Rockingham
Remembered
Wilson's
Picks
You Are My Sunshine
Like any good mother, when Karen found out that
 another baby was on the way, she did what she could  to
    help her 3-year-old son, Michael,  prepare for a newsibling.
They found  out that the new baby was going be
    a  girl, and day after day, night after night, Michael
sang to his sister in mommy's tummy. He was  building
   a bond of love with his  little sister before he even met
    her.  The pregnancy progressed normally! for Karen, an
 active member of the Panther Creek United Methodist
Church in Morristown,  Tennessee.

    In time, the labor  pains came. Soon it was every
    five  minutes, every three, every minute. But serious
 complications arose during delivery and Karen  found
   herself in hours of  labor.
 Would a C-section be required?  Finally, after a long
   struggle,  Michael's little sister was born.
  But she  was in very serious condition.

  With a  siren howling in the night, the ambulance rushed
 the infant to the neonatal intensive care unit at
St. Mary's Hospital, Knoxville,  Tennessee.
  The days inched by. The little  girl got worse.

  The pediatrician had to  tell the parents there
   is very little  hope. Be prepared for the worst.
   Karen  and her husband contacted a local cemetery
 about a burial plot.

  They had fixed up a special room in their house
for their new baby but now they found  themselves
    having to plan for a  funeral. Michael, however, kept
     begging his parents to let him see his sister. I want
to sing to her, he kept saying. Week two in  intensive
    care looked as if a funeral  would come before the week
    was  over.

    Michael kept nagging  about singing to his sister,
    but kids  are never allowed in Intensive Care. Karen
  and I decided to take Michael whether they liked it or not.
If he didn't see his sister right then, he may  never
    see her alive. She dressed him in an oversized scrub
    suit and marched  him into ICU. He looked like a walking
   laundry basket.

   The  head nurse recognized him as a child and
   bellowed, "Get that kid out of here now. No children
are allowed." The mother rose up strong in Karen,  and
    the usually mild-mannered lady  glared steel-eyed right
    into the head  nurse's face, her lips a firm line. "He
   is not leaving until he sings to his sister" she
stated. Then Karen towed Michael to his sister's bedside.

    He gazed at the tiny  infant losing the battle to
    live.  After a moment, he began to sing. In the
   pure-hearted voice of a 3-year-old, Michael sang:
"You are my sunshine, my only sunshine, you  make
    me happy when skies are  gray." Instantly the baby
    girl  seemed to respond. The pulse rate began to
 calm down and become steady. "Keep on singing,
Michael," encouraged Karen with tears in her  eyes.

    "You never know, dear, how  much I love you, please
    don't take  my sunshine away." As Michael sang to his
   sister, the baby's ragged, strained breathing became
as smooth as a kitten's purr. "Keep on  singing,
    sweetheart." "The other  night, dear, as I lay sleeping,
    I  dreamed I held you in my arms". Michael's little sister
began to relax as rest, healing rest, seemed to  sweep
    over  her.

    "Keep on singing,  Michael." Tears had now conquered
    the  face of the bossy head nurse. Karen glowed. "You
 are my sunshine, my only sunshine. Please don't take
my sunshine away..."

The next day...the very next day...the little girl  was
    well enough to go home. Woman's  Day Magazine called
    it 'The  Miracle of a Brother's Song'. The medical staff
 just called it a miracle. Karen called it a miracle  of
    God's love.