Rachel Campos-Duffy’s wisdom of motherhood and how…
As a mom of 9, Rachel Campos-Duffy has definitely had observe at pulling off Mother’s Day without a hitch.
And she’ll definitely be entrance and heart when the household celebrates today with a brunch at a buddy’s home — although not until she’s completed her shift co-hosting “Fox and Friends.”
“It’s the same for all moms. The kids will make me cards and give me flowers. We’ll go out to brunch, but try to do too much work,” she told The Post in an interview.
Mom of 9, Rachel Campos-Duffy and husband Sean Duffy with their youngsters. For Mother’s Day she told The Post: “It’s the same for all moms. The kids will make me cards and give me flowers. We’ll go out to brunch, but try to do too much work.” Courtest of Rachel Campos-Duffy
Donald Trump and one of Rachel’s smiling daughters at the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office. Rachel Campos-Duffy / Instagram
Life in her and husband Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy’s main home in New Jersey is often hectic, but they’re used to it.
Duffy is one of 11 and Campos-Duffy has three siblings, but said she never thought a lot about their child rely, including she was: “MAHA [Make America Healthy Again] before MAHA. I was Catholic and not on birth control.”
Her 9 youngsters, who vary in age from 27 to six are: Evita, Jack, Lucia-Belén, John-Paul, Paloma, Maria-Victoria, Margarita, Patrick and Valentina.
Campos-Duffy also has a message for youthful people who are being cautious about having youngsters, bemoaning the “weird idea that only rich people should have kids. It’s silly.”
Sean Duffy and Rachel Campos-Duffy share a kiss on the pink carpet at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. Getty Images
Referring to a New York Times article which profiled {couples} who had been rethinking having youngsters because of the high value of residing, mortgage charges and financial uncertainty, she explained: “That article is speaking of materialism and this idea that somehow being able to lounge on a Saturday and afford to buy a $10 latte will fulfill you.”
The host stresses having youngsters will lead to success over a lifetime, joking that if she waited until she was “ready” she would have been having her first child at 50.
Instead of wanting at her bank account, Campos-Duffy trusted in her mom who always said infants “all come with a little loaf of bread under their arm.” In other phrases, when a new bundle of pleasure arrived, they had been often accompanied by one thing fortuitous, like a business deal.
Sean and Rachel Campos-Duffy with their large household. “Even if one family takes a road trip and discovers somewhere or something interesting in America, I will feel like we did our job,” Campos-Duffy said. Courtest of Rachel Campos-Duffy
In the gathering of essays, Campos-Duffy and her Fox News colleagues pen their own love letters to our nation, offering glimpses into their formative moments from their respective corners of the US.
“We always just trusted in Providence. And it worked out,” she said.
As for entertaining the entire household, Campos-Duffy said they’ve just lately been hitting the street to have a good time our nation’s 250th birthday, impressed by President Donald Trump, who requested his Cabinet Secretaries to discover a particular manner to have a good time the milestone.
“So, my husband decided he was going to bring back the great American road trip.” As a household, they picked out a few short journeys that may match into Duffy’s hectic schedule, including a go to to the Grand Canyon’s Phantom Ranch, replicating a trek he took as a little one.
Campos-Duffy first rose to fame when she was forged in MTVs “The Real World: San Franscisco” in 1994. She then met Duffy — who himself had starred in “The Real World: Boston” — on digital camera when they had been both forged in “Road Rules: All Stars” in 1998. Rachel Campos-Duffy / Facebook
Rachel Campos-Duffy and Sean Duffy in a scene from “The Real World” in the 90s. Rachel Campos-Duffy / Facebook
Piling into a car and watching the world go by is also a great exercise for household bonding as nicely as gaining a renewed pleasure in our great American experiment.
“You load the kids, you take their phones and throw them in the glove compartment. You sing songs. You play music from the 80s that they’re gagging over, then you play some of their stuff. Suddenly you’re talking and we’re all not on our devices,” Campos-Duffy said.
Its also acquainted territory for Campos-Duffy, who first rose to fame when she was forged in MTVs “The Real World: San Franscisco” in 1994. She then met Duffy — who himself had starred in “The Real World: Boston” — on digital camera when they had been both forged in “Road Rules: All Stars” in 1998, travelling around the nation in an RV. They married the next 12 months.
Cast members of The Real World San Francisco: Puck Rainey, Rachel Campos, Cory Murphy, Pam Ling, Mohammed Bilal, Pedro Zamora, and Judd Winick. Courtesy Everett Collection
Cast portrait of the roommates from the sixth season of Real World: Boston. Sean Duffy was a member of the forged and ended up marrying fellow Real Worlder Rachel Campos. Courtesy Everett Collection
For locations, they didn’t have to look far for inspiration.
Campos-Duffy’s new ebook “All American Patriotism: Celebrating 250 Years of American Greatness,” is a great journey brochure for the US.
In the gathering of essays, Campos-Duffy and her Fox News colleagues pen their own love letters to our nation, offering glimpses into their formative moments from their respective corners of the US.
Will Cain writes about his Texas childhood under the Friday Night Lights, Conn. native Jesse Waters recounts his summers in Maine, while Benjamin Hall tells the inspiring story of American troops rescuing his father in the Philippines during WW II, then later rescuing him after he was gravely injured while masking the battle in Ukraine.
“We’ve allowed the public school system and culture to tell the story of who we are,” Campos-Duffy said. “Ultimately as parents, we have way more influence than we give ourselves credit for.” Rachel Campos-Duffy / Instagram
Campos-Duffy, 54, whose father is Mexican American and her mom from Spain, writes of her own “American dream” origin story. She recalled her mother and father taking her and her siblings to Philadelphia for the 2 hundredth anniversary of the US declaration of Independence in 1976 and her feeling of immense love for the nation.
“We went to see the Liberty Bell. It was so formative to me because my parents were saying how lucky we were.”
But today, youngsters are listening to the precise reverse. They’re being taught that our nation is irredeemable and racist. To heal, we need to tear down its studs and rebuild as some new Marxist project. It can really feel fairly jarring.
“We can’t ignore the poll numbers that show that people under the age of 30 have half the rate of patriotism of Gen Xers and Boomers. We even have trigger warnings on our founding documents inside of the archives,” she said.
Campos-Duffy said they’ve just lately been hitting the street to have a good time our nation’s 250th birthday, impressed by President Donald Trump, who requested his Cabinet Secretaries to discover a particular manner to have a good time the milestone. Courtest of Rachel Campos-Duffy
Campos-Duffy says “reversing these narratives” is crucial — and it falls on household to do so.
“We’ve allowed the public school system and culture to tell the story of who we are,” she said. “Ultimately as parents, we have way more influence than we give ourselves credit for.”
Campos-Duffy provides she’s discovered a great deal herself by being mom to her youngest, Valentina, who has Down Syndrome.
The bubbly 6-year-old always appears to be in the middle of the motion. She’s been photographed next to President Trump in the Oval Office; and in an cute clip that went viral, she’s hugging astronaut Victor Glover, who picks her up and declares her half of the Artemis II crew.
The Campos-Duffy household with their youngsters meet Vice President JD Vance. Rachel Campos-Duffy / Instagram
“She’s the best thing that happened to this family,” she said. “You know 90 percent of people with Down Syndrome are being aborted. It’s really tragic how genetic testing has caused their demise”
Campos-Duffy said she’s been stopped on the road by other mother and father of youngsters with Down Syndrome to inform them how Valentina affected their own journey. “They’ll say, ‘because of Valentina, I wasn’t afraid to have that baby’. And there is nothing better than that. She’s just happy. She loves life.”
And on Friday, she announced a new arrival coming in June: the household’s actuality show debut.
Over the years Campos-Duffy said her household had turned down all gives to movie together until doing their mini street journeys.
Sean Duffy and his household at a Senate affirmation listening to. Campos-Duffy and Duffy have been married 27 years and have 9 youngsters. Rachel Campos-Duffy / Instagram
“We’ve been married 27 years, everyone from the Kardashian producers, the producers of ‘The Real World’ and [network] TLC has approached us.”
To come full circle, the show couple tapped the “Real World” staff to produce the show, which is able to air on YouTube.
She hopes the ebook and show encourage people to reconnect with their households and their nation.
“Even if one family takes a road trip and discovers somewhere or something interesting in America, I will feel like we did our job.”
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