GAZELLE MAGAZINE Volume 2, Issue 1 | Page 48

FAMILY & HOME MEET BABY RAINE, A FERGUSON MIRACLE By ERIN WILLIAMS Michelle Ringo was five months pregnant when her normal environment became a literal war zone on August 10, 2014 - the day after Michael Brown Jr. was fatally shot in Ferguson, less than two miles from Michelle’s home. “Every night we would hear the helicopters and sirens, and having that stress along with being pregnant was kind of overwhelming,” said Michelle, who lives with her husband and son in a “typically quiet” Dellwood neighborhood. 48 Her last pregnancy, nine years prior with the birth of her son, was met with complications of high blood pressure and the risk of being diagnosed with pre-eclampsia. But her previous pregnancy could not have prepared her for the days ahead. “There’s just something about helicopters flying over your house every night; a couple of mornings when I took my son to school the tear gas was still in the air. It would strangle us a little bit,” she remembers of the drastic measures taken by the police force – and eventually the National Guard – to regain control in the Ferguson community. “My son GAZELLE STL is eight, and one day he told me he was afraid of the police. Everything was stressing me out. I’ve been on high blood pressure medication since I was eighteen. Sometimes when I know I’m getting stressed, I can feel it - and I can honestly say that I felt that stress.” The turning point came on September 8 when after dinner with her husband, Michelle experienced intense heartburn. “I was up all night walking around the house; that’s how bad it hurt,” she said. The next day, she took her son to school and got in touch with her doctor - two days prior to her next scheduled appointment - who advised her to come in for a checkup. She had already planned to talk to her doctor about the stress she had been feeling. At 210/140, her blood pressure was so high that she was admitted to Mercy Hospital that afternoon - but wasn’t allowed to drive herself for fear she would have a seizure. “The crazy thing about it was I was congested, I was uncomfortable, but I wasn’t miserable to where I felt like I needed dire medical attention,” she said. “Everybody was worried about me, but I didn’t feel that bad.” Additional blood work taken later that day revealed that Michelle’s liver was beginning to fail and that all of the ailments she had been battling (heartburn, cold symptoms, swelling) were due to an illness developed by pregnant women called HELLP syndrome. “The side effects are so similar to other problems, that most women don’t recognize that’s what it is. They just think they’re pregnant, and they don’t feel well - and that’s all I thought it was,” she said. The only cure? Delivering her baby. Within twenty minutes, Michelle was prepped for an emergency C-section, and delivered her daughter, Raine, the evening of September 9 at one pound, thirteen ounces, twelve weeks before her due date. “I was terrified that she would come out, and I wouldn’t hear anything, and she wouldn’t be breathing, but she was crying,” said Michelle. “She is a fighter.” After a three-month stay in the hospital,