Categories: General Sports News

“Is the girls’ father your son Borja?”

It was the last days of January 2023, just two years ago. On Risto Mejide’s classic sofa, the baroness had decided to sit down and tell everything. A question that Risto Mejide asked Tita Cervera was used in the promotion that advanced the program as part of their relaxed talk. “Is the girls’ father your son, Borja Thyssen (43)?” Mejide asked his interviewee. By “the girls” he was referring to the twins Guadalupe Sabina and María del Carmen. Some young women born in Los Angeles, and who filled Carmen Cervera with happiness who became a mother again at the age of 63 through a surrogate.

The baroness seemed troubled and did not know what to respond. A few seconds later, with a smile, Tita replied: “Girls have a father.” There it stopped. Then the question was removed from the program and was never heard from again. Now, with the baroness’ daughters of legal age, they are the ones who undergo an interview. One of Carmen’s daughters is attached to her brother Borja.

It must be remembered that in September 2020, Telecinco suggested that the father of Tita’s twins could be her brother, Borja. They did it after Carmen posed on the cover of a well-known magazine with her two daughters, Sabina y Carmen14 years old. In the image you can see that one of the two teenagers, who were born through surrogacy, bears a great resemblance to her brother. The mystery of who the girls’ father is remains latent to this day. The Baroness herself stated the following: “My daughters already know who their father is.” Now they are the ones speaking for Hello.

When the interview was broadcast, Carmen Cervera opened up about the most difficult issues in her life: marriages, infidelities, problems with the Treasury and, of course, the confrontation that kept her away from her son Borja for years. “I am a positive person and I always expect a change from him. I have tried to encourage it a thousand times, but there are people at his side who prevent it,” he confessed. But no trace of the question about the paternity of his daughters.

Two years have passed since an uncomfortable question crashed into the media figure of Baroness Thyssen

A question that many described as brutal: “Is the girls’ father your son Borja?” The echo of that questioning, launched with studied coldness by Risto Mejide, haunted Tita for weeks, but it did not break her figure; On the contrary, it added another layer to the complex picture of his life. Today, the protagonists of that storm, Carmen and Sabina, now adults, raise their voices, not to respond directly, but to trace their own story. Born on July 6, 2006 in Los Angeles, Carmen and Sabina came into the world with the discretion of those who do not know that they will be the subject of headlines and covers.

They were presented to the public almost two years later in a report that aroused the curiosity of a country accustomed to the spectacle of aristocracy. Since then, their faces, slightly different but linked by genetics and complicity, have been the secondary characters in their mother’s public life, until now.

Carmen, the oldest by three minutes, has the eyes of someone who looks at the world with a mixture of pragmatism and youthful enthusiasm. Since she started university, her life has taken a defined direction: a double degree in Business Administration and International Relations that directs her to follow in her mother’s footsteps in the universe of art and museums. However, when he speaks, there is no shadow of weight in his words, neither of the last name he carries nor of the rumors that have surrounded his family history. For her part, Sabina, very similar physically to Borja, seems a perfect counterweight to her sister’s structured character. An illustrator in training, she speaks with the same passion, but her words draw a different path: “For me, art is not in museums, but in the stories I can tell through my drawings. My mother and Carmen are my inspiration, but I want to find my own voice,” he says in the weekly.

Life in Andorra has been their refuge and springboard, a place where nature and privacy have allowed the sisters to grow away from the media noise, although always aware of their role in the bigger picture. But Sabina recognizes that there is something special in that isolation: the space to dream.

When the episode of his fatherhood comes up, there are no fusses or averted glances. Carmen, the most eloquent, faces the question with maturity: “My mother has always spoken clearly to us. We know where we come from and what it means to have this last name. That question didn’t change anything for us,” she says. Sabina, more reserved, nods silently, but adds with a slight smile: “Art teaches us that the important thing is not the noise around the painting, but what the canvas transmits. And we know who we are,” she says.

Despite their differences, the twins share a bond that goes beyond blood. Since they were little, they have been inseparable, and although their paths begin to diverge, the bridge that unites them remains solid. Carmen speaks with pride about her sister: “Sabina has a unique way of seeing the world. She always surprises me with her ideas and creativity. We complement each other a lot,” she says. For her part, Sabina describes Carmen as her pillar: “Carmen is the one who organizes me, who reminds me that dreaming is good, but that you also have to step on the ground from time to time. We balance each other,” she adds.

Humor and complicit jokes are a constant between the two, a trait inherited from their mother, who, despite being the epicenter of a complex family, has known how to build a close relationship with her daughters: “My mother has always been our refuge “Says Sabina with a tender expression. “He has taught us to face everything with elegance and determination,” he recalls. Having just turned 18, Carmen and Sabina are ready to write the next chapter of their lives. Carmen dreams of contributing to the world of art from a global perspective, while Sabina imagines a future full of drawn stories and universes to explore. They both agree on something: love and respect for the inheritance that their mother has left them, not only material, but also moral.

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Chris Lawrence

Chris writes Football and General Sports News on Sportsfinding. He is the newest member in our team, and has a lot of new ideas which he discusses with us to take this portal to new heights. He is a sports maniac, and thus, writing about various sports. He is fond of tattoos.

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