Post by auntym on Sept 19, 2011 16:33:00 GMT -6
paranormaloldpueblo.com/2011/09/13/the-ghosts-of-911-they-are-talking-are-we-listening/
The Ghosts of 9/11: ‘They Are Talking, Are We Listening?’[/color]
By Elsa Cook
September 13, 2011
Like many people, I was reflecting on the tragedy of 9/11/2001. I wept for those we have lost in the destruction of the Twin Towers, the Pentagon and those who perished in a field in Pennsylvania. I lost a friend who worked in the Pentagon and I have prayed that his last moments were not spent in abject terror. How could they not be? How could an such unsurmountable loss swept up in tidal waves of extreme emotion not be imprinted on the fabric of time? This question led me to further research where I discovered this post from Cynthia Dermody of The Stir:
” Bonnie McEneaney was a skeptic, just like you may be now. In the days and weeks following the death of her husband, Eamon (pronounced: Aye-mon), in the World Trade Center attacks on September 11, 2001, McEneaney continued to question that the “signs” her dead husband was sending her were real and not some imaginary attempt to hold on to something she’d lost forever.messages by bonnie mceneaney
An eerie wind out of nowhere on a perfectly still day, making a river pattern among the leaves and branches of the trees.
A blue heron, a bird not native to Connecticut in the middle of winter and having great significance to her personally, guiding her to a burial plot in a local cemetery.
And then the penny. For her, this is what made her believe beyond a doubt that her dead husband was communicating with her from another realm.
She was at a restaurant with friends, discussing some of the strange things she and other spouses and relatives of 9/11 victims had experienced since the terrorist attack. She was explaining that Eamon had foreseen his own death several times, most recently two days before he died while he and Bonnie were watching the World War II-based Band of Brothers miniseries about D-Day, which occurred on June 6, 1944.
She opened her menu, and there sat a wheat penny — from 1944.
The restaurant did not operate in cash or tips. No one else knew the background or would be so cruel as to plan such a mean practical joke. McEneaney could not rationalize any other way that the penny, with that specific date, could have gotten there, except for Eamon.
“This was just an incredible experience,” McEneaney said. “No one at the table could explain where the penny came from. For me, it was clear. And what makes this experience even more remarkable was that the entire day I was beginning to feel like I had made a big mistake — my own skepticism setting in. When the penny appeared that evening, it was if Eamon was saying, ‘Don’t give in to your doubts — stay the course.’ And I did.”
Author Bonnie McEneaney has chronicled her own spiritual experiences and those of numerous others in the book Messages: Signs, Visits, and Premonitions From Loved Ones Lost on 9/11, which goes on sale today.
Her goal is not to convert skeptics, but to help others who’ve lost loved ones open up to the possibility that they might be receiving messages, too. She believes that when you love someone, even when they die, the relationship continues — it’s just different. That special connection is not broken.
The book gave me chills. I’m fascinated by this possibility, and talked with McEneaney, who provided 4 key ways the rest of us can try to be more spiritually open to communication from the dead.
CONTINUE READING: paranormaloldpueblo.com/2011/09/13/the-ghosts-of-911-they-are-talking-are-we-listening/
The Ghosts of 9/11: ‘They Are Talking, Are We Listening?’[/color]
By Elsa Cook
September 13, 2011
Like many people, I was reflecting on the tragedy of 9/11/2001. I wept for those we have lost in the destruction of the Twin Towers, the Pentagon and those who perished in a field in Pennsylvania. I lost a friend who worked in the Pentagon and I have prayed that his last moments were not spent in abject terror. How could they not be? How could an such unsurmountable loss swept up in tidal waves of extreme emotion not be imprinted on the fabric of time? This question led me to further research where I discovered this post from Cynthia Dermody of The Stir:
” Bonnie McEneaney was a skeptic, just like you may be now. In the days and weeks following the death of her husband, Eamon (pronounced: Aye-mon), in the World Trade Center attacks on September 11, 2001, McEneaney continued to question that the “signs” her dead husband was sending her were real and not some imaginary attempt to hold on to something she’d lost forever.messages by bonnie mceneaney
An eerie wind out of nowhere on a perfectly still day, making a river pattern among the leaves and branches of the trees.
A blue heron, a bird not native to Connecticut in the middle of winter and having great significance to her personally, guiding her to a burial plot in a local cemetery.
And then the penny. For her, this is what made her believe beyond a doubt that her dead husband was communicating with her from another realm.
She was at a restaurant with friends, discussing some of the strange things she and other spouses and relatives of 9/11 victims had experienced since the terrorist attack. She was explaining that Eamon had foreseen his own death several times, most recently two days before he died while he and Bonnie were watching the World War II-based Band of Brothers miniseries about D-Day, which occurred on June 6, 1944.
She opened her menu, and there sat a wheat penny — from 1944.
The restaurant did not operate in cash or tips. No one else knew the background or would be so cruel as to plan such a mean practical joke. McEneaney could not rationalize any other way that the penny, with that specific date, could have gotten there, except for Eamon.
“This was just an incredible experience,” McEneaney said. “No one at the table could explain where the penny came from. For me, it was clear. And what makes this experience even more remarkable was that the entire day I was beginning to feel like I had made a big mistake — my own skepticism setting in. When the penny appeared that evening, it was if Eamon was saying, ‘Don’t give in to your doubts — stay the course.’ And I did.”
Author Bonnie McEneaney has chronicled her own spiritual experiences and those of numerous others in the book Messages: Signs, Visits, and Premonitions From Loved Ones Lost on 9/11, which goes on sale today.
Her goal is not to convert skeptics, but to help others who’ve lost loved ones open up to the possibility that they might be receiving messages, too. She believes that when you love someone, even when they die, the relationship continues — it’s just different. That special connection is not broken.
The book gave me chills. I’m fascinated by this possibility, and talked with McEneaney, who provided 4 key ways the rest of us can try to be more spiritually open to communication from the dead.
CONTINUE READING: paranormaloldpueblo.com/2011/09/13/the-ghosts-of-911-they-are-talking-are-we-listening/