Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The French show is on. It Feels Good. We share
good news, happy stories every day on the show What'd
you Find? Calen So?
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Jennifer Fluellen's son Deeton spent years praying for his mama,
who woke up from a five year coma in August
of twenty twenty two, and this Mother's Day, which was
her first at home with her kids since waking up,
he only wanted one thing, to have her come to
his church, and much to his mom's surprise, and Dayton,
who turned twenty last month, went to the front of
the congregation and read a poem that he wrote about
(00:29):
his mom, who has been fighting her way back to
regain the life that she lost. I was in the
back crying, said Peggy. He's the one with the biggest heart.
The family unfortunately was ripped apart in twenty seventeen when
she was involved in a car accident. She then woke
up in twenty twenty two, like I said, and since
then she has been fighting her way back, hitting little
(00:50):
milestones like going to her son's high school football game.
But now she is finally home and she was able
to fulfill her son's wish go to his church and
hear his beautiful palm.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Nay, wow, Yes, I've never heard of this. A micro premie.
I've heard of a premie, but a micro premie. It's
just from New Lennox, Illinois. A baby girl who weighed
just over one pound when she was born prematurely in
November has beaten all of the odds and gone home
with her parents after spending her first six months at
a suburban Chicago hospital. Nyla Brooke Haywood was treated to
(01:24):
a send off party on Monday at the Silver Cross
Hospital in New Lenox, attended by family, friends and hospital staffers,
before the six month old was taken home by her
first time parents, Nikia and Corey of a Juliet, Illinois.
So fairly a pound and now she's going home. Wow?
Is that cool homes? Yeah, that's nice. I've been all
(01:45):
these baby stories. Have a whole new meeting for you now.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
One hundred percent.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Yeah. I remember when we were doing our event at
Lurie's and you were talking about your you're being a
premie right or born early? Because I was a feeble yelling,
feeble calling at that and I've heard that story one
hundred times. Yeah, I'm glad. I can still make you
emotional with the same ten story, the same ten stories,
and then you guys give me a courtesy laugh on
the same ten stories. I make you cry and make
you laugh. Hey, it's got you here. I've made a
whole career twenty some years telling the same damn stories.
(02:11):
But up, yeah, yeah I will