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Old 12-28-2008, 08:24 PM   #1
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Default Angel Spotted in Hospital Hallway

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When Chelsea Banton was born five weeks prematurely, doctors predicted she had 36 hours to live.

Proving them wrong was the first miracle for Chelsea, now an Independence High School freshman.

“She spent the first four months in a neonatal intensive care unit,” recalls her mother, Colleen Banton of Mint Hill.

Before Chelsea was 2, she was admitted to the hospital for pneumonia, the first of several dangerous run-ins with the illness that have made her a familiar face in Presbyterian's pediatric intensive care unit.

Among other health problems in her medical history: hydrocephalus, requiring a shunt in her skull and, later, several shunt revisions; life-threatening viruses; and, this past July, fluid retention that required more than a week's hospitalization and three liters of liquid to be drawn from her body.

Prayer has helped sustain the whole family.

“We had been praying every day, my oldest daughter and I and Chelsea,” Colleen Banton said. “…Praying for a miracle.”

That miracle, Colleen believes, came Nov. 5 – seven weeks after Chelsea was admitted to the hospital for pneumonia.

What originally seemed like a bad cold nearly killed her.

“She was on life-support from the moment she got there,” her mother said.

That was Sept. 21. Over the next six weeks in the hospital, Chelsea faced one threat after another: pneumonia in her left lung, then her right lung, then sepsis, blood clots, staph infections, E. coli, a collapsed lung and feeding problems.

In late October, doctors met with the family to discuss “a plan of action,” Colleen said. One of the decisions she had to make was whether she would take Chelsea off the ventilator. Earlier, doctors had removed Chelsea from the ventilator several times, but had replaced it when the struggle to breathe became too difficult for the teen.

But a family meeting Oct. 31 was a turning point.

“At that point, the family… agreed that when she did come off the ventilator again, (they) weren't putting it back in,” Colleen said. “Whatever happened, would happen.”

On Saturday, Nov. 1, “they took her off the ventilator and she did good,” her mother said. “She was breathing on her own.”

The next day, “her stats went down,” and doctors put her in an oxygen mask.

But over the next few days, Colleen noticed her daughter “wasn't getting better. Things were kind of lingering.”

And Chelsea, who had been having anxiety attacks and crying throughout her hospital stay, was having more of them.

“I said, ‘She's been through enough,'” Colleen remembers. “I said, ‘Can we just take her mask off? She's been through enough.'

“I wanted to do what the Lord wanted me to do. And I really felt like I've had her for 14 years, and if it's time for her to go to heaven, then I know she'll be healed.”

The mask didn't come off immediately, though. They waited until family members had a chance to come to see Chelsea – perhaps for the last time.

On the afternoon of Nov. 5, as family and friends prayed about the decision, a nurse practitioner called Colleen's attention to a monitor showing the door to the pediatric intensive care unit.

“On the monitor, there was this bright light,” Colleen recalls. “And I looked at it and I said, ‘Oh my goodness! It looks like an angel!”

Colleen pointed her digital camera at the monitor to take a photo of the image, but the “first picture wouldn't take.”

She tried again and succeeded. The image gave her a peace that stayed with her when hospital staff removed Chelsea's oxygen mask.

And then, “when they took the mask off of her, her stats went as high as they've ever been.

“Her color was good, and the doctors and nurses were amazed,” Colleen said. “The nurse practitioner who saw the image in the monitor said, ‘I've worked here 15 years, and I've never seen anything like it.'”

Chelsea was removed from intensive care on Nov. 14 and went home three days later.

Her mother believes it was a miracle – attended by a very real angel bathed in light at the door to the pediatric intensive care unit.

“What was so ironic… is it was a rainy day,” Colleen said. “It had been overcast all day. And the sun only came out at that point.”

To those who doubt her story and photograph, Colleen Banton says: “If they doubt it, that's fine. … But I know what I saw, and the picture's untouched. I didn't make it up. That's just something that I believe.

“I believe that more people have changed since this happened. I know I have. I look at things differently than I used to – because I know God is in control.”

On Christmas Day, Chelsea will turn 15 – another miracle considering all of the medical trials she's faced, according to her mother.

“I'm learning,” Colleen Banton said, “that every day she's alive is a miracle.”
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Old 12-29-2008, 04:43 AM   #2
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Default angel?

look at the reflection in the floor. kinda looks like the sun coming thru a window hitting the wall....very rectangular angel...maybe with morphine pumping thru me I'll see angels too?

Last edited by Monkey; 12-29-2008 at 04:45 AM.
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Old 12-29-2008, 09:51 AM   #3
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It also has to do with quality of life. It is no joy to have to basically live in a hospital and receive painful operations and treatments. It is good to see the family has strong faith, but I pray the child will eventually be able to lead a normal life.
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Old 12-29-2008, 10:51 PM   #4
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Oh those of little faith, pray that on your death bed you might be so lucky as to have an apparition albeit an angel or not that miraculously brings you back to health and saves you from the clutches of death.
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Old 12-30-2008, 10:23 AM   #5
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There are some on their death bed who are awaiting death. My father used to pray to die during his final months of cancer. The pain was unbearable, and it was very difficult on my mother. An Angel of Mercy did show up and relieve him of his pain.
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Old 12-30-2008, 04:57 PM   #6
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Originally Posted by kidflash2008 View Post
There are some on their death bed who are awaiting death. My father used to pray to die during his final months of cancer. The pain was unbearable, and it was very difficult on my mother. An Angel of Mercy did show up and relieve him of his pain.


that is a really touching story, kidflash! hopefully your father rests in peace.
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Old 12-31-2008, 09:28 AM   #7
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Originally Posted by kidflash2008 View Post
There are some on their death bed who are awaiting death. My father used to pray to die during his final months of cancer. The pain was unbearable, and it was very difficult on my mother. An Angel of Mercy did show up and relieve him of his pain.
My father passed from cancer as well. Cancer rarely has a positive outcome on those taken or left behind. Dad prayed for death (although agnostic) it came quickly, thier is a God, I did not set out to offend anyone, I hope I didn't.
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Old 12-31-2008, 11:05 AM   #8
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The last month of my father's life was painful, although the last week in the hospice they pumped him up with morphine. He died peacefully in his sleep with my mother at his side. It is surprising how fast it can take once it becomes terminal. I hope I would have as much dignity as my father did if anything should happen to me. He is at rest, and all my family members have made a point of getting checked for colon and other cancers. Never put it off, and if not feeling well (you will know when there is a problem) please put aside any dislike of the doctors and medical clinics and get checked out. My father put it off for a few years, and it made it harder to fight.

Teslatom, it is correct that the true angels are the nurses, nurses aides and other medical staff. They are the ones who take care of you (the doctors are in and out), and it can take a toll on their personal life with the hours they put in.
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Old 01-03-2009, 05:44 AM   #9
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hahahahaha

looks like this case is debunked
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Old 01-03-2009, 05:45 AM   #10
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To monkey:

hahahahaha

looks like this case is debunked
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