Luke and Hillary Gardner never have a problem remembering
each other’s birthday. After all, the husband and wife were born the same day.
And so was their son, 27 years later in December 2016.
The odds of that happening are about one in 133,000,
statisticians say. And that’s a lot less likely than getting hit by lightning
sometime in your lifetime, which some put at roughly one in 12,000.
They weren’t aiming at a joint birthday when their son Cade
Lee Gardner was conceived, said Luke Gardner, an assistant pastor at a Baptist
church in northeast Mississippi and a student at a nearby campus of New Orleans
Baptist Theological Seminary.
“I really didn’t even put it together until we got
pregnant,” he said in a telephone interview Wednesday. “Then we realized, ‘Oh,
wow!’”
Brandon Shay,
and his wife Holly of Glendale, Arizona, hold their new born twins at at Banner
Hospital in Glendale. The couple welcomed their first son, Sawyer, right, into
the world at 11:51 p.m. Saturday. Their second son, Everett, arrived one minute
after midnight on Sunday. (AP)
Using a smartphone app, he said, his wife calculated a due
date of December 15, three days before their joint birthday. Her obstetrician
called it for December 19.
So the couple from Baldwyn, Mississippi, got in some
exercise to try to hurry the baby up a bit. The night of December 17, Gardner
said, “we went walking” around the parking lot at First Baptist Church of
Baldwyn, where Gardner is outreach pastor.
Whether or not the exercise sped things up, Cade was born at
10.01am on December 18 — exactly 27 years after his parents’ birthdate.
“Hillary is exactly six hours older than me,” Luke Gardner
said. She was born at 8.10am and her husband at 2.10pm on December 18, 1989.
They learned about their shared birthday before they started
dating, while just part of a group of friends who hung out together.
“I saw it on a Facebook page first and asked about it,”
Gardner said. “I couldn’t really believe it when I saw it. I had to confirm it
with her.”
The chance of meeting someone born the same day as you is
one in 365, explained Tumulesh Solanky, chair of the math department at the
University of New Orleans. He said the chance of two people being born on the
same day and having a baby on their birthday is about 1/365 times 1/365.
“That comes out to .0000000751 — seven zeros and then 751,”
or about 7.5 in a million, he said, which comes to about one in 133,000.
Statisticians note that this ignores such factors as leap years and the fact
that births are not evenly spaced throughout the year.
Gardner joked that if he and Hillary Gardner have more
children, they may have to try for December.
“If we have any more kids, if we don’t get pregnant in
March, we’ll have to wait till the next year,” he said.
-HT

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