Just weeks after Jhené Aiko became a mom for the second time, the Souled Out singer’s father has made her a big sister for the eighth time.
Jhené’s 78-year-old father, Dr. Karamo Chilombo, welcomed his ninth baby this month and shared the news in an Instagram post on Christmas Eve (December 24).
“THE FIRST MEETING OF FATHER AND SUN/SON ON THAT SPECIAL DAY AND HE WAS ALREADY VERY HUNGRY,” Chilombo wrote with the post.
In another post, Chilombo revealed the baby’s name is JahSeh-Miyagi and he arrived on December 16.
Proud big sis Jhené added her “congratulations” in the comments with a blue heart.
The singer and Big Sean welcomed their son Noah on November 8.
“After 24 hours of Labor, A Lunar Eclipse, with rain from the beginning of labor til he was born, he’s here safe and sound,” Sean wrote in a caption sharing the news. “Happy, Healthy and everything we could ever ask for and more. Any and everything for you Son.”
Jhené Aiko shared similar insight on her own page, adding a few nicknames for the pair’s newborn: “My baby Yoda, my Sani.”
The baby is the first child for Sean, while Jhené has a 14-year-old daughter from a previous relationship with Omarion’s younger brother, O’Ryan.
On his 2020 song “Deep Reverence,” Sean revealed that he and Jhené suffered a miscarriage in a prior attempt to have a child together.
“Should be a billionaire based on the time off I’m not takin’/ Probably why this shit with me get crazy and we lost a baby,” he raps on the track, which lives on his Detroit 2 project. He later confirmed he was referring to Jhené in an interview with Sway in the Morning.
God bless his testoterone levels at 78.
In an episode of Steve Harvey’s show he discouraged a 50-55 yo man from having a kid with his wife who was about 15-20 years younger and ever since I agree that after a certain age one shouldn’t be having kids. What will he be able to do with this boy when the kid is a little older and wants to play outside with his dad? Even more important, he’ll most likely have departed this life when his son will need his father for life lessons. Bringing a kid in to the world is the easy part, I don’t see a 78-year old doing those long nights with a baby nor having to carry the responsibilities for a lot longer.
Play outside with his dad? You sound like naive boy. There’s more to life than playing outside with your dad. The best thing you can pass on to your kid is knowledge and financial security.
The best thing to pass on is quality time. His son can be sitting on stacks of cash and be broken inside from the absence of this man in his life. At 53, I’ve gained my own money and knowledge, but tto have my father killed when I was six – who never got to see me grow, aspire, achieve; never got to dance on his toes, sit on his lap, have him wipe my tears, attend my graduation, see me off to Italy at the airport, meet my fiance, walk me down the aisle, dance at my reception, meet his two grandkids, help me navigate, defend me from predators – there’s no price on that. No bag however large or small can fill the gaping hole his absence left. I am coming from the female perspective, so you see it differently and maybe a dad would too. But from a kid’s point of view, having been there, those things are secondary to his actual presence. But this guy’s baby is here now so he can only do the best he can with the time he’s got. I would make milestone videos for him to view as he reaches certain ages, and pass on some knowledge & wisdom of experience to him. At least he will be able to feel his presence through modern technology. We didn’t have such blessings in the 70s. I would give anything to just see my father’s face.
The old dog still got some kick in him lol
he’s going to enjoy high school graduation at 96
he’s going to enjoy high school graduation at 96
I think after 50 no one should be making kids. This man will not live till 100 most likely. Say he does now the kid has to lose their father when they’re barely in their 20s. That sucks for the kid. Anyway what do I know.