Chicken Soup for the Soul: Dreams and the Unexplainable: 101 Eye-Opening Stories about Premonitions and Miracles
By Amy Newmark and Kelly Sullivan Walden
5/5
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Family
Dreams
Personal Growth
Friendship
Love
Love at First Sight
Guardian Angel
Near-Death Experience
Mentor
Fish Out of Water
Power of Friendship
Power of Love
Prophetic Dreams
Hero's Journey
Redemption
Intuition
Self-Discovery
Premonition
Spirituality
Fear
About this ebook
This enlightening collection is filled with true, personal stories from ordinary people whose dreams, premonitions, and intuition tapped into the extraordinary wisdom they already had within them.
You’ll read stories that will show you how to:
- Use your dreams as your own GPS for navigating life
- Find love and your soul mate
- Face your fears and overcome them
- Pay attention to that little voice in your head
- Let your dreams help you diagnose medical problems
- Act on your premonitions
- Improve your relationships by trusting your dreams
- Restore your faith in miracles through amazing coincidences and synchronicities
Amy Newmark
Amy Newmark is Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Chicken Soup for the Soul.
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Chicken Soup for the Soul - Amy Newmark
Divine Intervention
Miracle at the Oscars
Pregnancy is a process that invites you to surrender to the unseen force behind all life.
~Judy Ford
I sat in the limo next to my husband, Sebastian, nervously adjusting my navy blue sequined gown and staring out the tinted window. Hollywood Boulevard looked like a slow-moving river of limousines. Spectators pushed against the chain-link fences at the sidewalk edge. Some screamed for us to roll down the windows. Others held signs that said, God hates you.
The crowds thickened as we neared the Kodak Theatre. Finally, the limo stopped, and the doors opened. This is it,
Sebastian whispered. We’re at the Oscars.
It was the final event of a long awards season for Sebastian’s first documentary film, but for us it was the beginning of a season of miracles.
Walking down the red carpet was a miracle in itself. I grew up in Bulgaria under communist rule, five of us in a one-bedroom apartment that had no hot water or central heating. I was eighteen when, after the fall of communism, I watched my first Oscars. And here I was now, nearly twenty years later, walking into the Kodak Theatre, my family in Bulgaria gathered in front of the television hoping to catch a glimpse of me among the stars at the Academy Awards ceremony.
I remember when Sebastian, an author and war journalist, first told me that he wanted to bring a camera on his next trip to Afghanistan. He was going to make a documentary about the American soldiers in one of the remote outposts there. Tim Hetherington, an acclaimed international photojournalist, joined him a few months later. Their film, Restrepo, won the Grand Jury Prize for a documentary at the Sundance Film Festival in 2010 and was now nominated for an Academy Award. The four of us — Tim, his girlfriend Idil, Sebastian, and I — flew out to Los Angeles for a week of parties and events that culminated with Oscars night.
The trip to Los Angeles was a much-needed distraction from our six-year battle with infertility. We had done countless intrauterine inseminations and six in-vitro cycles before finally resorting to using donor eggs. But that failed, too, just two months prior to the Oscars. It had been our last hope.
Restrepo didn’t win an Oscar, but we returned to New York with a far greater prize than the gold statuette of a bald man. A home pregnancy test two weeks later confirmed the miracle. After all of the treatments and invasive procedures, we had gotten pregnant naturally.
Miscarriages are common in the first trimester, and with our history, we didn’t want to get too excited. But as the weeks went by and the pregnancy progressed normally, I allowed myself to believe that perhaps it was finally happening for us. At seven weeks, we cried as we heard the baby’s heartbeat at our reproductive endocrinologist’s office. Everything looked good, and he released us into the care of an obstetrician. We sighed with relief. We even began indulging in speculation about the gender of the baby. If it were a boy, we joked, we would have to name him Oscar.
The Academy Awards ceremony was the final event of a three-year project that had begun with Sebastian and Tim embedding with the American soldiers in a remote outpost in Afghanistan. While we were in Los Angeles, going from one awards party to another, the Arab Spring was in full swing. Sebastian and Tim felt restless. Before we had even returned to New York, they’d begun formulating their plan to cover the civil war in Libya. As the time neared, I felt the familiar tug before Sebastian went to a war zone. But something was different this time. I was pregnant, and all I could think about was the life growing inside me. I felt so protective of it that I couldn’t possibly excite myself by putting up a fight, arguing that going to Libya was dangerous.
I didn’t have to. Sebastian decided to stay with me. He didn’t want to take chances either and jeopardize the prospect of finally becoming parents. We’d waited for a baby for so long and would do anything to protect it.
We were excited to go to our first appointment with the obstetrician. Finally, we had joined all other pregnant couples. Now is the moment of truth,
the doctor said as he inserted the magic wand that would project a black-and-white image of the uterus onto the screen. Sebastian held my hand as we both looked expectantly at the ultrasound machine. The doctor kept adjusting the wand, trying different angles. I’m not seeing the heartbeat,
he said finally.
I stared at the screen. Sebastian was crushing my hand in his. I kept staring at the little, dark blob that was to be our baby, as if by sheer will I could wake it up, and we’d suddenly see the flicker of a heartbeat. But the image remained brutally still.
It was the first sunny, warm day of the year. Sebastian and I walked silently from York Avenue to Central Park where we sat on a bench, gutted with grief. Around us, children ran, birds sang, and the forsythia bushes bloomed bright yellow. The heartless excitement of spring was around us.
A week after our visit to the obstetrician, I had a D&C procedure to remove the dead fetus. Back from the hospital, I crashed on the couch, looking forward to a long, dreamless sleep after the anesthesia. The phone rang. Sebastian answered it, listened for a moment, and hid his face in his hands.
Tim had been killed in Libya.
The days and weeks that followed were a blur. At Tim’s funeral, I cried inconsolably. Together with Tim, I was burying — if not a child — the promise of one. Tim’s girlfriend Idil sat in front of me. As I noted her heaving shoulders, pangs of guilt pushed through the mountain of grief inside me. Guilt that I was sitting next to my man, my hand sweating inside his, while Idil sat alone at the edge of the church pew.
I couldn’t know for sure, but had Sebastian gone to Libya with Tim, he would have been on the same street, in the blast radius of the same mortar that had killed Tim and another photojournalist, Chris Hondros.
What if I hadn’t gotten pregnant when I had?
Eight weeks after the miscarriage, the doctor called me with the results of the genetic report. The pregnancy had been doomed from the moment of conception because of a rare chromosomal abnormality.
I never conceived again. Not even with medical intervention. But that new life Sebastian and I had created in Los Angeles had lasted just long enough to protect my husband from losing his own.
~Daniela Petrova
A Divine Delay
You are not just waiting in vain. There is a purpose behind every delay.
~Mandy Hale
The plan was to drive five hours from the Napa Valley to a northern coastal town for a little weekend vacation. I had invited my best friend, Paula, to take that weekend trip with me. The day before our departure, she called to say that she wouldn’t be able to make the journey because she had been asked by her boss to attend a meeting the very evening we were supposed to leave. I told her we could just pack the car and take off when her meeting was over.
I waited in the car while the meeting we assumed would take one hour stretched into three. When Paula finally came out, she only opened the car door long enough to say, I’m so sorry.
That’s when her boss stuck his head out the door and asked her to come back in. At that point, a thought struck me: God must be delaying us for a purpose.
When Paula returned fifteen minutes later, profusely apologizing, I told her not to worry. We started out on our big adventure, but before we even reached the Thanks for Visiting
sign at the end of town, we both decided that we should get an ice cream cone. We pulled into the last open ice cream stand and went in to order.
Oh, I’m sorry, but we just turned off the machine! But I’ll turn it back on,
the cheery waitress said. We waited twenty minutes for that ice cream to get hard enough to put into a cone. Paula and I just looked at each other.
When we were finally back in the car and on our way, we were stopped at a train crossing . . . by a very, very long train.
What is going on?
Paula moaned.
God is delaying us, Paula,
I responded happily.
An hour from our destination, Paula had fallen asleep, and I was driving on the deserted freeway. Well, deserted, except for the one car in front of me in the slow lane, going very, very slow. I pulled into the passing lane, and as I passed the car, I heard it go putt, putt, putt. Then it pulled over to the side of the road.
THIS is why I delayed you, I heard. Turn around and help. I felt this so strongly that I simply obeyed without hesitation. Paula woke up while I was turning the car around and asked me what I was doing. I explained and she complained, but I was determined. I pulled up beside the broken down car.
Do you need some help?
I shouted across Paula to the young man, now standing on the side of the road.
Yes! I ran out of gas. I didn’t think anyone was going to come by!
Paula crawled into the back seat, giving me the eye
before she did. The young man sat in the passenger’s seat. We chatted and then I asked him his name.
Andy Lane.
Okay, that sounded familiar. My last name is Lane, too! What’s your mom’s name?
Puzzled, he said, Mae.
I took a deep gulp. What’s your dad’s name?
Doug.
At that point, I screamed, slapped him on the back, and pulled the car over.
I’m Stan Lane’s daughter! Our fathers are brothers!
Because of a divorce in their family, I had last seen this cousin when he was a year old. He was now eighteen. I turned on the car light, and we looked at each other . . . yup, we were both Lanes.
We were both astonished by this encounter! It encouraged Andy, and gave him some much-needed faith that God was watching over him.
Some plans just need to be set aside for the greater one.
~Brenda M. Lane
The Most Perfect Timing
Impossible situations can become possible miracles.
~Robert H. Schuller
Things were not going well at all. I was laid off from my job and the next day my teenage daughter broke her foot. Then, when I took my children to the playground, my two-year-old ran in front of my daughter on the swing and got hit by the heavy boot on her foot.
He was laid out flat, but he finally got up and wanted to play again, so I thought at least that was going to be okay!
Unfortunately, when we got home, he asked if he could go lie down. That was weird.
He went to bed and tossed and turned and moaned. He finally got back up and said he couldn’t sleep. Then he threw up. It was pink.
I called his doctor, and he advised me to go to the closest pediatric trauma center. Three doctors converged on my daughter to grill her on what happened. She was terrified. I knew why they were doing it. If there was a chance we were beating up this kid, they didn’t want to give me a chance to coach her on what to say. But I watched a piece of her childhood float away, knowing this moment would be one of the most traumatic moments of her life.
They did some scans and told us my son had massive internal bleeding. I started to feel faint.
But it was just a playground accident. How can this have happened?
I said.
They looked at me with pity and could only offer this: These things sometimes happen.
They decided we needed to go downtown to the medical district where there was a pediatric hospital better equipped to deal with internal bleeding. They were going to take him by ambulance right away. I would have to take my other three kids home, find someone to watch them, and then race downtown to the hospital.
For two days, my son fought a fever and did not so much as sit up. I thought he was dying. My father, whom I had not spoken to in years, showed up for comfort. I needed him.
Finally, on the third day, my boy sat up. His fever had broken. Relief all around! They sent us home, telling us to come back in a month to make sure the bleeding had stopped.
The next month, we were all smiles when we came back. My son was happy, awake, alert, energetic and back to his old self. He was fine.
We did the scans and were told we’d get the results in two days. A friend of mine advised, Good news comes slowly.
So I comforted myself that waiting would be a good thing.
The next morning, however, the doctor called. Are you sitting down?
he asked. What they had thought was massive internal bleeding was actually a cancerous tumor on his kidney. It was about the size of a small melon. They’d have to remove it and what remained of the kidney. There’s a ninety percent survival rate, so that should be a relief,
he told me. They would be expecting us at the hospital and we should go right away.
My whole world disintegrated. My ears started ringing. I fell to my knees and sobbed.
We got to the ER, and my son, feeling fine, was happily running up and down the hall through the chairs. Parents holding feverish, rash-covered children scowled at me for being there with a well child when their kids were obviously sick.
My kid was about to leave with one less organ. But all those parents saw was a family cutting the line for no apparent reason.
We stayed overnight, as they were going to do the surgery bright and early in the morning. I recited a prayer I always say when I’m worried about my kids. Dear God, please send your very best guardian angels to watch over and protect my child.
I’ve said it before first days of school, plane flights, slumber parties, and any time I’m feeling anxious about my kids facing something without me. But this was the biggest thing we’d ever faced.
The next morning, as we prepared for surgery, a man sat down in front of me. He was French. He said, Listen. Your surgeon is the very best surgeon you could have possibly hoped for. He specializes in this rare tumor, and he’s here. In Houston. At this hospital. You’re very lucky. But he’s worried about this one. So he called me. Because I’m the very best anesthesiologist. I’ll be watching over your son through the entire surgery. So think of me as . . .
he looked up for the right word, his guardian angel.
I felt a blast of endorphins as I turned to look at this man.
What did you just say?
He laughed. His guardian angel.
At that moment, I knew my baby was going to be okay. God had sent two of his very best guardian angels to look after him. Then I thought back. If my daughter hadn’t broken her foot, she wouldn’t have hit my son with her boot. We wouldn’t have found his tumor for a few more years, and by then it might have metastasized all over his body. Because I was laid off the day before my daughter broke her foot, I could get unemployment and take time off to care for my son after his surgery.
The good luck continued. I got a new job shortly thereafter, and a year later my son was declared cancer free.
Everything happened with the most perfect timing. Ever since, I’ve made sure to list every single thing I’m grateful for when I pray.
~Heather McMichael
Purely Providential
With each new experience of letting God be in control, we gain courage and reinforcement for daring to do it again and again.
~Gloria Gaither
I awakened with a smile on my face. Sunbeams danced across the bedroom wall. Wake up, sleepyhead!
I said. It’s the first day of our vacation!
John reached over, enfolding me in his strong arms. I had the strangest dream,
he said. We were driving along a country road, and every sign we spotted had the number 39 on it!
Hmmm . . . that is kinda strange. Maybe it was something you ate!
Tossing my pillow in John’s direction, I headed off to the kitchen to start the coffee. Several minutes later, we were sipping the hot beverage while John Googled driving directions.
We’ve actually got our choice of two routes to the camping site we’ll be staying at tonight. We need to decide which one.
Suddenly, John gasped. I looked up from the list I’d made of provisions I’d already loaded in the RV the night before.
Take a look at this!
I hurried to the computer, leaning over John’s shoulder.
This is the shortest route, which would get us there before dark. But now take a look at this other route!
It was my turn to gasp as I spotted the number 39 posted all along a mountain highway.
Guess we know which one we’ll be taking! What can it mean?
Silently, we studied each other’s puzzled expression as the printer noisily hummed away.
An hour later, we were officially on vacation, wreathed in smiles.
The ride was pleasant as we listened to soft music and pointed out various points of interest along the way. The warm sun caressed my face, and I nodded off to sleep, awakened much later by John’s soft whistle.
Route 39 coming up!
With each mile, the traffic increased.
Looks like we made a mistake,
I murmured, spotting a bustling town up ahead.
Colorful shops lined the busy highway, including several restaurants and a daycare center. For years, I’d been a professional caregiver. Early childhood education was my passion. Lord, be with the children there,
I whispered, as I often did when I spotted a daycare center. Suddenly, I spotted something darting out the front door of the establishment. A little girl, no more than three, ran out into the busy, oncoming traffic. Frantic and sobbing, she weaved her way between cars. No one seemed to notice.
John, pull over there!
I cried, pointing toward a parking lot and then flinging myself out the door. I raced after the toddler, scooping her into my arms as she lost her lunch down the front of my white sweater.
It’s okay, sweetie! I’ve got you now. It’s going to be okay!
I held her closer as traffic suddenly came to a halt. We made our way safely back inside the daycare center, greeted by two hysterical adults.
Do you have any idea what could have happened to this child?
I exclaimed.
Tears formed in the director’s eyes as she apologized over and over. The child offered her arms to the woman, and I relaxed somewhat. A policeman arrived, and John and I answered his questions, leaving our contact information if needed.
With grateful hearts that all was well with the little girl, we climbed back into our home away from home,
anticipating the continuation of our journey. But before we started the engine, there was something more important on our minds.
Clasping each other’s hands, we bowed our heads, thanking God for being our Savior, for being Divine . . . for sending John dreams about Route 39.
~Mary Z. Whitney
Angel on Board
An angel can illuminate the thought and mind of man by strengthening the power of vision.
~St. Thomas Aquinas
Little voices chattered in the back seat — a mix of nonsense, songs, and the unique communication that occurs between young children that only they understand. The day was bright and sunny, and the usual traffic was moving along the four lanes headed south on California Highway 101.
For this young mother at the wheel, it was a good day so far — no one was fighting or crying yet. I pushed the On
button, flooding the red-and-white Suburban with music. I always liked to sing along. Sometimes, the kids would try to join in, kicking their little feet or clapping their chubby hands in time to the funky beat of the music that characterized Marin County in the early 1980s. We were headed to the medical clinic for a well check for one of the kids. Life was good.
Motherhood had always been my fondest dream, and I was acutely aware of that little slice of time that makes up the tender years of one’s children. I knew my good fortune, and I cherished it. The only unease that lurked below this happy surface had to do with their father; our relationship was not good. But today I didn’t want to think about any of that.
All three of my children were delightful in their own precious ways. The oldest and youngest had always been easygoing; they ate heartily, nursed to sleep, and slept well. The middle child was different. I couldn’t put my finger on quite what it was, but she had some kind of connection with the unseen, even as an infant. If ever I happened to open even one eye while in my bed (in a separate room), she knew I was awake and cried or called out to me. She was very tuned in,
you might say, and had a unique way of being in the world.
As we cruised along with the traffic, this middle child piped up with a question. Mommy, where do we go when we die?
Oh, my! Quickly, I asked myself, What are my beliefs on that? And how to explain them to a three-year-old in a way she might understand? The kids went to Sunday school and were learning something about the concept of God. They said prayers every night with me. But I wasn’t really prepared for questions about death.
Well, honey, you know how you learn about God at Sunday school? When we die, many people believe we go to heaven to be with God.
Oh, that’s good,
her cheerful little voice replied. Because we’re going there right now!
My hands froze on the wheel. My heart stopped. What can she mean? I checked my speed and carefully applied the brakes. Then, out of the corner of my eye, I saw it: a blue car careening across three lanes of traffic, heading right for us. I hit the brakes harder, and the vehicle roared across our lane, just in front of us! I heard the squealing of tires and watched pieces of black rubber fly through the air.
The orderly lanes of traffic were now a confused jumble of vehicles, each trying to avoid a crash. Everything screeched into slow motion as drivers carefully made for the side of the road or continued bravely on their way. The distressed vehicle came to rest in the middle median, stopped by the large oleander bushes. Miraculously, no cars had collided with it or with each other.
If I had not braked when my daughter spoke up, the out-of-control car would have broadsided us at high speed. I shuddered at the thought, at the tragedy our lives could have become in that lightning flash of time. Deep breathing helped me regain control, but I kept a tight grip on the wheel.
How are the kids? I glanced in the rearview mirror. They continued to chatter and play, buckled safely in their car seats. Then my foresighted daughter caught my eye and gave me what can only be described as a knowing smile. We had a guardian angel on board that day!
Did she have a special connection with God and the angels? Or was she herself the angel? All I can say for sure is this: That was not the only day when, as a small child, she received a message from God.
~Sallianne Hines
A Dreary Saturday
I would maintain that thanks are the highest form of thought; and that gratitude is happiness doubled by wonder.
~G.K. Chesterton
Even though I loved watching the Snorks cartoon series on Saturday mornings, I loved candy even more. The bank handed out Dum Dums lollipops, so I always wanted to go to the bank with my mom.
However, for some reason, one dreary Saturday morning I refused to go the bank with my mother. I kicked. I screamed. I threw the biggest fit I could. My mother wasn’t going to make it to the bank before it closed, so she had to make a decision. She would only be gone for fifteen minutes, maximum. What could happen in fifteen minutes?
She took my little brother and rushed off to the bank, and for the first time in my eight years, I was home alone. It didn’t seem like a big deal. I sat back down in front of the television, but something drew me to the back window. I went into the dining room and looked into my back yard. The gray sky opened up and it poured. As I watched the rain hit the water in our family pool, a sudden and violent jolt took me by surprise. To this day, I’m still not sure what it was.
I gathered my bearings, and something inside told me to get dressed and ready to go. I ran upstairs to my room and flung open my dresser drawer. I grabbed the most accessible pair of sweatpants and put them on under my nightgown. My mother was still in the habit of dressing me, so picking out what to wear wasn’t on my mind. I just knew I needed pants. After that, I needed shoes. My fuzzy bunny slippers would suffice. After I was dressed to my best ability, the same voice inside told me to watch out the window for the police.
I stood in my family room’s front picture window, waiting and watching. Maybe three minutes passed until I saw the brown sheriff’s vehicle come flying around the corner and onto my street, complete with lights flashing. I went to the front door and was coming out before the sheriff had even put the car in Park.
My brother met me halfway to the car and told me, We were in a crash, and Mommy’s hurt.
All I could say was, I know.
I walked to the car, opened the door, and crawled into the sheriff’s back seat. I can’t imagine how much my behavior must have puzzled the officer. How could I have known? We didn’t have a cell phone back in 1987. I rode quietly in the back seat while my younger brother sobbed in the front.
Once we arrived at the accident scene, the ambulance was waiting, and paramedics were still getting my mother stabilized. A kind police officer handed my brother and me each a stuffed teddy bear. I hugged mine gently as I saw my mother in the ambulance, lying on the gurney in a cervical collar. The police officer lifted my brother into the ambulance, and just before he lifted me, I saw my mother’s small, four-door sedan. She had been rear-ended by a lifted Jeep, the kind built for off-road fun. The force of the impact crushed the trunk, and the Jeep, having a higher clearance, ran up onto the back end of my mother’s car. The damage was severe, but my eyes were transfixed on the back seat — or what remained of it. It was crushed. If I had gone, either my brother or I would have been in that back seat, and one of us would have been crushed and most likely killed.
Someone or something saved me that day, and I continue to be grateful thirty years later.
~Heather M. Cook
Black Dog
What seems to us as bitter trials are often blessings in disguise.
~Oscar Wilde
As we lowered the skinny body of what had been my big, fluffy, platinum-blond dog, Woofie, into his grave, I erupted in primal sobs. I didn’t know a dog could make her way so deeply into the center of my heart and soul. I swore I’d never have another dog again . . . I didn’t think I could live through the heartache of losing another one.
Six months later, I was invited to speak at a conference in New Mexico — state slogan the Land of Enchantment
— spearheaded by our dear friends George and Sedena Cappannelli. To sweeten the pot of an already sweet opportunity, they offered my husband and me the opportunity to stay in their lovely guesthouse for the weekend. How could we resist?
We drove the long but scenic fourteen hours from Los Angeles to Santa Fe. We arrived the night before I was to speak so we could experience the acclaimed mythologist, author, and storyteller Michael Meade.
He strutted onto the stage with a conga drum. The lights went dim, and a faint spotlight found him. He told us a story in rhythm with his drum. I was transported back in time to a grassy field, starry sky, and open fire. He mesmerized us with this raspy, staccato fable (allow me to paraphrase):
There’s an old woman . . . as old as time . . . long, gray hair . . . lives in a cave . . . with her black dog sitting by her side . . . all day and night . . . she rocks in her chair and weaves . . . the most beautiful weave you’ve ever seen . . . blending all the fabric of time and space from the far reaches of this universe . . . She’s been weaving since the beginning of time . . . and it’s now almost finished . . . and it’s beautiful.
Just a few stitches left, and it will be perfect . . . but she can smell the aroma of her hearty stew that’s been brewing in a pot in the back of her cave . . . All that weaving made her hungry . . . She lays her weave down on her rocking chair while she hobbles to the back of her cave to feast on her delicious stew.
While she’s enjoying her feast, her black dog sniffs around at her weave, and begins playing and pulling on the string with his teeth and paws . . . it’s a toy, a game, it’s having a great old time . . . and by the time the old woman returns to her rocking chair, the entire weave — the one