We’ve written previously about twins who were separated at birth and later re-united, and the surprising similarities they discover in their lifestyles, habits and personal histories.
Now comes the case of twin boys separated at four weeks of age. The two sets of adoptive parents, who never met, both named their boys ‘Jim.’ At age five, Jim Lewis was told that he was a twin. At age 8, Jim Springer learned that he had a twin, but his parents thought the twin had died
The two were finally reunited at age 39. The similarities the twins shared amazed them and also researchers at the University of Minnesota, who were studying twins who had lived apart. The story of the two Jims is also included in Entangled Lives, by Nancy Segal.
Here are some of the traits that Segal lists.
– Both men were 6-feet tall and exactly 180 pounds.
– As youngsters, each Jim had a dog named Toy.
– Each Jim had been married twice. Their first wives were both named Linda and the second wives were both called Betty.
– One Jim had named his son James Allan and the other Jim had named his son James Alan.
-Each twin had driven his light-blue Chevrolet to Pas Grille beach in Florida for family vacations.
– Both Jims smoked Salem cigarettes and drank Miller Lite beer.
– Both Jims had at one time held part-time posts as sheriffs.
– Both were fingernail biters and suffered from migraine headaches.
– Each Jim enjoyed leaving love notes to his wife throughout the house.
The University of Minnesota study also found differences between the Jims, but not too many. They combed their hair differently. One Jim communicated better through speech, while the other preferred writing. One of the Jims had also divorced his Betty and was married for a third time to a woman named Sandy.
All things considered, that last difference might not bode well for the other Jim’s second marriage. Especially if he happens to meet someone named Sandy.
Oh, one other oddity. The Jims live in Minnesota—home of the Minnesota Twins baseball franchise!
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Shortly after Rob had written this post and put it on the dashboard, our neighbor, Annette, stopped by to relate another synchro that she and her identical twin, Janette, had experienced.
“So I’m going to this charity event in Lakeland this weekend,” she says. “And I bought this cool red jacket and I was telling Janette about it. She said I should wear her red jacket, that it was longer than the one I’d bought. I don’t know why she thought that since she hadn’t seen my jacket, but whatever.
“She starts describing her jacket to me – the color, the cut, the fabric – and I suddenly realized she was describing my jacket. Wait a minute. Where’d you buy this jacket?” Annette asked.
“Cole’s,” Janette said.
The same place Annette had bought her jacket. The jackets were identical.
We’ve yet to get a photo of the identical jackets, since the sisters are out of town, but will certainly do so in a future post. The relationship between identical twins seems to be riddled with synchros.




















