In 2021, conjoined twins Abby and Brittany Hensel reached a major milestone when Abby got married to Army veteran Josh Bowling.
Now, as the reality stars share footage from the special day, they've issued a warning to their haters.
Abby and Brittany, 34, are dicephalic conjoined twins. They have two heads side by side on one torso and share a bloodstream and all organs below the waist.
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Brittany controls the left arm and left of the body, while Abby controls the right.
They first appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show back in 1996 and went on to star in their own TLC reality show Abby & Brittany in 2012.
Back in March, it was revealed that Abby had gotten married to Army veteran Josh Bowling back in 2021 in Delano, Minnesota, after Today obtained their marriage records.
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The sisters have since began sharing footage from the couple's nuptials on social media.
On Thursday (13 June), they shared a clip of the first dance with their 299k followers on TikTok.
In the footage, which played to a soundtrack of Adele's 'Rolling in the Deep,' Abby and Brittany can be seen with their arms around Bowling's neck as they sway from side to side.
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Fellow TikTokers were quick to congratulate the couple, with one writing in the comments: "I'm happy for her. I've watched them since [they were] babies."
And another said: "Wishing them years of happiness."
But, following a barrage of hate when the marriage was first announced, the twins issued a warning to any potential trolls in a separate video.
Alongside a montage of pictures from the wedding, they wrote: "We know you think you know us #sisterhoodgoals #abbyandbrittanyhensel #happy."
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When news of Abby and Josh's marriage was first released to the public, it left everyone wondering about the same thing.
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People took to Reddit to question the legal side of the marriage, with one user asking: "How does this unfold legally? Since they are two people married to one man, who is on the marriage certificate?"
And another asked: "What if they fight? What if one h/w set wants to divorce and the other doesn't?"
However, a lawyer has since clarified: "One of the twins will be the legal spouse as far as the state is concerned. So it is theoretically possible that the other twin could someday decide to marry a different person.
"But given the way they have had to harmonise their entire lives, I imagine they would find it easier to stick to being married to just one person," they explained.