Sophie Kasaei Welcomes First Child, Reveals Baby Boy Name
sophie kasaei has given birth to her first child with Jordan Brook, and the couple says their baby boy is healthy and happy. They shared the news on social media after years of fertility struggles and a pregnancy that was already shaped by Brook’s hospitalisation.
Little Miracle Arrival
The couple described the newborn as “our little miracle,” adding: “A moment we had dreamed of for so long. We can’t believe he is finally here, healthy and happy. 'You are our little miracle who has completed us”. That language does more than announce a birth; it closes a long, public stretch of uncertainty for a pair who had documented the road to this point.
They had announced in December that they were expecting their first child. During the TOWIE Christmas special, they said the baby was due in mid-June, and on the latest series they learned they were expecting a little boy. The reveal gives the pregnancy a clear endpoint and turns a TV storyline into a family milestone with an actual arrival.
Jordan Brook’s 22 Days
Jordan Brook spent 22 days in hospital after being diagnosed with meningitis and encephalitis during Sophie’s pregnancy. He said on Wednesday 1st April: “I’M GOING HOME ??” and described the illness as “The top 1% percent of the worst case of viral meningitis and encephilitis that my Dr has ever seen,” adding that he had brain swelling, inflammation and acute memory loss.
Brook also thanked Kasaei and said she and their baby boy had kept him in the fight, before adding that he could not wait to “start our future as a healthy family of 3.” That is the sharpest measure of what changed here: the birth did not just add a child, it came after a pregnancy defined by a serious medical scare and the couple’s open fertility struggles.
December To Baby Boy
The couple’s timeline now runs from a December pregnancy announcement, through the mid-June due date they shared on television, to a baby boy whose name they revealed with the birth. For readers who followed the story, the practical takeaway is simple: the pregnancy is over, the child has arrived, and the family’s next chapter begins from a far less fragile place than it did in March.
The unresolved piece is no longer whether they would become parents, but how openly they choose to share the child’s life from here. They have already set the tone themselves: private where it counts, public when the milestone is too large to keep off the feed.