Posted on 02/11/2003 4:52:20 AM PST by miltonim
By Monica Sattley February 10, 2003
"Welcome to Sonic ... (sniff) ... Can I take your order? (sniffle)."
Had the restaurant been walk-in instead of drive-in, a swipe across the eyes of the cashier to remove a tear would have accompanied the sad greeting.
It was July 16, 2002, and the Sonic employees at 1703 Military Road had just heard the nerve-racking news that a son had been born to their assistant manager - four months early. At just 1 pound, 4 ounces, Hunter Brant Hill's condition was, to say the least, questionable.
Mandy Hill, a 12-year employee of Sonic, is Hunter's mother, and David and Cathy Hull of Poyen, the baby's maternal grandparents, are the restaurant's owners of 22 years.
"That day a few of us went up (to the hospital) to check on him," recalled Cindy Rigsby, the restaurant manager. "He was so tiny, it was kind of scary." Hunter's lungs were still six weeks shy of developing, his kidneys were not functioning, his eyes were still fused, his skin transparent.
"You couldn't touch him for fear of tearing (his skin)," said Cathy Hull. With a Nov. 10 due date, he was born at 23 weeks, still well within the range of legal abortion, 32 weeks. He was small enough to fit in an adult's hand. |
"His little diaper was not even two inches big," his grandmother said.
To add to the edgy situation, Mandy and Brant Hill, Hunter's parents, had been waiting for him five-and-a-half years, the pregnancy delayed by fertility problems.
"I was very scared that he wasn't going to make it," said Mandy Hill. But her mother kept a positive outlook and told her, "God didn't give you this baby just to take him away."
Hunter lived and grew in an incubator under close medical supervision at UAMS for 94 days. He was taken home to Prattsville in October. He recently weighed in at 9 pounds, 8 ounces, and is developing now the same as any baby born in October would.
"He's getting really good at holding his head up," said Hill, "He tries to stand up; he pulls your fingers; he doesn't cry very much."
The lack of crying is probably because he doesn't have much experience with it. Because Hunter's lungs were not fully developed when he was born, he had to be hooked up to a ventilator and he wasn't able to cry. But that was a sound his parents yearned to hear. His first whimper, Hill said, sounded "like a little lamb crying."
Hunter's successes have come only after a long, arduous time in and out of the hospital, and with all the amazing recoveries Hunter has made thus far, his grandmother considers him a "miracle baby."
His first success was a day after Hunter's birth. Hull describes what happened: "The doctor talked to me out in the hall and said, 'If his kidneys don't start functioning, that's going to be a major problem.' I told him, 'Sometime between 7 and 8:30 p.m., they're going to start working because that's when my church will be praying for him.'"
At 8:20 her prediction came true. Hull said, "His daddy was crying and everyone was asking what was wrong and he said, 'He started peeing!'"
Hunter's parents were not allowed to hold him for quite a while after he was born. Mandy Hill got her first chance when Hunter was one-and-a-half months old. "It was probably for 10 seconds; just long enough for the nurses to change his sheets in the incubator." After several more weeks, mother and baby were allowed to cuddle for about 20 minutes.
The Hills and Cathy Hull spent a lot of time in the hospital those 94 days. Mother and grandmother would drive there in the morning, Cathy Hull would stay until 4 p.m., when Brant Hill could get off work, and then the Hills would stay "until they couldn't stay any longer," Hull said, because they were not allowed to visit after 6 p.m.
"We would just sit there and watch him sleep," remembered Mandy Hill. "I went 93 out of the 94 days he was in the hospital ... The doctors kept telling me I needed to stay home and rest, but the one day I didn't go, I cried all day," she said.
Cathy Hull said even though Hunter was hospitalized so long, "the year really went by; you didn't know where it went because you were just at the hospital every day."
Rigsby said Sonic employees were kept up-to-date on Hunter's condition throughout it all. "Cathy would call us and keep us updated on what was going on. She brought pictures up here periodically."
The trek is not over yet. Hunter has had two surgeries on his left eye, and doctors are not sure what his future will look like. Mandy Hill said she is confident he is growing up healthy. "I'm thinking he's going to be a perfectly formed boy," said his grandmother.
For now, Hunter has to be watched carefully. He has a heart monitor when he sleeps and sometimes needs to be hooked up to oxygen in his slumbers.
Hill has quit her job at Sonic to give Hunter the close attention he needs at home. She says the journey has been, and continues to be, well worth it.
"I think God always does everything for a reason, and it's made me and my family closer," Hill said.
©Benton Courier 2003
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