Beyond the veil

So my husband, my sister and I were saying our nightly Rosary. We sat in our usual positions: I sat in my recliner with the ice machine on my shoulder (healing from rotator cuff surgery) with my husband on the love seat to my left and my sister on the couch to my right.

We sit in a triangle, to say our prayers every night.

In the middle of the Rosary, my husband stopped us by speaking up, “My father. I just saw my father. I opened up my eyes and looked at Sue (that’s me.) He stood beside her chair and was looking down at her. No particular expression on his face, no smile or anything. He was just watching her. He just disappeared as I looked at him.”

I have observed that as many people age, (my husband is 81) they begin to see into the next dimension much more often.

The medical profession often says they are hallucinating, seeing things that are not really there. I beg to differ. I believe they actually see into the next dimension, into which most of us do not ordinarily see.

I was happy to know that his deceased father’s spirit looked over us as we prayed. And it made me wonder if our prayers don’t help open that window between us and beyond the veil.

Author: admin

As a toddler, Sue Baumgardner made up stories for herself looking at books she could not read and later spun tales for her younger sisters. After she had her own children, she told them tales and eventually wove a new pattern into the fabric of their lives. As the three sat together, one would begin with a story idea of her own. She spoke perhaps a paragraph or two or three, then pointed to the next who would take up the thread and continue with her own evolution of the story line passed to her, until she pointed to the next. The third person wove her own ideas into the story progression. After the three each had a turn, anyone could end the story, in their turn, whenever it felt complete to them. After her children were adults, Sue studied writing, first poetry and then prose. After six semesters in adult education, she was thoroughly hooked on the story art form. Sue continued with dozens of classes, seminars and writing retreats. She studied writing and publishing under the likes of James Patterson, Peter Behrens, and Mark Dawson. As a contributor to the Discover Maine Magazine, Sue received her first check for her prose. Her poetry has been published in The Aurorian. She has six of her paperbacks along with four ebooks published. They include fiction and nonfiction for adults and fiction for Middle Readers. Her very first publishing though began with Greeting Card Universe, where Sue’s greeting cards with verse are sold across the world.

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