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Mothers and Miracles

An Army private during World War II, stationed in the South Pacific, hears the voice of his mother thousands of miles away in Baltimore, telling him to duck just seconds before a bullet whizzes over his head. At that precise moment, his mother, at the hospital recovering from brain cancer, sits up and yells, “Duck, James!”

A boy whose mother died when he was a toddler is visited often in his dreams by a woman with curly brown hair and blue eyes. She comforts him. The boy has no memory of his mother and no photos of her. Until, as an adult, he sees a picture. An image identical to the woman in his dreams.

A struggling young woman is visited in the middle of the night by her deceased mother, who tugs at her ankle and warns her to break up with the guy she’s seeing.

By themselves, each story is extraordinary, baffling even. Except in Mysterious Ways, where each can be found and where they’re almost routine. Nearly every issue, it seems, features a story of someone seeing or hearing their mother from miles away or across the heavenly divide. Maybe it’s because my mother died five years ago and I know how comforting it would be to be visited by her. Maybe it’s my need to try to understand the workings of the universe. But these stories stay with me and leave me wondering: Is it only in Mysterious Ways that mothers appear so often and so miraculously? Are these dreams, visions and visitations real? Or simply a product of the imagination—voices and images stored in our memory, then summoned into consciousness? And why exactly would God choose to employ mothers in these mystical endeavors anyway?

My search for answers led me first to David Kessler. He’s a renowned grief expert and the author of Visions, Trips and Crowded Rooms: Who and What You See Before You Die. In his research, Kessler has talked to thousands of people, many of whom have been visited by deceased friends and loved ones. He noticed a trend.

“The person who visits the most is your mother,” he says. It’s not even close. At the time when we most need comfort—whether in grief or near death—it’s mothers who answer the call. Hospice workers concur. According to one nurse quoted in a 2019 Atlantic article, “everyone is calling for ‘Mommy’ or ‘Mama’ with the last breath.” The reason, Kessler says, is simple.

“Mothers are the strongest and first connection we make in life,” he says. “That stays with us forever.”

Judith Orloff, a psychiatrist and author of The Empath’s Survival Guide, agrees. She’s documented case after case of mothers who come to their child’s rescue because of a seemingly inexplicable bond. Take the patient of Dr. Orloff who suddenly experienced intense stomach pains, only to find out later that her son—away at college—had appendicitis.

“Mothers have a sixth sense about their kids because of their strong connection genetically, emotionally and by virtue of carrying the child in their womb for nine months,” Dr. Orloff says. “Adopted mothers can also feel this connection on a soul level, and their intuition can reach out to save their children too.”

Research supports that mothers hold a special place in our consciousness. A 2016 Stanford University School of Medicine study found that children’s brains responded positively to their mothers’ voices in audio clips less than a second long. During MRIs, these recordings lit up parts of the children’s brains related to emotion, reward processing, facial recognition and social functioning.

“We know that hearing [their] mother’s voice can be an important source of emotional comfort to children,” Daniel Abrams, a neurobiologist and the lead author of the study, said. “Here we’re showing the biological circuitry underlying that.”

When people hear or see their mothers, though, are they experiencing an actual person or are the voices and images generated from within the mind? Here opinions differ. Ann Shinn, a psychiatrist at Harvard Medical School, said research indicates that those who hear voices—and don’t suffer from an apparent mental illness—are hearing thoughts audibly that their brains simply don’t recognize as their own. Researchers at Durham University in England also theorize that there are people who are born with more sensitive neural pathways and, as a result, are primed to make sense of the world through sounds and voices, more so than most people. It’s believed that this group comprises five to 15 percent of the population. And one percent of people may frequently hear voices without having a mental illness.

Scientists, of course, also ascribe the phenomenon of seeing people to a trick of the mind. But Kessler, based on thousands of firsthand observations with those who are dying or grieving, firmly believes that these voices and visions are very much real. He notes the profound difference between a patient experiencing a hallucination or dementia and a patient relating a conversation they had with their deceased mother.

“When you witness someone who is dying talking with their deceased mother, they can later tell you with complete accuracy how long the conversation lasted. And if they’re interrupted, the conversation will pick up exactly where it left off,” he says. “When someone is having a hallucination, the sense of time passing is all over the place, just like the words they use to describe it. It’s a completely different experience.”

But the question remains: Why would God employ mothers, both living and deceased, to act and appear miraculously to their children?

Mothers often show up in dreams because they are so important in our lives,” Dr. Orloff says. “They’re often associated with miracles because their guidance travels far and will help their children in the midst of various challenges.”

According to Charity Virkler Kayembe, co-author of Hearing God Through Your Dreams, God may have specific reasons for employing mothers in dreams and visions. He often uses symbols that we’re familiar with or emotionally connected to in order to get our attention.

“One important reason God would use mothers in dreams and visions is because most of us believe strongly in their great love for us,” Dr. Kayembe says. “We trust that they selflessly care for us and have our best interests at heart. So if we hear our mother’s voice directing us on the battlefield, we don’t question it.”

After all, Jesus’ own mother was synonymous with ultimate comfort and love, and she continues to appear throughout the world to those in need. Perhaps in the case of the dying, mothers show up miraculously in order to soothe their children, to prepare them for the journey ahead. Hence the many stories about deathbed visitations from mothers that Kessler has documented.

“There’s a part of me that’s become more courageous and more mature to say, ‘Not only should I find the courage to share these stories, but it’s actually a disservice letting you believe your grandfather or grandmother, who was a very sane person, became crazy in his or her last moment of life,’” Kessler says. “I have a responsibility to say, ‘This is a common phenomenon. I can’t explain it.’”

But it wasn’t until Kessler experienced the comfort of his own mother from beyond the grave that he became fully convinced. When Kessler was just 13, his mother died in a hospital in New Orleans. It was a devastating blow, made all the more so because of a shooting outside the hospital. Kessler and his father were unable to cross the police tape to visit her one final time before she died.

It was then that Kessler decided to devote his life to studying grief and dying. Years later, in 1987, Kessler’s father was dying and struggling to come to terms with his final days. Kessler, even with all his knowledge, had no words to comfort him.

Then, one day, his father greeted him with a big smile. “Your mother was just here,” his father said. “She said everything would be okay and we’re all going to be together again.”

In late 2005, Kessler was in New Orleans to give a talk. The city had recently been devastated by Hurricane Katrina. He found himself outside the hospital where his mother had died, the building shuttered by the storm’s fury. Kessler hadn’t been inside since he was that 13-year-old. Now he felt compelled to find closure there. He asked a security guard if he could go inside. The guard escorted him down the darkened hallways, past wires hanging from the ceiling, tiles ripped from the floors by floodwaters, broken glass everywhere. They made it to the ICU and, inside the doorway, Kessler turned, remembering that his mother’s bed had been the second on the left. There in the dark, above where his mother had died, Kessler noticed the call light. It was blinking green.

“Green means the patient is being seen,” Kessler says. “Forty-two years after she died, my mother was there looking after me.”

More than Mere Coincidence

I want to share with you some research we’ve done at Guideposts recently, but first I’d like to tell you a story I heard from a friend the other day.

He was pushing his son in a swing that hangs from a tall old oak tree in their back yard. All the while their Golden Retriever lay quietly in the grass watching, his head bobbing back and forth as if he were a spectator at a tennis match. The boy squealed with excitement, my friend pushed harder and the swing arced higher and higher.

Suddenly the dog leapt up, trotted purposefully over to the swing and sat down. My friend had to stop swinging his son to avoid the dog. He tried to shoo him away but the dog was quite stubborn, almost insistent. Then my friend heard a faint cracking sound. He looked up. Far above, the screws that held the swing to the tree branch had torn almost completely loose. One more push and his son might have…

“Every day I pray that my boy is protected,” he told me. “That day I saw protection in action. It sent a tingle down my spine.”

Me too. I love this story and not just because I love Golden Retrievers (Hi, Millie!). It is a perfect example of a Mysterious Ways story, the monthly feature Guideposts magazine readers have always said they turn to first and can never get enough of.

Now you can get even more. As I’ve been telling you recently, we’ve launched Mysterious Ways magazine devoted exclusively to those stories that send a tingle down your spine, stories that prove what our hearts know: Everything happens for a reason. We may not always understand that reason, but we know a loving hand can touch any moment of our lives in wondrous and reassuring ways. In ways unexpected. In ways that are more than mere coincidence.

These amazing accounts are glimpses into a larger plan at work in our lives.

We just finished up our fifth issue and have been asking customers what they think. In particular, we’ve been trying to gauge response to our covers. Overall, readers love the magazine. We’ve gotten incredibly positive feedback. And readers have given us some great direction for future covers. I can’t tell you how incredibly grateful we are for the response we are getting. Given the current media environment, maybe the most mysterious way of all is a successful magazine launch. Just the other day Time Inc. announced it was selling off most of its magazine group, including People. We plan to hang on to Mysterious Ways.

But we need your help. Click here if you’d like to try a free issue. And if you have your own Mysterious Ways story, please share it with us. Enjoy your long weekend, if you get one.

Mom’s Last Promise

I stared up at the ceiling from my rock-hard bed in the hospital maternity ward. Two hours earlier, I’d given birth to Markeise, my beautiful baby boy. I should’ve felt elated. And yet, something—someone—was missing. Minnie, my mom.

Lachesha and Minnie

For as long as I could remember, I’d called her by her first name. Minnie had me when she was only a teen, and we were close enough in age that we acted more like best friends than mother and daughter—“thick as thieves,” my grandmother often said. Even after I got married, we talked on the phone every day, went shoe shopping on the weekends, cracked up over the same jokes.

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Minnie was diagnosed with uterine cancer during my first trimester. “Don’t you worry, darling,” she said. “I’ll be there for the baby’s birth. Wouldn’t miss it for the world. I promise.”

I believed her. Minnie loved being a grandmother more than anything else. She’d been at the hospital when my first two children were born, snapping photos and making a fuss. When I gave birth to my daughter, she’d hollered, “It’s a girl! It’s a girl!” in the waiting room until one of the nurses asked her to quiet down.

I thought we told each other everything. But Minnie never let on how serious her cancer was—she didn’t want to worry me so early on in my pregnancy. She started chemo too late. Within three months, she was gone.

I stopped staring at the ceiling and pulled out Minnie’s photo from my overnight bag. I positioned it by my bed, hoping to feel her presence. But I didn’t. She’d never meet her grandson. Never stare into his big, brown eyes, so much like her own.

A nurse walked into my room. “How are you doing?” she said.

I wiped my eyes and forced a smile. “Just hormones.”

The nurse shuffled over to the dry erase board opposite my bed and pulled a marker from her pocket. She scribbled the name of the on-call doctor, the one who would be taking care of Markeise until we were ready to go home.

Only after she left did I notice what she’d written, in all capital letters.

MINNIE.

Miraculous Monarchs

Around this time every year, millions and millions of Monarch butterflies are arriving in Mexico for the winter. They can’t survive the approaching cold in the north, so they fly south for warmer temperatures and a food source.

Monarchs from central and eastern Canada and those east of the Rocky Mountains make this journey while Monarchs west of the Continental Divide migrate to California.

Imagine something weighing less than 1/5 of a penny flying up to 2500 miles! It is amazing these tiny creatures can fly such long distances, but the miracle is they know where they are going, having never been there before!

I wrote a few weeks back about the disposition of chipmunks, but Monarchs win the award. It is obvious to see the Lord’s hand in the making of these amazing creatures.

What is more amazing is to understand the life cycle of the Monarchs. Only the 4th generation of Monarchs make the journey to Mexico. In February and March, the Monarchs that spent the winter in Mexico come out of the hibernation, mate, fly north, lay eggs then die.

The 1st generation is born! They start as an egg, caterpillar, chrysalis then turn into a butterfly. All Monarch butterflies, except the 4th generation, only live 6-8 weeks–from the time the egg is laid until it finishes its lifetime as a butterfly.

Around May and June, the 2nd generation is born, and the life cycle repeats itself. In July and August, the 3rd generation is born, and the life cycle repeats itself again.

But in September and October, the 4th generation is born and they do not die after 6-8 weeks. These are the butterflies that migrate to Mexico. Their lifespan is 6 to 8 months until the whole process starts over again!

What tickles me is seeing how the scientific world is baffled by how the Monarch butterflies find the trees in Mexico when it is something God so masterly orchestrated. I read words like: “researchers remain perplexed,” it is a “great mystery,” “no one knows.”

I may not exactly know how, but I know who….God!

Location: The State Botanical Garden of Georgia, Athens, Georgia

Miracles Are for Everyone

There’s something I’ve always wondered about miracles: Does everyone get one? Or just perfect people? You know, like saints or mystics from the twelfth century. Surely St. Augustine was more prone to the miraculous than someone like me, right?

The other night, though, put everything in perspective for me. I was on my way to dinner with my friend and former coworker Lisa. Her birthday was coming up, so after work I picked up vanilla and chocolate cupcakes, each packaged in a separate plastic container.

I walked to the train station, brown paper bag of treats in hand. The wind was blowing like crazy and I was trying to push my way past the crowd of commuters. In all the commotion, I dropped the cupcakes on the floor of the station. The bag ripped, and one of the cupcake containers tumbled out. The cupcakes weren’t ruined… just a little smushed. It was silly, but I beat myself up over it. How could I have been so clumsy?

And then I remembered something that made me smile. You see, this wasn’t the first time I’d made a mess of Lisa’s birthday cake. Two years earlier, when Lisa and I worked together, I was in charge of getting her birthday cake for a little celebration at our office. Lisa’s the kind of person who remembers everyone’s birthday and scours the store for just the right greeting card. One year, she baked three different pies for my birthday. She’s like the Martha Stewart of New Jersey. So I wanted to do something special, find a cake she’d never forget. I went to a famous bakery in New York and ordered this giant, cannoli-filled chocolate cake. Pastel roses. Fluffy whipped cream. Fancy script icing writing. It was beautiful.

It was also extremely heavy. I’m just under 5 feet tall, with the strength of a squirrel. So my sister, Priscilla, suggested I put the cake box in a large shopping bag with handles. We tipped the box over on its side to fit the bag and I carried it to work on my shoulder. Of course, when I opened the up box at work, the cake was completely ruined. A jagged line ran down it like a scar. The side looked like it had melted off. My co-workers teased me to no end about it.

It didn’t matter, though, how ugly that cannoli-filled mess looked; it tasted absolutely delicious! We gobbled it up. In fact, it almost tasted better smushed.

Maybe that’s how it is with miracles. We are all scarred and flawed. We fall over and over again. And even so, God continues to bless us with these amazingly sweet moments. If anything, his wonder seems to touch us more when we’re at our lowest–when we’re sick, all alone, running out of options. He takes us at our most smushed and works his wonder in us and through us.

Miracles have nothing to do with how wonderful we are and everything to do with how wonderful God is. Miracles are for everyone–we just have to be open to them.

I met Lisa for dinner that windy night and handed over the ripped paper bag of cupcakes, a little sheepish. She just smiled and laughed it off. Sure, it wasn’t the perfect dessert. But at this point, it was practically a birthday tradition!

Have you ever experienced a miracle at your most “smushed”? Share your story below, or email me at mw@guideposts.org!

Miracle on Maui

Daylight was just spreading across the horizon. My best friend, Jennifer, and I stood on the beach, gazing out at the ocean. It was our last day on Maui—we had a plane to catch in a few hours. But I was glad we’d gotten up early for one last breathtaking view, a visit to a mysterious spot I’d heard about from our hotel’s cultural advisor, Clifford, the night before. A place called Makalua-puna Point.

“I don’t want to leave,” Jennifer said. I didn’t either. Hawaii felt like heaven. Even more than I’d imagined it would when Maui’s tourism board invited me to visit and write about my experiences. It was the best assignment a freelance travel writer could ask for, a business trip that didn’t feel like business.

Jennifer was here for a different reason. She’d just lost her other best friend—Bandit, her black Labrador retriever. I still remembered the day she got him as a puppy, back when the two of us were in high school. A little bundle of fur with oversized paws. We three grew up together.

I couldn’t visit Jennifer without expecting her big black dog to come bounding up to me, wagging his tail for all he was worth. I knew how heartbroken she was to lose him. “I wasn’t even with him when he died,” Jennifer had told me over the phone. “I was at work when it happened. I didn’t get to say goodbye.”

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I’d read that Maui was known for its healing properties. Jennifer needed that, so I’d invited her along. We’d spent the last week exploring all the island had to offer. We hiked to the top of Haleakala¯ Crater, a red-orange dustbowl formed from the collapsing peak of a volcano. We spent an afternoon stand-up paddleboarding at Olowalu Beach. We rappelled down a 50-foot waterfall in the rain forest off the Hana Highway and then got massages at the Grand Wailea Hotel’s Spa Grande.

The trip wasn’t all adventure. Jennifer and I prayed together in the meditation garden at a Lumeria Maui retreat. We met on the beach late at night to see the ocean glimmer in the moonlight and the waves roll up on shore. One day we trekked deep into the Hawaiian wilderness at Iao Valley State Park.

Exotic plants carpeted the ground and ancient rocks towered overhead. The bright-green Iao Needle soared 1,200 feet into the cobalt sky. The foot trails and hidden streams were so beautiful we just had to stop and take it all in.

“This really is paradise,” Jennifer said. “It feels like we’re the only people in the world,” I agreed.

It was the kind of place that compels you to give thanks to God— or sing. “Oh Lord, my God, when I in awesome wonder…” My voice echoed off the rocks. “Then sings my soul, my savior God, to thee, how great thou art!”

We thought we had seen everything there was to see. Our predawn walk to Makalua-puna hadn’t been on the schedule. We expected to spend the morning packing our bags before we headed to the airport. But the night before, over sushi and sashimi, Clifford had told a captivating story.

“The hotel was originally planned to sit right on the beach,” he said. “But the Hawaiians protested that this spot was sacred. We believe it to be a vortex, a place where souls go before birth and after death. The ocean is like a womb.”

I wanted to know more. Clifford described a ritual Hawaiians performed in the early morning. “It’s a ceremony where you cast your burdens into the ocean,” he said. “All the things that are weighing you down, keeping you from moving forward. You drown those in the water and come out like new.”

That’s exactly what Jennifer needs, I thought, though I didn’t say it. We’d been so busy, she hadn’t had time to dwell on Bandit’s loss. But I could tell she was struggling with the thought that he was gone. Even though we had a long plane ride the next day, we agreed to meet Clifford in the lobby of the hotel at 5:00 a.m.

In the morning we took a golf cart down to the beach. “It’s time,” said Clifford.

Jennifer and I waded into the ocean. We dipped ourselves in the calm waves, letting them wash away any negative emotions we’d brought with us. Then we walked back onto the beach and Clifford led us in a chant. “E ala e ka la¯ i ka hikina…” Words, he’d explained, about the rising sun. The sun brings life to the earth and lets us do all the things God meant for us to do.

The sun broke over the horizon, sparkling on the water. We dried ourselves off in a nearby gazebo. “I really do feel lighter,” I said. “There is one more thing,” Clifford said. “Keep a lookout for a messenger. A butterfly, a bird, a ladybug—any creature that lingers with you a little longer than you’d expect. That’s a sign that your prayers have been heard.”

This being Hawaii, wildlife was everywhere—colorful birds flitting among the coconut palms, crabs digging in the sand on the beach, butterflies fluttering among the flowers, geckos sunning themselves on rocks. Who could say if any of them had a special interest in us?

“What’s that?” I said. There was a rustling in the woods just beyond the gazebo. I saw something dark, something big. I grabbed Jennifer’s arm. The bushes parted. Out from the darkness bounded a big, black…Labrador?

He loped right up to Jennifer and stood outside the gazebo, wagging his tail. We both held our breath, too surprised to speak. The dog seemed to contemplate us. He gazed steadily at Jennifer for a moment, then turned and disappeared into the woods.

“Did you see that?” I said. “It’s Bandit!” She cried. We screamed and laughed, cried and hugged together.

The Case of the Missing Cell Phone

Cell phones can be a pain in the neck. Whenever I seem to need mine, I can never find it. And this was one of those times, standing by my SUV shivering and wet.

It was whitetail hunting season—a day my three buddies and I had been anticipating for months.

We parked our SUVs on a private, rural lot just after dawn and hiked two miles—lugging rifles and backpacks filled with food, water, flashlights, extra clothing, twoway radios and, yes, cell phones—into the Pennsylvania State Game Lands wilderness.

The weather was overcast and chilly, but we were determined to get us some deer.

We weren’t in the woods but an hour before we lost our will for the hunt. The wind started, and then the rain. Oh, did it pour!

The four of us huddled like soaked dogs under a stand of hemlocks before we gave up and slogged an hour back down the now-muddy mountain we had climbed.

Now, hunching under the raised hatch of my SUV, I stripped off my wet clothing and quickly changed into dry clothes. From force of habit I reached into my backpack for my cell phone. I felt around. Nothing there. I checked and double-checked.

I knew that I had packed it before we headed out. Somehow, the phone must have fallen out of my bag at the spot where we had hunkered down in the woods, near the hemlock trees.

“I have two options,” I told my friends. “One, I can forget the phone. Even if I hiked back to the stand of hemlocks and found it, it would probably be ruined by now.

“But I’m a stubborn guy. I can hike back up the mountain, in this pouring rain, and scrounge around in the brush trying to find it. I’m leaning toward option two.”

My friend Bill thought I was crazy but insisted for safety’s sake that he come along.

Back up the mountain Bill and I went. What had been a rocky path was now a muddy stream. Rain pelted us. Our feet slipped.

“You know,” Bill said, “this isn’t the brightest thing we’ve ever done.”

At last we reached the hemlocks. We looked everywhere. No phone.

Light was fading. Time to give up and head home. Down the mountain we went, the only sound the squishing of our boots in the mud.

Then from somewhere I thought I heard a voice. I immediately turned to Bill. “Did you hear someone?” I asked.

“No,” he said, keeping his head down, trying not to slip.

I heard the sound again.

“Bill?” I said. “Yeah, I heard something,” he admitted. It sounded like it came from somewhere up the mountain. We peered through the trees and the rain.

“There!” I said. “Up on that ridge!” Bill’s eyes followed where I was pointing.

A man was up there, waving his arms frantically. He was headed toward us, slipping and sliding. “Help!” he yelled. “Please help!”

We stood there. What kind of nut would be out here in the rain—well, other than us?

The man eventually reached us. He looked to be in his mid-twenties. “Please help me,” he said, panting. “I came up here with a friend. I can’t find him, and I don’t know how to get back to where we parked.” He told us his name was Tim.

I looked the young man up and down. His clothes were soaking wet. Not insulated or waterproof. Totally inadequate. He had an empty thermos. No food. He had a cell phone, but it was dead.

“Come with us. We’ll get you out of here,” I said.

The three of us started down the trail, Bill and I helping him as best we could.

“Are you sure we’re going the right way?” Tim asked.

“Just trust us,” I said.

It was clear that Tim was disoriented. He couldn’t even tell us his friend’s name. We tried to keep him talking, so that he wouldn’t pass out on the trail.

By the time we reached my SUV about 45 minutes later, Tim was shivering uncontrollably. We helped him into the backseat. Bill gave him some almonds from his snack pack and coffee from his thermos. I started the car, cranked the heat up and we wrapped him in a dry blanket.

Tim mentioned a general store he and his friend had passed on their way to the wilderness. I knew where it was. On the way there, a vehicle pulled up behind us and flashed his lights. For a second, I thought it was the cops. The driver got out. I rolled down the window.

“Are you Tim?” he asked.

I pointed to the backseat. “That’s Tim,” I said.

The driver said he had Tim’s friend in his truck. He’d found him in about the same condition that we found Tim.

Tim stumbled out of my SUV and into the truck. Bill and I drove on home.

On the way, we had a serious talk.

“Do you know the danger he was in,” I asked. “What would have happened if we hadn’t been up there and he had heard our voices?”

And then it hit us both—we would never have been up there to rescue him if not for my silly phone.

“I guess there was a good reason I lost it after all,” I said. Together we offered a prayer of thanks.

But I hadn’t lost it. Back home I finished unloading my backpack. That cell phone was right where I had put it.

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Miracle at the Front Door

Here in the Midwest, we’re used to frigid winters, but that morning seemed colder than usual.

Maybe it was because my husband wasn’t sleeping next to me. He had gone out of town on a long trip. It was just me looking after our three daughters. We lived out in the country—no neighbors within shouting distance, and I felt vulnerable. At night I made sure to lock the doors and I prayed God would watch over us.

I’d woken up shivering, with a pounding headache. It was really cold, even for our 170-year-old house. Did our furnace break down? I went downstairs to check. That’s when I saw that the front door was wide open! I shut it and cranked up the thermostat. I’m positive I locked that door last night. Did someone break in? I dashed upstairs. The girls were safe in their beds. I looked around. Nothing was missing.

My teeth chattering, I waited for the furnace to kick in. It didn’t. The draft from the door must have blown the pilot light out. I didn’t know how to relight it. My husband usually took care of things like that. Why did he have to be gone for so long? I called the girls down to breakfast, turning on the oven and shoving the kitchen table near it for warmth.

Once I got the kids off to school and I got to work, I phoned a furnace repairman. “I’ll take a look as soon as I can and call you,” he said.

I got a call back a few hours later. “Your furnace has a leak,” the repairman said, in a tone that seemed to imply more than just a minor problem.

“How soon can you fix it?” I asked, dreading another freezing night.

“Ma’am, you don’t understand,” he said. “Your furnace is leaking carbon monoxide. That’s the type of thing you see on the news, where an entire family dies in their sleep. I’ll install a new furnace tomorrow. Until then, you’ll need to stay somewhere else.”

Immediately I thought of the front door. If it hadn’t somehow gotten open to let the fresh air in…

That breath of fresh air saved our lives—and it made an impression on my husband too. When he got home, he promised never to leave us for so long again.

Find more true Mysterious Ways! Download your free ebook, Mysterious Ways: 9 Inspiring Stories that Show Evidence of God’s Love and God’s Grace.

Message in a Dream

Today’s guest blogger is assistant editor Daniel Kessel.

If you’re a Mysterious Ways subscriber, you’ve probably received your copy of the December/January 2015 issue. Did you catch the news Edward Grinnan shared in the Editor’s Note?

Starting next issue, we’re launching a new section called “Dreams & Premonitions,” devoted to the stories you send about these mind-boggling, sometimes prophetic phenomena. I’ll be the section’s editor, and I’m extremely excited.

That’s why I couldn’t believe it when my brother Mark recently told me the story of a mysterious dream that impacted one of his favorite radio personalities, Don Geronimo. Mark, a big-time radio fan, followed the popular “Don & Mike Show” up until its final episode in 2008.

Freda Wright-SorceThe show ended in part because Don had so much going on behind the scenes. His wife, Freda, was killed in a car accident in July 2005.

She’d been a frequent guest on the “Don & Mike Show” and had started calling in even before they were together. Their on-air relationship was a hallmark of the show.

After his wife’s death, Don took a short hiatus from work. He returned three weeks later and recorded what my brother described as one of the most memorable, heart-felt episodes in the show’s run, dedicating the whole 75 minutes to Freda’s memory.

Don discussed the poignant letter his wife had written him months earlier, which he discovered locked away in the family safe. According to the Washington Post, Freda’s letter begins with a dream:

“I dreamed last night I died. . . . I wasn’t afraid and I felt no pain. . . . Don’t be sad for me. My only sadness is my family will be sad for me. Just know that all is right and is as it should be. I am happy.”

Freda wrote she looked forward to being reunited with her loved ones someday. At the end, she signed simply, “Freda, 10/16/04.”

Penned just 9 months before her fatal accident, inspired by a dream, the reassuring letter was exactly what Don needed to make it through the difficult days ahead.

Have you ever had a mysterious dream or an inexplicable premonition? What did you do about it? Contribute to our new section and share your story with us!

Mastin Kipp on Embracing Life’s Divine Storms

Why does God send a storm when a rain shower will do? That’s a question we asked Mastin Kipp, Functional Life Coach and author of the bestselling book The Daily Love: Growing Into Grace and the recently released Claim Your Power. In 2004, Mastin was 22, a Kansas native living the dream in Hollywood. Until it became a nightmare. A “divine storm” uprooted Mastin’s life and sent him down a remarkable path of self-discovery. We recently Skyped him to get some answers on why everything had to go wrong for things to go right….

Mastin Kipp as seen on the cover of the Oct-Nov 2017 issue of Mysterious WaysWhat exactly is a divine storm? A divine storm is basically when everything in your life seems to go crazy. It’s a crisis you didn’t see coming. It could last a day, a week, a year, even longer. And it can be hugely painful. Maybe money is running away from you. You can’t seem to get a job. A close friend passes away. And you sort of feel like, Is God against me? Is someone following me around and purposely sabotaging my life?

I call it a divine storm because, from a spiritual perspective, it really is God trying to get your attention. If you’re in a divine storm, you’ll know. You’ll definitely know. The set of circumstances is too bizarre for it not to be from God.

Why is he trying so hard to get our attention? You can think of it like driving on the highway. When you start going off the road, there are these divots. Some of us have to go over the cliff before we say, “Hey, I should’ve paid attention to those divots back there.”

The purpose of a divine storm is to help you find your calling or get back on track. The crisis reveals patterns that need to be healed or addressed so you can live out your purpose, whatever that might be. It’s sort of a wakeup call to how you’re spending your life. A lot of times, you realize, I actually have some past trauma that I haven’t worked through. It’s not just a bunch of random stuff happening to you because you’re a bad person. I like to say that the universe has shaken you to awaken you.

Is that what happened to you? Absolutely. The first giant storm came when I was 22 years old. I’d just gotten fired from my dream job as a vice president for a record label. I honestly felt like Hollywood had chewed me up and spit me out. I’d moved to Los Angeles when I was 19 to pursue my dreams in the music business, and my life very quickly became an episode of E! True Hollywood Story. I was partying a lot, doing drugs, spending money like crazy. In addition to losing my job, I was going through a huge breakup and was deeply depressed. The relationship had been based on drugs.

One Sunday, around four o’clock in the morning, I was driving home to Santa Monica after a massive fight with my ex. I was high as a kite. I made a turn onto Ventura Boulevard and cut off a police officer, the only other driver on the road. I was screwed. In that moment, I decided to pray. Where that thought came from, I have no idea. I just said, “Dear God, if you help me get through this, I’ll quit.”

The cop pulled me over, and I explained my situation. I didn’t lie. I said I was tired and had been fighting with my ex. He let me go. I knew that moment was a handout from God. As if he was telling me, “Hey, kid, wake up.” On the drive home, I felt this presence in the car with me. I didn’t know what it was at the time, but it convinced me that I had to change. That the next time I wouldn’t be so lucky.

Did you change? That’s the thing about addiction—all logic, all promises go out the door. Days later, I was in my apartment at 3 a.m. and felt the urge to use again. I’d spent the whole night drinking. I went to cut up a line of cocaine, but I physically couldn’t do it. Something wouldn’t let me consume any more drugs. It was as if a force had taken up residence inside my body and was preventing me from doing it. Like I wasn’t in control of myself. It was the same presence I felt in the car on Ventura Boulevard. Along with a deep knowing that if I did use again, I would die.

I couldn’t prove it, but I didn’t want to find out. I flushed the drugs down the toilet. I’m not a person who has these visceral, very visual spiritual experiences. But in this instance, it was obvious to me that there was a higher presence there in that room. To me, it was very clearly Christ.

​How did you go from there to becoming an inspirational guru? I wanted to figure out how to feel as good off the drugs as I felt on them. I’ve come to find that addicts are really people looking for God in all the wrong places. I threw myself into spiritual study and asked God to show me my purpose. Eventually I started an inspirational T-shirt company to share all the spiritual truths I’d uncovered.

It did really well at first. Then, within a week, everything went bust. My business partner left. The new girl I was dating left. The business crumbled. My roommate moved out. I got gout in my left toe. My lower back went out. All of that happened over maybe six days! I kept thinking to myself, I’m not dumb or smart enough to do all this to myself. There has to be something else going on here. That’s when I heard the voice of author Caroline Myss, whose work I’d been studying during my recovery, saying that this is happening for you, not to you.

My first reaction was, “Easy for you to say—you’re not the one with all these problems!” But then I thought about what I’d really want to do with my life if that was in fact true. I created @TheDailyLove on Twitter. I began tweeting messages of love to encourage others. It ended up being an answer to my prayers. Sometimes things going wrong can actually be them going right.

Is it only during a divine storm that we’re really able to sense God’s presence the way you did? If you’re distracted, addicted or in some unhealthy behavior pattern, you’re definitely not paying attention to the divine. You’re checking Facebook likes or doing drugs or in an endless cycle of worry. But when someone is in the middle of a storm, they’re vulnerable, and there’s an opportunity to make a choice. Either you’re going to keep going or you’re not. When you’re brought to your knees like that, it’s an encounter with the divine.

Can’t God just send a light gust of wind, though? For some people, sure. But I’m the guy who hit rock bottom and asked for a sledgehammer and a drill! My storm was in direct proportion to how stubborn I was. It doesn’t always have to be that dramatic. For the stubborn ones, though, it sometimes does. Sometimes you won’t make a move until you’re in too much pain not to make a move. Storms really stress the importance of intuition. If you don’t pay attention to what your heart is telling you, then you get a divine rain shower or a divine lightning bolt and eventually a divine storm.

God is trying to bring us to a surrender point, when we say, “The way I’m doing things is not working. Show me a better way.” Whether or not you’re stubborn, there’s a part of everyone’s story where all seems lost. You can call it a divine storm or a “dark night of the soul” or just an ordeal. At the end of the day, it’s archetypal in nature and everyone will go through it at some point in their life.

What determines whether or not you survive the storm? Part of it is understanding that these storms are normal. Whatever the crisis is—whether it’s the death of someone you love, a business that’s not working out, a relationship that’s failed—it’s just part of what happens in life. Millions have gone through it; millions will go through it again. So instead of focusing on the why of what’s happening, focus on finding the message, the miracle in it all.

Does a miracle always come out of a divine storm? I think the mere fact that something is going wrong is the miracle. Because it’s getting your attention. Everything that happens to you can be used to help you find your purpose, which ultimately brings you closer to God. We have to start viewing not just the good stuff as the miracle, but also the bad stuff that gets you to the miracle. The whole thing is a gift.

Do you still have storms? I have a divine storm every five seconds! There’s always something going on. I’ve come to believe that the whole purpose of life is to weather the storm. It’s not about preventing it. It’s about understanding why it’s there. And then having the strength to face it and use the opportunity to grow.

Louie Zamperini: The Power of Forgiveness

My journey into forgiveness began with a phone call, a breathtaking story and a question.

It was 2002. I’d spent the previous year in a whirlwind of promotion for my first book, Seabiscuit, and was taking some time off. One day, I found myself thinking about a man named Louie Zamperini.

Researching my book, I’d stumbled upon references to an odyssey that he’d survived in World War II. Though I’d only heard bits of his story, I was intrigued, and jotted his name in my notebook. When I finish this book, I thought, I’ll try to find him.

That day in 2002, I did a search online for Louie and discovered that he was alive, in his mid-eighties, living in California. I wrote him a letter. He sent a warm reply, so I called him.

Over the next hour, he told me the most amazing survival story I’d ever heard, a tale that included a plane crash, shark attacks, and capture and torture by the enemy. But what fascinated me even more than his story was the way Louie told it.

He was infectiously cheerful, speaking of his captors’ cruelty without a trace of bitterness. I asked how he could speak so easily of such vicious men. His answer was simple: “I’ve forgiven them.”

I was hooked. My mind began turning on a question: How does a man forgive what is seemingly unforgivable? In search of the answer, I began a seven-year journey through his life, a journey that culminated in my book Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption.

The more deeply I understood what Louie had endured, the more wondrous his forgiveness seemed.

As a boy in California in the 1920s and early 1930s, Louie was an incorrigible delinquent. Then he discovered that he had an extraordinary talent for running. He became a world-famous track phenomenon, competing in the 1936 Berlin Olympics when he was still a teenager.

World War II began, and Louie set aside athletics and joined the Army Air Corps. He was stationed in Hawaii as a bombardier, fighting harrowing air battles against the Japanese.

On May 27, 1943, Louie and his crew took off to search for a missing bomber. Far out over the Pacific, engine failure sent their plane plunging into the ocean. Trapped by wires in the wreckage, Louie passed out.

When he came to, the wires were gone. He swam to the surface and climbed onto a raft, joining two other survivors. They’d sent no distress call, and no one knew where they were.

For weeks the men floated, followed by sharks, surviving on rainwater and the few fish and birds they could catch. On the twenty-seventh day, a plane appeared. Louie fired flares, and the plane turned toward them.

But it turned out to be a Japanese bomber, and its crewmen fired machine guns at the castaways. Louie leaped overboard.

He had to kick and punch the circling sharks to keep them away until the firing stopped and he could climb back up onto the raft. Over and over the bomber returned to strafe the men, sending Louie back into the shark-infested water.

By the time the bomber flew off the raft was riddled with bullet holes and was starting to sink. Amazingly, none of the men had been hit, but the sharks tried to drag them away. Beating them off with oars, the men frantically patched the raft and pumped air into it. Finally the sharks left.

On they drifted, starving. One man died; Louie and the other crewman hung on. On the forty-sixth day, they saw a distant island. They rowed toward it. When they were only yards from shore, a Japanese boat intercepted them.

For the next two and a quarter years, Louie was a captive of the Japanese military. First he was held in a filthy cell, subjected to medical experiments, starved, beaten and interrogated.

Then he was shipped to prison camp in Japan, where he was forced to race against Japanese runners, winning even though he knew he’d be clubbed as punishment. He joined a daring POW underground, stealing food and circulating information to other captives.

It was in prison camp that Louie encountered a monstrous guard known as the Bird. Fixated on breaking the famous Olympian, the Bird beat Louie relentlessly and forced him to do slave labor.

Louie reached the end of his endurance. With his dignity destroyed and his will fading, he prayed for rescue.

When the atomic bombs ended the war, the Bird fled to escape war-crimes trials, and Louie was saved from almost certain death.

He went home a deeply haunted man. He had nightmares of being bludgeoned by the Bird. Trying to rebuild his life, he married a beautiful debutante named Cynthia, but even her love couldn’t blot the Bird from his mind.

He sought solace in running, but an ankle injury, incurred in POW camp and exacerbated by the Bird’s beatings, hampered him. Just as he was reaching Olympic form again, his ankle failed. His athletic career was finished.

Devastated, he started drinking. He had flashbacks: The raft or the prison camp would appear around him, and he’d relive terrifying memories. He simmered with rage, provoking fistfights with strangers and confrontations with Cynthia.

He couldn’t shake the sense of shame that had been beaten into him by the Bird.

Louie thought God was toying with him. When he heard preachers on the radio, he turned it off. He forbade Cynthia to go to church. He drank more and more heavily. In time, Louie’s rage hardened into a twisted ambition: He would return to Japan, hunt down the Bird and strangle him.

It was the only way he could restore his dignity. He became obsessed, trying to raise money for the trip, but his financial ventures kept failing.

One night in 1948, Louie dreamed he was locked in a death battle with the Bird. A scream startled him awake. He was straddling his pregnant wife, hands clenched around her neck. His daughter was born a few months later.

One day, Cynthia found him shaking the baby, trying to stop her from crying. She snatched the baby away, then packed her bags and walked out.

In the fall of 1949, Cynthia made a last effort to save her husband. She asked Louie to come to a tent meeting in Los Angeles, where a young minister named Billy Graham was preaching.

For two nights, Louie sat in that tent, feeling guilty and angry as Graham spoke of sin and its consequences, and God bringing miracles to the stricken.

On the second night, Graham asked people to step forward to declare their faith. Louie stood up and stormed toward the exit. But at the aisle, he stopped short.

Suddenly he was in a flashback, adrift on the raft. It hadn’t rained in days, and he was dying of thirst. In anguish, he whispered a prayer: If you will save me, I will serve you forever. Over the raft, rain began falling. Standing in Graham’s tent, lost in his flashback, Louie felt the rain on his face.

At that moment Louie began to see his whole ordeal differently. When he’d been trapped in the wreckage of his plane, somehow he’d been freed. When the Japanese bomber had shot the raft full of holes, somehow none of the men had been hit.

When the Bird had driven him to the breaking point, and he’d prayed for help, somehow he’d found the strength to keep breathing. And that day on the raft, he had prayed for rain, and rain had come.

Louie’s conviction that he was forsaken was gone, replaced by a belief that divine love had been all around him, even at his darkest moments. That night in Graham’s tent, the bitterness and pain that had haunted him vanished.

A year later, Louie went to Japan. He was a joyful man, his marriage restored, his nightmares and flashbacks gone, his alcoholism overcome. He went to a Tokyo prison where war criminals were serving their sentences.

He hoped to find the Bird, to know for sure if the peace he’d found was resilient. But the Bird wasn’t there. Louie was told that the guard had killed himself.

Louie was struck with emotion. He was surprised by what he felt. It was not hatred. Not relief. It was compassion. Louie had found forgiveness.

Louie Zamperini’s life is a journey of outrageous fortune, ferocious will and astonishing redemption. For me, what gives his story lasting resonance is the light it sheds on the cost of victimization and the mystery of forgiveness.

What the Bird took from Louie was his dignity; what he left behind was a pervasive sense of helplessness and worthlessness.

As I researched Louie’s life, interviewing his fellow POWs and studying their memoirs and diaries, I discovered that this loss of dignity was nearly ubiquitous, leaving the men feeling defenseless and frightened in a world that had become menacing.

The postwar nightmares, flashbacks, alcoholism and anxiety that were endemic among them spoke of souls in desperate fear.

Watching these men struggle to overcome their trauma, I came to believe that a loss of self-worth is central to the experience of being victimized, and may be what makes its pain particularly devastating.

Anger is a justifiable and understandable reaction to being wronged, and as the soul’s first effort to reassert its worth and power, it may initially be healing. But in time, anger becomes corrosive.

To live in bitterness is to be chained to the person who wounded you, your emotions and actions arising not independently, but in reaction to your abuser. Louie became so obsessed with vengeance that his life was consumed by the quest for it.

In bitterness, he was as much a captive as he’d been when barbed wire had surrounded him.

This is why forgiveness is so liberating. But how is it found? For Louie, it lay in resurrecting his dignity, seeing himself not as the wretched creature that the Bird had striven to make of him, but as the object of God’s infinite love.

His self-respect and sense of power reborn, he finally had the strength to let go of his hatred.

I talked to other former POWs who forgave their captors, and for each, forgiveness seemed to follow a return of dignity. Each man found it in his own way, guided by his history and his pain. Louie’s story doesn’t represent the only way out of bitterness. There is no one right path to peace.

Forgiveness is a complex, elusive mystery, and one man’s story can only begin to unravel its secrets. But I take from Louie’s life one beautiful, undeniable truth.

Even when a man suffers the most soul-shattering of abuses, even when he seems hopelessly bound by resentment, forgiveness can still find him and set him free.

Lost on the Night Before Christmas

The Christmas party had been wonderful. It was great to be among friends on Christmas Eve, sipping eggnog and singing carols. I was sorry it had to end. Finally, at a little past one in the morning, I headed home. I was almost at the freeway exit when I saw the sign: CLOSED FOR NIGHT CONSTRUCTION/PLEASE TAKE ALTERNATE ROUTE.

Alternate route? What alternate route? The 55 Freeway was the only way I knew back home, and there weren’t any detour signs. The next exit was coming up fast. Maybe this will put me on the right road, I thought, turning off.

Big mistake. Now I was in the parking lot of a shopping mall. I drove in circles around the deserted lot, trying to get my bearings. I didn’t have a GPS, didn’t have a cell phone. At this hour, on Christmas Eve, there wasn’t anybody to ask for directions.

I glanced at my gas gauge and groaned. Almost empty. Pulling into a spot, I shut off the engine. I leaned my head against the steering wheel. I hoped what I heard about miracles on Christmas was true. I needed one right now.

All of a sudden, I felt a bright light shine on me. The star of Bethlehem? No, just a streetlight on top of a pole that seemed to be sticking up from one of the used car dealerships that lined the street. I couldn’t take my eyes off it. Maybe the lot has a night watchman, I thought.

I drove slowly, staring at the light. There was something comforting about it . . . even if I didn’t know what I’d find when I got there.

I passed some buildings and trees and the full lot came into view. The building next to it was dark. No night watchman. But there was something that made me believe in Christmas miracles.

Attached to the light pole was a sign. 55 FREEWAY: STRAIGHT AHEAD. The way back home.

READ MORE: IS THAT YOU, SANTA