I am near tears.
This is that kind of talk.
So I get to the house, they're not crying,
but my mom, you could tell she has been crying.
So we sit down and say, what is going on with you guys?
And my dad said,
me and your mom were out today. We were on the way to the doctor and your brother reached
out to us on Facebook.
Excuse me?
So he starts telling us the story when they were 15, my mom got pregnant. He just hoped
it would go away and it didn't.
They tend not to.
That's the problem with those.
They're kind of permanent.
Hard to get half pregnant.
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At 24, I lost my narrative,
or rather it was stolen from me.
And the Monica Lewinsky that my friends and family knew
was usurped by false narratives, callous jokes, and politics.
I would define reclaiming as to take back what was yours.
Something you possess is lost or stolen,
and ultimately you triumph in finding it again.
So I think listeners can expect me to be chatting
with folks, both recognizable and unrecognizable names,
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My hope is that people will finish an episode of Reclaiming
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They connected with the people that I'm talking to
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["Wonderful Wonders"]
So she has my brother.
They essentially take him away.
She doesn't get to see him, doesn't get to hold him, does not know where he's going.
So this is my full biological brother from both of my parents.
Oh my God.
Oh wow.
And he's older than you.
This is crazy.
Yeah.
So he's six years older than me.
And so my parents are looking at us like, we are so sorry.
I know we should have told you, but we never thought
we'd ever see him again.
But we knew they did 23 in May.
But we kind of just thought it was like for fun,
not knowing they were looking for my brother.
But the funniest part about it is I wasn't upset because I was
just so glad my dad wasn't dying.
Sure.
What I could think about was like,
oh my God, it's just a brother.
That's really not that big of a deal, guys.
It's a bonus.
But I can definitely imagine for your parents,
as I would get older and have kids
and have this experience with my kids,
it would retroactively make me go like,
oh my goodness, our child's out there.
We must see that child.
Also, if this really was you, let's say it's you.
It's me.
Can you imagine the kind of guilt
because your life is really good
and your children's lives are really good
and to think, well, what happened to that kid
and what if they didn't end up in as good of a situation?
That's a lot.
I'm not shocked they were looking.
I think for them to hold onto that so much, you know, if somebody asks,
oh, is this your oldest?
And in your head you're like,
Kind of? Yeah.
I was 28 when we found out.
So that was a really long time
for them to hold onto that.
So we end up meeting my brother.
It was right before COVID happens.
We found out that he was married
to his high school sweetheart
and had an eight-year-old
son. Just like mom and dad. Yeah. But so the weirdest part of it all is how often our paths
really crossed throughout all of our lives. He was adopted by a family that's 15 minutes down
the road from where I grew up. His adoptive mother was a beauty queen and his father was the mayor of this New Jersey town that I lived in.
Wow. Oh my God.
They had two biological daughters before him
and then adopted him.
Him and I commuted to Manhattan
on the same trains all the time.
We have the same stories of being stranded
because of train delays in the same places
at the same time.
My mom's cousins knew his sisters in high school.
Listen, you're lucky you never dated them.
That's really- Exactly.
This is the most important part.
That's why this stuff gets tricky.
Cause you would meet them and you would feel
this crazy familial thing that you would not chalk up to that
and it would be very confusing. Exactly. My brother's a good looking successful guy.
Is he single?
No, still married.
Oh yeah, I forgot his high school sweetheart, damn it.
Get her out of the picture.
His brother-in-law lived a couple of houses down from me in the same town.
Oh my God.
This is bizarre.
But your parents didn't know that.
No, they didn't know any of that.
And that's what's so strange.
But there's pictures of my brother
in the newspaper with his dad.
My parents have probably looked at those pictures
not really knowing it was him.
Well, it's really great news
that he ended up with a wonderful family.
Yes.
Totally.
And then for him to reach out to us
and see my parents are still together.
I mean, you got two more sisters.
Yeah, he's like, I'm good on the sisters.
Is there a cool brother I can hang with?
So have you guys become close?
He was in my wedding.
We've all gotten super close.
We've gone on vacations with his in-laws.
Oh, this is lovely.
You can see my mom feels complete.
Yeah.
And do they have a sweet relationship? see my mom feels complete. Yeah. I bet.
And do they have a sweet relationship?
Oh my gosh, yeah.
My mom is like constantly stealing her grandson to babysit.
She annoys them all the time, the same way she annoys me.
And do his adoptive parents feel at all threatened
by any of this or they're totally cool with it?
They were totally cool with it.
His adoptive mom lives in Florida now,
so she's not local anymore and his dad did pass away.
But his sisters have reached out to me,
they messaged me on Instagram
and they could not be any sweeter.
So it was really a wild, cool thing.
Big win.
This is.
Really glad you didn't date.
It's really cute coming back to this.
Yeah, just circle back to that.
Yeah.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Considering he's like a full brother too.
Yeah.
It'd be really bad.
Yeah, that'd be real, real bad.
Maybe do 23 and me before dating anybody.
Yeah, let's do it in your teen years.
I'm scared to find stuff out on there though.
It's hard to find a partner.
If I really fell in love with someone,
I would not wanna find out they were my full brother.
It's better to not know that.
I just don't wanna know.
That's right, just have a child that's a cyclops
and then ask yourself why that happened.
Worth it.
Oh, well, Brooklyn, that was kind of an uplifting story.
Yeah, I liked that a lot.
Life-affirming.
Well, and thank you guys for everything you do.
You guys are not just my favorite podcast.
You're actually the only podcast that I will listen to.
Good, don't stray.
We don't know how we'll hold up to competition.
All the others are either too light, too dark.
You guys really just kind of fit right in the middle.
Thank you.
We aim to delightful meaning you for real.
All right.
Thank you guys so much.
All right.
Take care.
These are surprisingly happy stories.
I know.
I'm kind of relieved.
Me too, but I want some bad ones.
How could they even go bad?
They're always going to probably be this, right?
Well, it could have gone incest.
Can only hope.
Well, you got a twofer coming up next.
What's that mean?
Oh, two people.
Wow, this is a first.
Oh, this is exciting.
I'm nervous.
I'm a butterfly.
I was going to say something.
I'm a gourd.
Dating your brother.
What if you found out you weren't related to your brother
and then started dating him?
Oh! You're like, oh my God, this is the best news?
I've always been so attracted to you
and I haven't been able to figure it out.
That would be a story.
Is that siblings found out they weren't siblings
and promptly started dating.
But really we know that's not gonna happen
because the pheromone exchanged.
Yes, she mapped each other's.
Smells and stuff, ew.
Hello.
Hi.
Hi, is this big A little A R O N?
It is.
Aaron, you'll be our first dual caller.
Is there a Jessica also joining us?
She'll be here momentarily.
Okay, exciting.
Now this cool painting behind you,
there's a butterfly and airplane and it looks to be flying overarily. Okay, exciting. Now this cool painting behind you, there's a butterfly and airplane
and it looks to be flying over like Mexico City or something.
What's happening in this photo?
Jess put that together, it's kind of a collage.
She'll have to tell you the story of that.
Okay, a lot is riding on Jess's appearance.
She's the more charismatic of the two of us.
Well, don't sell yourself short, Erin.
Don't do that short, Erin.
Don't do that.
Where are you guys at?
We're on Vashon Island, Washington state.
Okay, Jessica has joined us.
Jessica, the painting collage,
what city are that butterfly and that airplane above?
Oh, he's facing the wrong way, okay.
Absolutely nothing.
That is actually a painting I did in college
over a very ugly palm tree from one of those
mall furniture decorating stores
that you go to in grad school.
And you're like, this is four feet by two.
It's gonna take up the whole room
and it's gonna cost $39.
Okay.
So I've just dragged that thing around for years.
What is the relationship here between you and Erin?
Well, we're gonna tell you that-
Oh, this is gonna come up.
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
Oh, we're excited.
Let's jump in. Let's get in.
We need to know.
Technical matter, Jess, did you start recording?
I'm doing it as we speak.
This is such a couple already though,
cause she's like, you're facing the wrong way
and then he's in charge of tack.
Right.
I mean, if I have it facing the window,
it's usually just like a bright white nothing.
All right. So I've been selected to start the story.
So it's 1984.
I'm 28 and let's say I'm between things.
I've recently returned from a year of
teaching English in the Canary Islands.
Instead of staying in paradise for some dumb reason,
I come back to the US and then don't
know what to do with myself.
So I move into my mom's basement and start driving a taxi.
I also start dating a German woman, Kirsten, and it gets kind of serious, but then she
goes back to Germany for work.
We decide, however, to keep dating and have a long distance relationship.
Then one day in the local newspaper, I see an employment dad seeking sperm donors to help infertile couples. It turns out that infertile couples
means lesbian couples about 95% of the time, but I only learned that much, much later.
Since Kirsten and I are being monogamous, this jerk-off job, as it were, seems both like easy money and a good outlet for my sperm.
I get hired and I wind up donating.
They pay me, so I don't know why they refer to it that way,
but I wind up donating about twice a week for a year.
Oh, so 104 trips.
Probably a little less than that.
I tried to do this at UCLA
because they were paying good money for UCLA sperm.
And I went in and did a deposit
and then they said, your sperm count isn't high enough.
Too low.
Yeah.
So you're more virile.
So keep your hats in.
You're more manly than I was.
My condolences.
Were they looking for a cab driver
living in mom's basement when they...
Yeah.
Despite that career profile,
I went to Johns Hopkins, so maybe that helped.
That definitely helps.
Okay, so at the end of this year of donating sperm, I moved to Germany to be with Kirsten.
That relationship doesn't last too long, but in any case, I go on with my life and I don't
give the sperm donation much thought. I'd signed a mutual confidentiality agreement
with a sperm bank and DNA testing doesn't exist yet. So I just assumed I'd signed a mutual confidentiality agreement with a sperm bank, and DNA testing
doesn't exist yet. So I just assumed I'd never learn anything about any children born.
I don't ever get involved in a serious relationship and have children the standard way. So fast
forward 30 years to 2016, and I begin to see ads for 23andMe. I immediately understand
that if I get a DNA test, I might be able to find my progeny and I'm to see ads for 23andMe. I immediately understand that if I get a DNA test,
I might be able to find my progeny and I'm intrigued.
But I procrastinate signing up for about a year.
But finally, I order the test, spit in the test tube, and mail it off,
having no idea what the odds of finding any of the children are.
A few weeks later, I get the results back.
Hold on one second. I do want to ask when you spit in the test tube, what would have been your
guess of how many kids resulted from these a hundred plus or minus trips?
I did do like a kind of back of the napkin calculation based on odds of conception.
It seemed like 60 to 70 children might be possible.
Wow.
Yeah, this is wild already. Okay. like 60 to 70 children might be possible. Wow, wow, wow.
Yeah, this is wild already.
Okay.
So I'd get the results back and find exactly one child, a son named Bryce, age 20, who
lives in New York.
I was in Pennsylvania at the time.
I see this result and I'm like, yikes, what do I do now?
I spend about a week thinking about what to write to him and he's also on 23andMe.
So I wonder if he's noticed me or been notified about my existence. And I wonder if I'm failing some sort of unwritten
DNA test results getting etiquette. I write to Bryce and let him know that I'm interested
in connecting. I tell him a little bit about myself. He writes back to me in about five
minutes flat. And he writes back with an email that starts
dad
Exclamation point which is real hillarming because I'm wondering what expectations this guy have of me
But it turns out he's just joking around and having fun. Oh, okay. He's got your sense of humor
We make a positive connection and pretty soon he connects me with another of my kids, Maddie,
who's also about 20, a daughter, who he found through a different service.
In fact, he's found in total five other children.
So I immediately go from one to six, except for Bryce and Maddie.
All the other ones are younger.
They don't really come into this story.
Bryce and Maddie and I wind up corresponding with each other.
We have like a Facebook chat going.
We get to know each other a bit.
We exchange life stories and pictures.
Our resemblance to each other is pretty striking.
There was no doubt that the results were accurate,
but they're young college students in their 20s.
They have other things going on in their lives.
So after not too long, things go dormant and, you know,
we occasionally like each other's Facebook posts. A few months pass and then in early 2017,
I get a kind of confusing message through 23andMe from a daughter named Alice, aged 11.
But really, it's her mother Jessica that's writing. And this seems like a good place to
bring Jess to tell her side of the backstory. Okay. It's her mother Jessica that's writing. And this seems like a good place to bring Jessica
to tell her side of the backstory.
Okay.
Yeah, that's me.
Okay.
What's up, everybody?
It's Jason Kelsey, and I'm here with my slightly famous
little brother, Travis, AKA Big Yeti
Kelsey.
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, we're here to bring you a next level entertainment
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Hey everyone, it's your girl Kiki Palmer. Did you know I host a podcast called Baby?
This is Kiki Palmer. And you're not going to believe the conversations I've had.
Like is OnlyFans only bad?
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I've talked to John Stamos, the VP, Kamala Harris, to Jordan Peele, Raven Simone and
yes the one and only Jamila Jamil.
And just wait until you hear our conversation.
We talk Twitter drama, bad dates, and then time.
How the hell do you actually get sexy?
Like what the hell does that mean?
Like I know how to be funny.
I know how to be like, you know what I'm saying?
Ah!
Like I don't really know how to be like,
and take your clothes off.
I'm not robbing fucking Givens.
You know, it's like, how do people do that?
I've been in this situation too many times
and not felt any of those things.
The girl eyes, the quiet.
Like I've never been quiet a moment in my fucking life.
Yes.
Baby, this is Kiki Palmer.
No topic is off limits.
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So my backstory is a long, long time ago,
I was a kid and I was a kid.
I was a kid and I was a kid. I long time ago, I was married to a woman and we had two daughters
using an anonymous sperm donor.
I carried the first and she carried our youngest and we used a sperm bank randomly.
Our gynecologist was like, I'm registered at this bank.
So we picked a donor. We had
sperm shipped overnight. It comes in like a giant helium tank on dry ice. You put on
gloves and you lift out this little smoking half a chapstick cap of sperm.
Oh wow. Okay.
We went through that entire process and had our first daughter, Alice. You have your first
baby. You're over the moon. You're like, she's obviously perfect, let's replicate her. So we used the same
donor again and had our youngest daughter. And by the time Alice was 11, I was divorced
and I was dating a man who coincidentally is also named Aaron David, like Aaron here.
Oh wow, that seems impossible.
When he learned this, I was like, oh, they just made
a mix up at the Bureau of Boyfriends. And Alice at the time was really, really sick of hearing
her grandma talk about like, oh, we are from Kent, we're from Romania, we're from all these places.
She knew I never knew my father. She obviously knew she grew up with two moms and an anonymous
donor. And she was like, you know what? 75% of me is a mystery.
Why did you not know your dad?
I just never did.
It was the seventies.
I had a single mom.
It was not discussed in the Midwest and you didn't go looking because you're
Midwestern, I guess.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a secret.
But Alice is Gen Z and has no such qualms.
She just wanted the map of her country.
Being 11, she
wasn't at the place that Bryce and Maddie as college students were. She wasn't like,
who am I? Where do I come from? She was like, I know who I am. I'm 11. I'm cool.
At the time, I'd never heard a DNA story of people finding adoptive parents. So she asked
grandma for this present for Christmas. Grandma is more than happy to provide. And
six weeks later, we get the results. And I clicked the DNA relatives tab and it just
father 50% shared DNA. My reaction was the same as Aaron's. You're like, what am I going
to do about this now? He's probably getting a notification right now. The clock is ticking.
I Googled. I did what anyone would do. I had no idea sperm banks had branches. So we had ordered
from the DC area. So luckily he went to Johns Hopkins because I found a guy on LinkedIn,
right age, the right degrees in the DC area. So I went to Facebook and he had all of his
school pictures, K to 12. And I got chills at that moment. It was no doubt in my mind. Here's my daughter with a 1960s boy
full haircut. I wrote him that confusing note and just said, Hey, I'm the mom. I'm open to talking.
Write me back if you want pics. Yeah. Oh, wow. He wrote back. He'd already written a bio for
Bryce and Maddie. So I read it to Alice and she wrote her own life story back to him,
which was very short. But because she was 11, me and Aaron started texting. We just
both found it fascinating. We formed this friendship. Six months later, that summer,
because Bryce and Maddie are college age, we all decide that we're going to meet in
Seattle. He threw a huge party on the roof of his place and we all came. And I was cool
with that, especially with such a young daughter
that there were two other siblings there. It was not going to be a big deal. But we
all decided we were going to spend basically two weeks together. And Aaron does this huge
hippie fest in Eugene every summer. So we all pile in my car and we drive back down
there and we go to this hippie fair.
Instantly, Aaron and I were the parents in this scenario. We're throwing sandwiches to the back seat. Do you have everything? Got to make sure everybody's
happy. We're both playing parents and yet we are actually the biological parents of one of the kids.
Eugene was where I was living at the time. He had been in a band in that area. He had
commuted every weekend. We could have passed him and the girls in grocery stores. We had some one-step removed
people in common. So weird how close our paths had always been to crossing. So during that trip,
we took a walk one night just to be alone and talk and sort of have our first date. And it was like
the wildest first date I've ever been on because we went to a cemetery by my house because all the
kids are back in the house. You're on your first date, but you already have a child that's 11 years
old. Yeah. Right. And what happens on this first day is most of it telling him what our
in quotes daughters are like.
Can I ask quickly how your ex-wife felt about you connecting with Aaron?
Ex-wife was not in the picture at that point, but I can tell you for
sure she would not have been supportive.
I got you.
Okay.
I'm a little bit more open about that kind of thing.
We went on this whole trip together.
We kind of played family.
So we came back to Seattle with him and we started dating
and the rest is history.
It kind of progressed from there.
You know, I met and got together with my daughter's bio dad
12 years after she was born.
Wow. So how long have you guys been together now?
Since 2016. So like, yeah, nine you guys been together now? Since 2016.
So like, yeah, nine at this point.
Alice is in college.
Wow.
Oh my God.
So you ended up Erin raising your daughter from 11 on.
Only sort of.
Alice should probably be here to speak for herself,
but she has never considered me to be her father,
her other moms, her other parent,
even if her parent hasn't been so
great to her recently.
I think Alice would double down on that and be like, that is why we cannot let her off
the hook because gay family is family.
She was just like, my mom's already out of the picture and that really hurts.
I'm not ready to pull someone else into that and risk that again.
And from what you've already told me about her personality, it's on brand.
It's definitely on brand for her
and it felt a lot safer for me.
I tried to Google this and no one else on the internet
had been in this situation before.
There was no answer to, how do I date my kid's dad?
Yeah.
I tried to be a good mom about this
and it felt better because I knew that she wasn't
just gonna like run into his arms
and then it was gonna end
and I was gonna be the worst mom on the planet.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
Wow.
What about the younger daughter?
My youngest daughter, what actually happened to a strange, my wife and me, is she withheld
that daughter and abandoned Alice.
So Alice hasn't seen her sibling in that amount of time either.
Alice is completely adamant that this child is not her sibling just because it's Aaron's.
It's not like Maddie is now substitute sister
or is as much sister.
We've kind of come full circle,
like love definitely makes a family,
but biology also can make some sort of family too,
and both are not the whole enchilada,
and both are not nothing either.
Yeah, that's so true.
Well, this might surprise you
that the most shocking part of this whole story to me is that they keep, that's so true. Well, this might surprise you that the most shocking part
of this whole story to me is that they keep the sperm
for so long.
I would have thought I either had kids in that window
of time I was jerking off at the place.
I would not think there could be a 20 year span.
I actually found him because one of the vials
they sent me had the date on it, January 1994.
And I was like,
94. I graduated high school in 94. It's 2004 when I'm trying to get pregnant. I was like,
he already had a master's by 94. Okay, here's his age. Let's start Googling. I did not expect
that that was 10 year old sperm.
They sold you expired sperm.
I got expired sperm, man.
Wow, what a story.
What a story. We're now aware of, I believe,
22 of my children. Okay.
22. Wow.
I have a spreadsheet. I've only met four.
Does it stress you out at all? No. Whenever I discover one, I write them
an email and tell them a little bit about myself and say I'm open to connection.
Though strangely, other than Bryce and Maddie
and one other, Emily, who happens to live near us,
I guess we had a Zoom meeting with one family of three,
but most of them just haven't been that interested.
Yeah. Right.
Huh.
Wow, this is a wild story.
This really is.
This is the most interesting meet-cute I've ever heard.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
After my piece was published in the New York Times, and Jess also had a piece published
by the BBC, we did get some movie interest.
Uh-huh, I could see that.
Nothing ever came of it.
I think the problem is there's not an obstacle in our story at all.
They would have to invent that.
Sure, sure.
We're good at that.
Some creative license, that's allowed. We know how to do that. Sure, sure. Yeah, well, we're good at that. Some creative license, that's allowed.
We know how to do that.
Well, you guys, this was delightful.
What an interesting story.
What's the name of the New York Times piece
and the BBC piece in case people wanna read it?
I think that might interest people.
No idea, but his New York Times,
I mean, that's kinda how it got out.
He wanted to write a modern love
with his creative writing degree on it.
So there's a modern love that's like,
am I in a chromosomally arrayed relationship?
Oh, that's a clever title.
That's not the title though.
It is the modern love column and the title is
first I met my children, then my girlfriend,
they're related.
Oh, that's nice.
Okay, that's tasty.
I like your title though a lot, Jessica.
I don't know if that was a first draft.
That might be the subtitle on it. Well, wonderful meeting both of I like your title though a lot, Jessica. I don't know if that was a first draft.
That might be the subtitle on it.
Well, wonderful meeting both of you.
Thank you for telling us that story.
And thanks for doing it this way.
This was fun to have both of you.
Yeah, you laid it out beautifully.
Thank you so much for having us.
Okay, take care. Bye.
Bye.
Wow.
Meet cutler.
I guess that sperm stays good for a fucking goat's age, huh?
But it worked out. Yeah, it's great.
Alice.
Taylor, can you hear us?
Yeah, I'm sick, so I'm sorry, my voice is off.
You're gonna have to get healthy before we can talk to you.
You're gonna have to call us back.
I had some cold, I thought it went away, now it's back.
Yeah, these colds, they just linger.
These are the new colds.
They're for three months.
That's just how the fucking colds are now.
Apparently.
Okay, so you have a wild DNA story. I do. I'm a twin. The new colds, they're for three months. That's just how the fucking colds are now. Okay.
So you have a wild DNA story.
I do.
I'm a twin.
We are the babies of seven, about six, they divorced and my dad moved out with his friend girl.
Went to another state and kind of left my mom to raise all of us.
And he made it really clear that he had left.
When I was about 16, she was completely over me and my shit.
She booted me out here to live with him, just me,
left everybody back where they were.
What about the twin?
Yeah, and are you guys identical or fraternal?
It's a boy, so he stayed back.
We were freshmen in high school, but I was a pain in the ass.
I have a 17 year old right now and God bless her.
I know I'm caught between.
So my brother was really, really challenging.
And now that I think of his story and I write about it, I realized he really needed
someone that had a lot of capacity to help.
I just feel bad for both people in the story.
Like I feel bad for my mom and I felt bad for my brother.
So you probably needed a lot of help.
I am so blessed by my children that I'm like, how did you do it?
And she's like, I sent you.
I am so blessed by my children that I'm like, how did you do it? And she's like, I sent you. I didn't.
So she sent me here and I was nice and sassy.
And I was like, you know what? Why'd you leave?
Like, what's your problem? Was she worth it?
And he's like, it wasn't the only one.
For all I know, you're some Jack guys, baby.
I understood that this Jack guy was like a colleague of my mom's.
I'd heard the name, but I'm like, you're deflecting.
You're just trying to take the attention off what you're doing. I was very much not here for it. Also, Jack guy sounds like a colleague of my mom's. I'd heard the name, but I'm like, you're deflecting. You're just trying to take the attention off what you're doing.
I was very much not here for it.
Also Jack guy sounds like a term, like a certain kind of guy.
Like he works at a guy.
Well, that would be great.
But I was thinking more like he works at a mechanic shop, like
he's jacking up cars or like a different industries for sure.
But yeah, fair enough.
He didn't harp on it.
He never really had a lot of nasty things to say about my mom.
He was always very kind. He's like, she loves you, but he was tired of being the only one taking the blame. And he kind of wanted to get his story out there. But then we didn't talk
about it again. And did he and the friend girl have any children? No, that happened for about a
year. And then after I had my third son, my mom mailed me my baby book. And the baby book had all
these like cards and crap in it. And then there was a literal Western Union telegram, yellow with the tear on it and everything
that said, congratulations on the twins. I'm so happy. Jack. Oh, okay. This is curious.
Yeah. You're curious. I tried digging and I can't find anything and I just move on.
So a couple of years later, me and my twin decided we were both going to try Ancestry
and 23andMe.
We wanted to prove that they were full of it. And the other one said the origins are off.
We weren't really doing it for DNA purposes. We were just trying to play with it.
And we were kind of right. His came up a little bit Irish and mine came up a little Scottish.
And then the rest of it was just Eastern European. Didn't think anything of it. 2022,
I got back in this Jack fix and I was like, I'm going to figure this out. So I started digging
through 23andMe, which had matches that were like fifth cousin nonsense.
So I was bored.
So I was like, I'll log into my brother's ancestry because he would have different matches
and sure shit.
I opened up, it says parent child match, my brother and Jack.
Hold on a second.
Why didn't yours say that?
Jack only did ancestry.
Oh, you did different ones.
They divided and conquered.
Oh.
I don't like to blow up my family over nothing.
So I'm like, I'm going to do my own ancestry
cause I had done 23 so that I can catch my breath.
You told your brother, obviously he already knew.
Not at this point.
Oh, wow. Okay.
We don't live in the same state anymore.
So I just let it be.
And I didn't know how to process, you know, that's a lot.
This is a fucking mess.
I do my own.
Ironically father's day is the day I get mine back.
I open it up and there is no Jack to be found.
And it says that me and my twin brother are half siblings.
Wow.
It's called super feed on case.
I don't know how to say it.
No.
It's very, very rare.
There's like 10 cases in all of America.
Whoa.
Wow. So your mother was carrying two different people's child.
Isn't that wild?
At literally the exact same time.
Yes.
What?
I'm upset.
Don't even know how to tell my brother that he's the only one of us seven that's not.
Well, do you know though, the other fives, have they done ancestry?
None of them have.
We don't know how much Jack was in or out of the picture.
My dad has got black hair and blue eyes and my twin is the tallest out of everybody.
He's like 6'1", I'm 4'11".
And he's blonder and so is Jack after doing lots and lots of fun research.
So then I decided to go crazy on my ancestry and connect some more dots and just try to
make sense of it.
And I couldn't, I couldn't connect any more dots. So they have these things called DNA angels.
I don't know if you've ever heard of them, but like huge shout out to them. They do it
for free. They'll log into your ancestry and they'll help you connect some dots from fifth
cousins all the way down to like maybe who your grandfather's father was. So I call on
them and I'm like, help me. So she logs in and about 10 hours later, she calls me and
she's like, I'm really sorry, but you're not your dad's either.
What? Oh, plot fucking twit.
She's like, it's one of these three men, they're all brothers.
They connect to a grandfather that my DNA connected to.
Mom was busy. She sure was.
USY busy.
So I just started the top of the three men.
He's the oldest out of all of them closest to my mom's age.
His name is James.
And about two hours into researching, do I not land on a photo of Jack,
James, my mom, all at a conference the year of my birth?
I mean, there's like 10 of them, but those three were in the middle.
Like my mom was in the middle and Jack and James.
And I continued to find out Jack was the president
of this company and they were the trustees.
Okay, now hold on.
Was it a threesome?
I asked that question a lot.
I've done so much investigating.
The only thing I don't know is did they take turnt?
Right.
Yes, yes, it was one night and then the next night.
She'd like go down to the bar after.
Exactly, cause it would have to be that fast.
There's a lot of permutations here.
I think it was an orgy.
Even if she hyper-obulated, the studies show
it has to be within a couple of days.
Okay, so have you discussed any of this with your mom?
No, I haven't confronted her.
You haven't?
I told my twin, which kind of ruined our relationship.
No.
So he called Jack, cause I'm sitting on it for months.
And then he comes out here of our birthdays
and I'm like, so guess what?
And he's like, mom got Eiffel Tower.
And I was like, that's not funny.
What's that mean?
What does that mean?
She knows a lot of code words.
Just think about an Eiffel Tower.
Oh, oh, share like a wobbly H, sawhorse.
Yeah.
I don't get it.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, I get it.
He calls this guy,
because I had this guy's phone number.
Mind you, both these two men are married 50 years plus.
So they were married to these women and they still are.
He calls them and he's like,
Hey, guess we parent child matched on ancestry.
And Jack's like, your mom and I agreed
we'd never have any contact with you, so bye.
Oh my God.
Well, he's afraid.
Sure, and I'm not out here to hurt anybody.
He could have been like,
here's a few medical things you might need to know.
Exactly. Minimally, I'm sorry.
Yeah, here's 5,000 bucks.
Jack had no kids.
Maybe he thought he was sterile.
Well, he knew about us though.
Oh, and sent a telegram.
But he doesn't probably know that I'm James's.
He probably thinks he has me and my brother out there.
He's like, okay, I don't need to talk to you, but is your sister going to call?
Cause I need to tell her I don't want to talk to her either.
If your sister calls, it's going to be a longer conversation.
He's not my dad, so I can't say anything to him.
And then I looked up mine and he was once upon a time,
the Supreme Court Justice of a Southern state.
So I decided to leave that alone.
Holy moly.
And he's got kids and grandkids and I'm not ruin anyone's life.
It doesn't change who I am.
But are you like, what am I?
So yeah, what impact does this have?
Cause we've talked to some people today
who have had this experience
and some of them are like, doesn't matter.
It's cool to know.
And that's still my parent and I don't really care.
Yeah, I went to a conference on it.
They're called NPE non-parental event
or non-expected parent.
And a lot of people are just crying like,
the mailman's my dad and my mom lied my whole life
and it's my identity.
And I'm like, no, it's not.
You are who you are, your blood's blood.
I grew up with step siblings,
my kids have had a step dad.
I don't identify with who was in the room that night,
I identify with who I turned out to be
and the people that cared to stay in my life.
I have great relationships with people
that are blood and that aren't.
Yes.
I'm bummed and I can see why my mom always had
just this undercover, I'm not so sure about her,
get rid of her, she just didn't like me.
I can't imagine though that she assumed
the twins were from two different men.
Even though she had sex with two different people.
There's no way.
That would just not only spoil her,
your dad left and cheated.
Not only did he do that, but you doubled down.
You know, and to tear down a woman in her late seventies,
it's just like, what's the point?
I told one of my sisters, the other sibs don't know, and she's like, you've got to tell her and I'm like, no
I don't I mean the only reason I think to tell her is like she is a medical marvel history
Literally, I mean there probably is just 50 cases this has ever happened
Yeah, I think that they said in just America there's 12 and then then the other countries, there's more. But you don't have a lot of documentation on this. How many twins both do it?
Do you just assume one's DNA is the other's?
Wow.
This is twisty and turny.
Growing up though, did you think you and your twin had twin abilities?
Well, they did share a mom.
Right. And like we shared a room and we shared a lot of time together.
And I always thought we had the special bond.
Are you left-handed?
No, my little boy is though.
Maybe he'll be president.
Sure.
Overindex.
What a story.
Oh my God.
That's a barn burner.
Thank you so much for sharing it.
Yeah.
Yeah, you guys.
It was super fun.
I do need to give a shout out to one of my friends, Rebecca. She actually used your story to ask about dyslexia and she gives it to her students
at the elementary school she teaches at and she loves, loves, loves you guys.
She got me interested in you guys' podcast.
Thank you, Rebecca.
Yeah, that's lovely.
Yeah, shout out.
Well, lovely meeting you.
I'll be thinking about that one for a while.
That one's going to stick.
Yep.
Have a great day.
All right. Take care, feel better. Thank you. Bye. This one really got stick. Yep. Have a great day. Take care, feel better.
Thank you.
Bye.
This one really got out of hand.
I feel like we need to do this again.
I'm sweating.
Four for four.
They also grew in intensity.
Yeah, they really did.
There was like a natural progression that felt scripted.
Yeah, oh my God.
A show.
Bonne amie.
Bonne amie.
Vos joie de vie.
Falle fou français.
Faire les mebouche.
Are you gonna go look into your DNA?
I feel like now I'm not anyone's, don't you?
All those stories make you feel like, oh shit.
Who are my, everyone.
Who am I?
Who am I?
Who's my mom?
Are you my mom?
He has a great book.
Are you my mother or something?
Yeah, are you my mom?
Are you my mom?
I thought it was are you my mother?
She has a turtle.
It could be mother, but.
It's mother.
Fuck.
Sorry.
Yeah, that's so formal.
Sorry and thank you.
No wonder people said no.
They're like, you're stuck up.
I'm your mother.
I'm your mom.
Mother, if you didn't grow up with them,
they're your mother.
The little bird asks a bulldozer if it's his mother.
Are you my mother?
Yes.
It's a very sweet story.
Yeah, sweet.
All right. Love you.
Love you.
Do you wanna sing a tune or something?
When it was theme song.
Oh, okay, great.
We don't have a theme song for this new show,
so here I go, go, go.
We're gonna ask some random questions
and with the help of ourchairy's we'll get some
suggestions.
On the flyer, I'm dish.
On the flyer, I'm dish.
Enjoy.
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