 Living
Life to the Fullest
Story: Miracles
A Message from the Birdies
of Love
(© Lloyd Glenn)
This is a true story that occurred in
1994.
Throughout our lives we are blessed with
spiritual experiences, some of which are very sacred and confidential, and others,
although sacred, are meant to be shared. Last summer my family had a spiritual
experience that had a lasting and profound impact on us, one we feel must be shared.
It's a message of love. It's a message of regaining perspective, and restoring
proper balance and renewing priorities. In humility, I pray that I might, in
relating this story, give you a gift my little son, Brian, gave our family one summer day
last year.
On July 22nd I was in route to
Washington DC for a business trip. It was all so very ordinary, until we landed in Denver
for a plane change. As I collected my belongings from the overhead bin, an
announcement was made for Mr. Lloyd Glenn to see the United Customer Service
Representative immediately. I thought nothing of it until I reached the door to
leave the plane and I heard a gentleman asking every male if they were Mr. Glenn. At
this point I knew something was wrong and my heart sank. When I got off the plane a
solemn-faced young man came toward me and said, "Mr. Glenn there is an emergency at
your home. I do not know what the emergency is, or who is involved, but I will take
you to the phone so you can call the hospital. My heart was now pounding, but
the will to be calm took over. Woodenly, I followed this stranger to the distant telephone
where I called the number he gave me for the Mission Hospital.
My call was put through to the trauma
center where I learned that my three-year-old son had been trapped underneath the
automatic garage door for several minutes, and that when my wife had found him he was
dead. CPR had been performed by a neighbor, who is a doctor, and the paramedics had
continued the treatment as Brian was transported to the hospital. By the time of my
call, Brian was revived and they believed he would live, but they did not know how much
damage had been done to his brain, nor to his heart. They explained that the door
had completely closed on his little sternum right over his heart. He had been severely
crushed.
After speaking with the medical staff,
my wife sounded worried but not hysterical, and I took comfort in her calmness. The
return flight seemed to last forever, but finally I arrived at the hospital six hours
after the garage door had come down. When I walked into the intensive care unit,
nothing could have prepared me to see my little son laying so still on a great big bed
with tubes and monitors everywhere.
He was on a respirator. I glanced
at my wife who stood and tried to give me a reassuring smile. It all seemed like a
terrible dream. I was filled in with the details and given a guarded prognosis.
Brian was going to live, and the preliminary tests indicated that his heart was
ok-two miracles, in and of themselves. But only time would tell if his brain received any
damage.
Throughout the seemingly endless hours,
my wife was calm. She felt that Brian would eventually be all right. I hung on to
her words and faith like a lifeline. All that night and the next day Brian remained
unconscious. It seemed like forever since I had left for my business trip the day before.
Finally, at two o'clock that afternoon,
our son regained consciousness and sat up uttering the most beautiful words I have ever
heard spoken. He said, "Daddy hold me," and he reached for me with his
little arms. By the next day he was pronounced as having no neurological or physical
deficits, and the story of his miraculous survival spread throughout the hospital. You
cannot imagine our gratitude and joy. As we took Brian home we felt a unique
reverence for the life and love of our Heavenly Father that comes to those who brush death
so closely.
In the days that followed there was a
special spirit about our home. Our two older children were much closer to their little
brother. My wife and I were much closer to each other, and all of us were very close
as a whole family. Life took on a less stressful pace. Perspective seemed to
be more focused, and balance much easier to gain and maintain. We felt deeply blessed. Our
gratitude was truly profound.
Almost a month later to the day of the
accident, Brian awoke from his afternoon nap and said, "Sit down mommy. I have
something to tell you." At this time in his life, Brian usually spoke in small
phrases, so to say a large sentence surprised my wife. She sat down with him on his
bed and he began his sacred and remarkable story.
"Do you remember when I got stuck
under the garage door? Well it was so heavy and it hurt really bad. I called
to you, but you couldn't hear me. I started to cry, but then it hurt too bad.
And then the birdies came.
"The birdies?" my wife asked
puzzled.
"Yes," he replied. The
birdies made a whooshing sound and flew into the garage. They took care of me."
"They did?"
"Yes, he said."
"One of the birdies came and got you. She came to tell you I got stuck under
the door."
A sweet reverent feeling filled the
room. The spirit was so strong and yet lighter than air. My wife realized that a
three year-old had no concept of death and spirits, so he was referring to the beings who
came to him from beyond as "birdies" because they were up in the air like birds
that fly. "What did the birdies look like?" she asked.
Brian answered, "They were so
beautiful. They were dressed in white, all white. Some of them had green and white.
But some of them had on just white."
"Did they say anything?"
"Yes," he answered. They
told me the baby would be alright."
"The baby?" my wife asked
confused.
And Brian answered, "The baby
laying on the garage floor." He went on, "You came out and opened the
garage door and ran to the baby. You told the baby to stay and not leave."
My wife nearly collapsed upon hearing
this, for she had indeed gone and knelt beside Brian's body and seeing his crushed chest
and unrecognizable features, knowing he was already dead, she looked up around her and
whispered, "Don't leave us Brian, please stay if you can. As she listened to
Brian telling her the words she had spoken, she realized that the spirit had left his body
and was looking down from above on this little lifeless form. "Then what
happened?" she asked.
"We went on a trip," he said,
"far, far away." He grew agitated trying to say the things he didn't seem to
have the words for. My wife tried to calm and comfort him, and let him know it would
be okay. He struggled with wanting to tell something that obviously was very important to
him, but finding the words was difficult. "We flew so fast up in the air. They're so
pretty Mommy, he added, and there is lots and lots of birdies.
My wife was stunned. Into her mind
the sweet comforting spirit enveloped her more soundly, but with an urgency she had never
before known. Brian went on to tell her that the birdies had told him that he
had to come back and tell everyone about them. He said they brought him back to the
house and that a big fire truck and an ambulance were there. A man was bringing the baby
out on a white bed and he tried to tell the man the baby would be okay, but the man
couldn't hear him. He said the birdies told him he had to go with the ambulance, but
they would be near him. He said they were so pretty and so peaceful, and he didn't
want to come back. And then the bright light came. He said that the light was
so bright and so warm, and he loved the bright light so much. Someone was in the bright
light and put their arms around him and told him, "I love you but you have to go
back. You have to play baseball, and tell everyone about the birdies." Then the
person in the bright light kissed him and waved bye-bye. Then whoosh, the big sound
came and they went into the clouds.
The story went on for an hour. He
taught us that "birdies" were always with us, but we don't see them because we
look with our eyes and we don't hear them because we listen with our ears. But they
are always there, you can only see them in here (he put his hand over his heart).
They whisper the things to help us to do what is right because they love us
so much.
Brian continued, stating, "I have a
plan, Mommy. You have a plan. Daddy has a plan. Everyone has a plan. We must
all live our plan and keep our promises. The birdies help us to do that cause they
love us so much."
In the weeks that followed, he often
came to us and told all, or part of it again and again. Always the story remained the
same. The details were never changed or out of order. A few times he added
further bits of information and clarified the message he had already delivered. It
never ceased to amaze us how he could tell such detail and speak beyond his ability when
he spoke of his "birdies." Everywhere he went, he told strangers about the
"birdies". Surprisingly, no one ever looked at him strangely when he did
this. Rather, they always get a softened look on their face and smiled.
Needless to say, we have not been the
same ever since that day, and I pray we never will be. |