Silly Green Monkey
Cowardly Lurking in the Shadows of Greatness
I'm just shocked to see it go from the CoSprings Gazette I wrapped after Christmas to the world in only a few days.
"The baby was, it was basically limp, with a very slow heart rate."
Tracy Hermanstorfer, 33, was getting prepped for childbirth at the hospital Thursday morning and her 37-year-old husband was by her side when she began to feel sleepy and laid back in her bed.
Yes, why can't we ?This is a beautiful and emotionally moving event for the family involved. I suppose it could have emotional meaning for any of us if we want (or not) if we decide that we want to personally relate to the story. Why can't we just leave it at that and not try to drag some weird, nonexistent "paranormal" meaning out of it?
She did no such thing, she simply speculated. Her conclusion was:Martin offered up a couple of plausible options.
She did no such thing, she simply speculated. Her conclusion was:
"I don't have a great explanation," Martin said. "From my personal perspective, I'll take help wherever I can get it."
After running a battery of tests on Hermanstorfer, doctors still do not know what caused her cardiac arrest or what brought her back from the brink.
It's rare for a woman to suffer cardiac arrest during pregnancy and rarer still for both mother and baby to survive, Martin said.
So which conclusion(s) would you draw from the above?
1. We don't know the cause, but it probably has a natural explanation.
2. We don't know the cause, and it's probably supernatural.
3. Something that rarely happens has a supernatural cause.
"Unfortunately, in most of these situations, despite the best efforts of the team, Mom is not able to be revived," Martin told "Good Morning America."
What conclusion do you draw? Any? None? What?The conclusion I wouldn't draw is that there is nothing here to be explained.
"'They did something to [the infant] and boom, he came back to me right in my hands,' the dad said.
Coltyn Hermanstorfer.
Poor kid...
She did no such thing, she simply speculated. Her conclusion was:
"I don't have a great explanation," Martin said. "From my personal perspective, I'll take help wherever I can get it."
After running a battery of tests on Hermanstorfer, doctors still do not know what caused her cardiac arrest or what brought her back from the brink.
It's rare for a woman to suffer cardiac arrest during pregnancy and rarer still for both mother and baby to survive, Martin said.
They did not return from the dead .. Dead is dead ..
I posted this in R&P
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=163513
The dead baby also had a pulse ..
Dr. Martin:
I suspect someone botched the meds, and now they are playing CYA ...
The father is happy with " Godidit ", and the ( hospital's ) attorneys can relax ..
I'd like to read the code report. I'm going to wildly speculate that she came right back following some Narcan. The 'got sleepy, then stopped breathing' sounds like someone got a bit of a heavy dose of something. That would affect the baby too, in pretty much the way that was reported.
A
There are unlimited possibilities, just no convincing explanation.She specifically mentioned the possibility of relief of obstruction to blood flow with delivery of the baby, and relief from stresses specific to labour and delivery as possibilities. Other possibilities have already been brought up by others.
What does any issue discussed in this subforum have to do with the paranormal if, as most here believe, there is no such thing as the paranormal?You didn't answer my question. What has this to do with general skepticism and the paranormal?