She went to sleep as she always had, immediately and deeply. She awoke, choking, in a room filled with smoke and to a kind of fear she had never experienced before. She was 21 years old, and she was confronted with the very real thought that her life might be finite.
She couldn’t have known that, after she went to sleep, her roommate’s boyfriend had left a burning cigarette in the ashtray next to the couch. She slept while the end table was jostled and the ashtray tilted and the cigarette rolled into the groove between the couch arm and the cushion. She slept while later, after her roommate’s boyfriend left and her roommate went to sleep, the couch exploded in flames and ignited everything around it. She slept while her roommate, closer to the smoke, leapt out of her own bed and threw open her window and hung from the ledge outside her window.
She ran to the bedroom door. It was hot to the touch, and she knew not to open it. She ran to the window, opened that, sat on the sill with one leg dangling down, seven stories above the ground. She saw her roommate hanging for her life on the ledge under her bedroom window. She assumed her life was over.
Some minutes later, she heard someone come into her room and she heard the words, “You’re going to be OK now.” She felt a damp towel being placed over her head and strong arms pulling her from the window sill. The arms stayed around her along the hallway, down seven flights of stairs, and onto a couch in the lobby. The towel was removed and she heard the same words, “You’re going to be OK now.” She didn’t see the speaker. She saw her roommate brought into the lobby on a stretcher and she heard a firefighter say, “We can’t find the other girl.” She went up to them and told them that she was the “other girl.”
The firefighter asked her how she had gotten out of the apartment, and she told him someone came into her room and saved her. He said that was impossible. The apartment door had been locked. They had to break the door down to get to the roommate. They knew no firefighter could have entered before that.
She called her mother. Before she could speak, her mother asked “What happened? I know something terrible happened. Your grandmother came to me in a dream and kept crying and saying ‘Something happened to my end table! It’s gone!”
The end table, along with everything else in the apartment was, indeed, gone. The mystery “person” who saved Susan’s life was never found. Susan never expected that he would be. She doesn’t know where her grandmother’s powerful spirit resides. She is simply grateful that love transcends both death and displeasure over ruined furniture.
Hippie Cahier
October 18, 2011
Wow. This truly gave me goose bumps.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
I felt that way when Susan told me the story years ago.
Deborah the Closet Monster
October 18, 2011
My entire body is covered with goosebumps as well.
pegoleg
October 18, 2011
Goosebumps must be contagious – we got a case over here, too. What a well written and powerful message!
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
Thanks, Peg!
notquiteold
October 18, 2011
I believe it. And I love that things like this do happen.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
I believe things are happening all the time. We just have to be open to experiencing them.
Kathryn McCullough
October 18, 2011
Wow. Amazing. Where did this story come from? I fully and completely believe in these kinds of unexplained “miracles.”
Kathy
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
Susan is one of my closest friends. She told me the story years ago. Recently, she was contacted by a producer who wanted to feature her story on TV. He had seen a reference to her experience in a book about angels. Then the producer changed his mind when she told them it had happened 40 years ago. They wanted something more recent. But when she told me about the producer, it reminded me of the story, so I wrote about it.
run4joy59
October 18, 2011
Wonderful story, gave me chills.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
Thanks!
Lisa (Woman Wielding Words)
October 18, 2011
Wow! What a truly powerful, eerie story that is a true testament to the power of love and spirit. Amazing.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
My friend was amazed that I remembered so many details. I thought, how could I not?
k8edid
October 18, 2011
Amazing story – even if it is 40 years old. Probably not trashy enough for TV, though. It made me shiver. My grandmother has never saved my life, that I know of, but I feel her presence with me quite often, and I can hear her say “keep your chins up”.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
I think so much of this is about our choice as to how we interpret any event. But I felt when Susan told me the story, the message was very clear.
nrhatch
October 18, 2011
I love hearing about Angels. 😀
Marion Driessen
October 18, 2011
Love is a power so great, so intense, that it can break through the boundaries of life and death. It must be a comfort to know your family is watching over you, sending an angel.
Beautiful and strong story, your words are well chosen and touch us, bring the story to life in our minds.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
Thanks, Marion.
dragonfae
October 18, 2011
What an awesome story Renee … thanks so much for sharing!
omawarisan
October 18, 2011
That happens. It usually isn’t that well written, but it happens.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
Thanks, Oma.
Seasweetie
October 18, 2011
Thank you for sharing this – it is always nice to have reassurance that space and time are no boundaries for love.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 18, 2011
And thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane!
She's a Maineiac
October 18, 2011
I’ve got chills and tears. What a story!
merrilymarylee
October 18, 2011
O h m y g o o d n e s s !
I’m hearing the music of The Twilight Zone now.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 19, 2011
It is like that. I remember being a Twilight Zone (and Alcoa Presents) junkie back in the day.
Carl D'Agostino
October 19, 2011
We call them “God Shots” Just cannot be explained and they are so wonderful.
Walker
October 19, 2011
Fascinating. And, for the me the message is to remember to be ‘open’ to the presence of the unexplainable in life. Thank you for sharing this story…
lifeintheboomerlane
October 19, 2011
Being open is the key. To everything!
SisterMerryHellish
October 19, 2011
I adore this story! I read it at work yesterday morning and got choked up. I’m guessing everyone assumed it was PMS. You’d think they’d have a calendar by now!
Really, hon, eerie and heartfelt. Love it!
lifeintheboomerlane
October 19, 2011
Hey, thanks. I’ve had some experiences in my own life, but nothing as dramatic as this for sure.
Spectra
October 19, 2011
I beleive!
I have had my own share of experiences, mostly to do with dreams and pre-solving a crime, but nothing so sacred as a sweet sparing of a life. And the Gramma factor! I do not own anything from my grandparents, but truy feel they would be looking out after me, maybe are, when needed. Your story is proof.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 21, 2011
Pre-solving crime???
Amy
October 19, 2011
Amazing, wonderful story. Truly there are “more things in heaven and earth . . .”
My Inner Chick
October 20, 2011
–Lovely.
And I believe EVERY word. X
lifeintheboomerlane
October 21, 2011
I’m smiling.
totsymae1011
October 20, 2011
Interesting tale and believable. Very fortunate for the girl but whatever happened to the guy has my curiosity going.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 20, 2011
Thanks for visiting Life in the Boomer Lane. Interesting question. I’ll have to ask Susan.
ifiwerebraveblog
October 21, 2011
I love this story. Thanks for sharing it. Have you ever read “Expecting Adam” by Martha Beck? It’s a great read, and your story reminded me of a story within the book.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 21, 2011
Thanks! I haven’t heard of that. I’ll have to check it out, and Tell Susan about it, as well.
Kathryn McCullough
October 21, 2011
Renee, I posted piece two days ago called “Kids Make the Best Bookies.” Would you mind taking a look and seeing if you think it could stand alone and be published somewhere? I don’t know if you read Jacquelin Cangro, but she suggested I try tweaking it and sending it somewhere. She said a journal, but I can’t imagine which one. I’m curious to know if you agree or think it’s better to save the story and use it only in the memoir itself.
http://reinventingtheeventhorizon.wordpress.com/2011/10/19/kids-make-the-best-bookies/
Thanks, Renee! I need really honest feedback, including criticism. I want to know how it could be better.
Kathy
lifeintheboomerlane
October 22, 2011
Kathy, I just wrote you a l-o-n-g email response and then got a message about the email not being able to be delivered. I’ll leave you a comment on your blog. Aaaaargh.
territerri
October 21, 2011
I love stories like these. And fully believe in them as well. Thank you for sharing this.
Lunar Euphoria
October 22, 2011
What an intense story, beautifully told.
Dreams are eerie. Two weeks ago I awoke from a vague, jumbled, but very disturbing dream: I had been called to a friend’s house. She was very upset and I was there helping her pack for a trip.
There wasn’t much to the dream, but the emotional intensity and the pull of her need was vivid and stayed with me that day. Her mother died a couple days later.
lifeintheboomerlane
October 22, 2011
Thanks. I don’t know whether we actually communicate with people in dreams, or whether our dreams are ways our brains attempt to make sense of the energy that exists between all of us and that we are tapping into when we sleep. Either way, it’s fascinating. Thanks for sharing this..