Carl Mullan and wife Aisling welcome third child - and share beautiful Irish name

1 week ago 5

Carl Mullan and his wife Aisling have welcomed their third child together.

The 2FM presenter shared the happy news with an adorable picture of their new daughter, alongside a video of himself and his wife in the hospital.

The couple previously welcomed son Daibhí in August 2021 and had daughter Éala during the same month in 2023.

Carl and Aisling chose a beautiful Irish name, which means fair woman in English.

In a post announcing their daughter’s birth, the RTE star said: “Welcome to the world, Béibhínn Mullan.

“We are so over the moon to have another beautiful little girl who joined us last week, and both she and her Mam are doing great.

“We’ve spent the last few days adjusting to life as a family of five—and coming to terms with the fact that we are both now officially outnumbered.

“Once again, we can’t thank the wonderful staff at Holles Street Hospital enough. Honest to God, they are angels on earth. There were so many we came across—some whose names we can’t recall—but to Rebecca, Omar, Sophia, Bríd, Bianca, Trish, Katie, Eugenia, and everyone else we were fortunate enough to meet: we are forever grateful to you for bringing our daughter safely into the world”.

Carl Mullan and wife Aisling's new daughter

Carl Mullan and wife Aisling's new daughter

He received many messages of congratulations from his friends and followers.

Rosanna Davison wrote: “Congratulations all!”

Ailbhe Garrihy shared: “Beautiful baby girl. Congrats and well done mama @aisling_mullan xx”.

A third person said: “Huge congratulations. Absolutely fantastic news! Beautiful little girl”.

With another commenter adding: “Congratulations guys. She is beautiful. I love her name”.

Carl previously opened up about how his life changed since becoming a father.

“I don't think I was fully mentally prepared before becoming a dad for what it would mean,” he said on Brendan O'Connor's RTÉ Radio 1 show.

“I often talk to people about the mourning of the loss of your old life. That's probably the biggest thing I've had to try and figure out.

“You realise, oh, it's gone. It is not coming back, I keep thinking it's coming back - it's not.”

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