logo
Mom Sleeps with Phone on Silent, Wakes Up to Something That Nearly Stops Her Heart

Mom Sleeps with Phone on Silent, Wakes Up to Something That Nearly Stops Her Heart

Yahoo6 days ago
With seven adult children, Meredith Thornton of Arkansas keeps her phone on every night, a habit she adopted when her eldest first got a driver's license.
'Even though they're grown, it scares me to think about them on the road at night,' Thornton, 54, tells TODAY.com, noting that staying reachable has come in handy over the years, especially as the family has faced 'legit emergencies' in the past.
"They know I'm always available," she says.
Recently, however, Thornton experienced a rare lapse.
When Thornton's eyes popped open after an uninterrupted sleep, she was greeted by a string of back-to-back missed calls from her 18-year-old son, Van.
'My world stopped. My heart stopped,' she recalls. 'What made it worse was the timing. He gets off work around 11:30 at night, and those calls came about an hour later. It lined up with something terrible, like a car wreck, or a mental health issue."
Thornton, who says she was "paralyzed" with anxiety, managed to summon the courage to check on Van. She didn't expect to find him safe and sound in his bedroom at home, but there he was, fast and asleep and completely unscathed.
He was also very confused.
'He mumbled something about texting me,' Thornton says. Sure enough, when she checked her phone, there was a message from Van.
The emergency, it turned out, was far less dire than Thornton had imagined. Van needed a Microsoft code — just a simple code — that had been sent to his mother's email.
Thornton had a feeling the mix-up would strike a chord with other parents on TikTok. And she was right. Her video recounting the ordeal quickly went viral, racking up more than three million views.
"Girl!! 11 messages from my son asking about Roblox code and I'm thinking he been kidnapped," one person wrote in the comments.
"I was legitimately on a stage speaking to over 300 people. I keep my phone on silent, but I use it to know the time. My son called eleven times in a row. I apologized to the audience and turned my mic off and took the call. 'Can I spend 7 dollars on roblox.' Thank God it was all teachers."
"What about the text messages that just say….MOM followed by absolutely nothing else."
"Ooooh I get those. Heart attack city."
"This happened to me last weekend. And my kids were calling because A BEAR WAS OUTSIDE THEIR TENT."
Thornton says she was too relieved to be angry at Van for giving her a scare, especially over something as silly as a passcode — and after all, he had texted her.
'Kids today are up all night,' she says. 'I think they forget that some of us actually sleep!"
This article was originally published on TODAY.com
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Toddler Critically Injured After Fall from Third-Story Window. Neighbor Remembers Hearing Woman in the Building Scream
Toddler Critically Injured After Fall from Third-Story Window. Neighbor Remembers Hearing Woman in the Building Scream

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Toddler Critically Injured After Fall from Third-Story Window. Neighbor Remembers Hearing Woman in the Building Scream

"When there's children involved, my heart goes out," a neighbor saidNEED TO KNOW A 3-year-old child is in serious, but stable condition after falling from a third-story apartment window in Boston on Aug. 11 Officers arrived to find the toddler conscious and in bed "with his limbs sprawled out" An investigation is ongoingA 3-year-old child was seriously injured after falling out of a third-story window of an apartment building in Boston, authorities said. On Monday, Aug. 11, at 9:20 p.m. local time, officials received a report that a child had fallen out of a window that was three stories up in an apartment on Evans Street in the neighborhood of Dorchester, the Boston Police Department said in a statement shared with PEOPLE. The toddler was transported to a local children's hospital and is in critical, but stable condition. As of Tuesday, Aug. 12, 'the child is no longer in life-threatening condition,' authorities said. A neighbor, Kelly Bransfield, told ABC affiliate WCVB she heard a woman from the building screaming. "I just hope for the family's sake and for the child that everything turns out to be okay," Bransfield told the outlet. "When there's children involved, my heart goes out," she continued. "I've got children and grandchildren, and, you know, this is the summertime. They should be having fun, not [lying] in a hospital." When officers arrived at the scene, they found the child conscious and in bed "with his limbs sprawled out,' according to the incident report reviewed by PEOPLE. The 3-year-old child was having trouble breathing, with injuries and swelling on the entire left side of the upper body. The child had fallen from the kitchen window, according to the report. Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. After the toddler was transported to the hospital, the Crime Scene Response, Area B3 Detectives and the Boston Police Homicide Unit arrived to process the scene. An investigation into the incident is ongoing. Read the original article on People

San Mateo Sheriff Christina Corpus' attorneys make last-ditch attempt to halt removal hearing
San Mateo Sheriff Christina Corpus' attorneys make last-ditch attempt to halt removal hearing

CBS News

time24 minutes ago

  • CBS News

San Mateo Sheriff Christina Corpus' attorneys make last-ditch attempt to halt removal hearing

At a San Mateo County Board of Supervisors meeting Tuesday, the legal team representing embattled Sheriff Christina Corpus made another attempt to halt the upcoming hearing proceedings aimed at her removal. Corpus is facing potential removal from her elected position after voters in March overwhelmingly approved Measure A, a charter amendment granting the supervisors temporary power to remove the sheriff on grounds of misconduct. Measure A was the board's way of removing Corpus, who remained defiant against calls to resign after the release of a scathing, 400-page investigation by retired judge LaDoris Cordell alleging that Corpus had an inappropriate relationship with her chief of staff and fostered a culture of intimidation and retaliation in the Sheriff's Office. As part of the removal proceedings, a Measure A hearing is set to begin Monday and last 10 days. In addition, a separate trial is scheduled for September after the county civil grand jury accused Corpus of having a conflict of interest in the hiring of her chief of staff, Victor Aenlle, with whom she has a close relationship. The civil grand jury also alleged that Corpus retaliated against three of her staff members. At Tuesday's board meeting, at least four of Corpus' attorneys showed up in a last-ditch attempt to halt next week's hearing. They requested that the supervisors pause the Measure A hearing and instead hold the civil grand jury trial first. Attorney Tom Perez, who served as the former U.S. secretary of labor during former President Barack Obama's administration and as a senior adviser to former President Joe Biden, spoke for more than 10 minutes during public comment. Perez recently joined Corpus' team of lawyers, and originally requested one hour to speak to the board at Tuesday's regular meeting, according to a letter he sent to board president David Canepa and County Attorney John Nibbelin. The board denied that request. "I sent a letter last week, and I'm here to make a specific request," Perez said to the board at Tuesday's meeting. "The request is that the civil grand jury proceeding, which would give the community a voice in this matter, proceed first, and the reason for that is so that the community can weigh in." Perez spent the next 10 minutes of his speech defending Corpus against accusations made in the Cordell report and trying to highlight her accomplishments and track record as sheriff. He mentioned Corpus' response to the 2023 Half Moon Bay shootings, and the reduction in violent crimes and property crimes seen in 2024 during Corpus' tenure. He attempted to discount allegations that Corpus and Aenlle had an intimate relationship, and also discussed the challenges she faced as the first woman of color to be elected sheriff in the county. "We are here to defend her vigorously, and we will bring the truth forward," Perez said. "We will prove the negatives." None of the board members responded directly to Perez's request during the meeting. A statement from county spokesperson Effie Milionis Verducci said San Mateo County fully intends to move forward with the Measure A hearing next week. "The county remains committed to defending the integrity of the lawful Measure A process and we look forward to the hearing taking place, beginning August 18," she wrote. It was Corpus' latest attempt to stop the removal proceedings, having filed multiple requests to halt the Measure A process through temporary restraining orders. "The Sheriff has now asked three different judges to stop the removal process and all three have refused, allowing the process to move forward," Milionis Verducci said. Monday's hearing will be open to the public after Corpus reversed her initial request to keep it closed. "Let the public see the facts," Corpus said in a statement announcing her decision in late July. "Let them hear the truth. Let justice pierce the veil of corruption and bring light where darkness has reigned for far too long." Tuesday's meeting also included an agenda item in which the board heard a presentation recommending the establishment of a full-time inspector general to oversee the Sheriff's Office with subpoena power. Kalimah Salahuddin, the chair of the county's Independent Civilian Advisory Commission on the Sheriff's Office, gave the presentation explaining the benefits of having an inspector general. The ICAC is comprised of nine appointed members who offer recommendations to the board for encouraging transparency and accountability in the Sheriff's Office. An inspector general, Salahuddin said at the meeting, would have "the ability to hold impartial investigations into allegations of misconduct, both internally and externally, to be able to review internal investigations for fairness and then support ICAC when issues are brought to our commission." For some members of the public, the addition of a full-time inspector general to oversee the Sheriff's Office has come at an important time given the current upheaval the department is facing surrounding Corpus. "Over the past year, we have witnessed the complete unraveling of the Sheriff's Office," said deacon Lauren Patton McCombs during public comment. She is a member of the Coalition for a Safer San Mateo County, a group of community organizations that support civilian oversight of the Sheriff's Office. "The time to act is now. I encourage you to follow the recommendation of ICAC and hire a permanent inspector general to prevent any future problems developing within the Sheriff's Office. Don't wait until a new interim sheriff is appointed." The board did not take a vote on whether to hire an inspector general during Tuesday's meeting.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store