Mother spends more time with baby doll than her own daughter
Baku, December 8 (AZERTAC). Ashleigh Kirby looks like any other proud mother pushing a pram through her local park.
But the `son` she keeps wrapped up to ward off the cold is actually an incredibly lifelike doll.
The 36-year-old, from Andover in Hampshire, also takes Finlay shopping, regularly changes his nappies and has spent hundreds of pounds on clothes for the £250 `Reborn` she bought online. She has the doll - made to replicate a new-born - sleeping in a cot in her bedroom, where she keeps Finlay`s tiny clothes in a specially-bought wardrobe.
Ashleigh, who already has a 12-year daughter Becky, bought the doll six months ago after splitting up with her partner made her fear she would never have children again. She is now planning to `expand` her family, with another doll to keep the first company, which she is planning to call Summer.
Ashleigh said she thought about adopting after separating from her partner but was `too lazy`. She added: `I always thought something was missing in my life and, when I saw the babies, immediately I knew what it was.
`The dolls are a substitute for me. I am very maternal. I bought Finlay six months ago for £250 from a lady I found online.
`Half of my bedroom is taken up by his cot and I also have a pram, a car seat and a wardrobe of clothes. `He wears a nappy which I change - although not as regularly as you would a real baby. `I`d have liked to have met another man and had a brood of kids, but life didn`t work out like that. `I considered adoption, but I`m too lazy to go through the process. Real children are hard work - you worry all the time. With Finlay, it`s cuddle time all the time.`
Ashleigh, who separated from Becky`s father when she was just five, was desperate to add to her family but was worried about finding the right man. She took the drastic step of buying the incredibly lifelike doll - called `reborns` - after watching a documentary.
Unemployed Ashleigh - who claims £13,000 a year in benefits - spent months painstakingly researching and designing the perfect doll.
The dolls take four weeks to make and arrive in plastic kits of a head and four limbs - like Airfix models. The body is weighted with glass beads or steel shots to make it feel as life-like as possible. Each hair is meticulously added individually to the baby`s head and eyelids, which can take 40 hours to complete.