Triplets decided to enter the world at 26 weeks. The plan was Nashville, but it was a left turn and an hour away. Would choosing the local hospital be right?
A quick check confirmed that Monica was past the point of an epidural.
“It got very exciting, very quickly,” Monica said. “They all just kept begging me to keep holding the babies in. It would come in waves, and I would think I don’t know if I can do it. And then I’d have a relaxed moment; then it’d hit again.”
H. Mather Bennett, MD, the on-call obstetrician that day, told Monica that part of the reason they wanted her to wait as long as she could was that they were trying to get as many staff members on site as possible.
“Everyone was so kind. I knew once I got up to the room, and they told me to keep waiting so they could get everything they needed that the boys were going to be okay,” Monica said. “I was definitely reassured.”

When Greg met with Bennett, he called Monica’s original doctor in Nashville, handed Bennett the phone, and they collaborated on a plan. The triplets would be born at VTHH.
“Dr. Bennett was very transparent. I never questioned his logic or choices. He was so calm and knew exactly what he was doing,” Monica said. “I felt confident because I could hear his confidence.”
Monica delivered the first baby, Matthew Keith, naturally and had the other two, John Michael and Weston James, via cesarean section due to risk factors. At birth, Matthew Keith weighed 2 pounds, 2 ounces; John Michael weighed 1 pound, 8 ounces; and Weston James weighed 1 pound, 14 ounces.
“There was a nurse in the operating room, I wish I knew her name, but she worked at Vanderbilt NICU years before and transferred to Tullahoma. She was barking out orders to every nurse in there,” Greg said. “Everybody’s energy level was through the roof because of the circumstances, and she said, ‘Brain is the main thing we’re focused on right now. Brain and breathing.’ I credit her for taking charge in that room.”

Once the babies were born and whisked away to warming beds and heat lamps, Monica was moved to postoperative care, and Greg found himself in another big moment.
“They came in and said all three boys were stable and awaiting ambulances for transport to Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. They asked for names so they could start the paperwork,” Greg said. “We hadn’t picked out names, and Monica was in and out from the anesthesia, so we scrambled to pick out the names for all three boys. That was terrifying and a unique experience I didn’t expect. It may have been rushed, but we could not have picked better names for our boys. We love their names and who they have become.”
Later that night, after Monica was able to get up and move around a bit at Monroe Carell, Greg wheeled her down the hall to see the boys.
“They all had their own room and were in their little incubators. Goodness they were so tiny,” she said. “I was so relieved. I knew I had controlled every bit of it that I could at that point and then I got to let the hospital work its magic, which they did.”
Each boy went home at a different time. Matthew Keith was the first on Oct. 11, 2023, after spending 105 days in the NICU. Weston James went home on oxygen on Nov. 2 after spending 127 days in the NICU. After 130 days, John Michael was off of oxygen and able to come home on Nov. 5.
“It was a long time. We could probably make the drive from Tullahoma to Nashville with our eyes closed,” Monica said. “I had a NICU journal. Looking back, the things they were able to do, the little goals that they would set, the setbacks that they would have — that feels like a lifetime ago.


“They had to train their bodies to do things that would’ve naturally happened if they’d been born later. You don’t realize how much their bodies need that time. But it’s amazing to see that their bodies were able to learn things based on what the NICU had and what the nurses and doctors were able to offer.”
Today, each of the triplets has their own personality. According to Monica, firstborn Matthew Keith is “the chill one,” and most calculated, calm and controlled. John Michael is high energy, playful and “either smiling or crying — there’s not a lot in-between.” Weston is the happiest and motivated by words of affirmation.
“My boys are alive because of the initial care they received at VTHH and the support they received afterward at Monroe Carell,” Monica said. “They all loved my boys. I know it’s their profession, but it was more than that. They needed to see my boys succeed just like I did. I’m just so happy that I get to share that we’re thriving and doing as well as we are.”










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