Angela’s all around us-

Story by: Judy Webster Powers- The Silver Hands

Summary: A woman when she was young wanted to help needy people by becoming a nurse.

Getting a married and having children stopped that. When the children were full grown she returned to school to become a nurse. She was had reservations about doing that, until one day going to school, driving down a icy mountain road , she lost control of car.

A pair of silver hands gripper her steering wheel and averted a death plunge. The disappeared and regained safe control of the car.

She knew it was an angel that saved and decided she become a nurse. She ended up helping the needy when she became a nurse practitioner.

Angels all around us

Story : Never Alone by Shelly Beach

Man next door “babysits” a young girl. He does work in a closet with a light, hooked with a wire around his neck. Hooked up to an electrical outlet.

He gets electricity enter his body from. The girl hears a thud and finds the man on the floor.

A voice tells her not to touch the Cord around the man’s neck but to pull it out of outlet.

The man recovers from electrical encounter and continues to finish the work he started.

New weekly addition to this blog; stories of heavenly visits by the editors of Guidepost.

First story: The Mysterious Distinguished Visitor by Annalee Davis.

Summary: a man enters a church service in Michigan during the winter. He sits in front pew and stands at end of service. He turns to

Congregation and claims that their church extension will be built; they didn’t have the funding to build it.

He walks out of the church, people follow him but he is not outside and there are no foot prints or tire tracks in the snow.

The extension gets built

So you need a grandpa

I am a grandpa who has been there!

Here are my credentials:

-Food preparation : trice to the ER for the suturing of various fingers caused by use of knives to cut food and opening a package with a pair of scissors which was the most memorable because I ended with a great prime doctor.

-Cutting balsa wood: After cutting a finger, in a sensitive area, using and x-acto knife the finger was wrapped in a Telfa pad and then tapped to an adjacent finger to prevent it from moving, hence quicker healing.

-Drinking fluids: Using a Wide mouth mug; actually two of them and dropping them causing the scattering of porcelain pieces all over the floor. This forced grandpa to buy a 20 ounce sip thermos eventually used to guarantee that at least 64 ounces of water was consumed every day; for medical reasons I might add!

-Assist in making quilts: after a number of pin pricks and minor cuts grandpa learned that hydrogen peroxide dissolves blood on fabric.

Alert: If you are clumsy you may be pleasantly rewarded in unexpected ways.