Angels and the Paranormal



           
Angels kept me WARM



  
Woman in subzero temps 'saved by angels'
   Credits heavenly help for weeklong, miraculous
   survival in wilderness

   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   Posted: November 24, 2003
   1:00 a.m. Eastern

   © 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

   How did Mischelle Hileman survive a weeklong ordeal in the Oregon wilderness,
   stranded in subzero temperatures without a winter coat or matches to start a fire?

   She says two angels stayed with her each night, emanating warmth and light.

   Hileman, 40, found herself in the canyon near Wallowa, Oregon, following an elk hunting
   accident a year ago. She recently revisited the area, now on artificial legs. Her frostbitten
   legs were amputated below the knees.

   "I think we witnessed a true miracle," Wallowa County Sheriff Fred Steen told the
   Oregonian.

   Nighttime temperatures dropped to at least 4 below zero in Alder Creek Canyon where
   Hileman lay injured for more than a week.

   Hileman agrees her survival was miraculous. The former home health worker says that
   during her struggle to survive, two angels appeared and remained with her, radiating
   warmth and keeping her from dying of hypothermia.

   "The best way to describe it was two golden bright lights, just in the shape of two
   people," she told the  Oregonian. They appeared on the second night after she began to
   pray for help, they never spoke and disappeared at daylight, but they were with her every
   night until she was rescued, she said.

   Hileman's ordeal began on a sunny 55-degree Sunday morning on Oct. 27, 2002, when
   her father, Benny Hileman, 62, pulled his pickup off a logging road 12 miles northeast of
   Wallowa to let her out. It was elk season, and Mischelle planned to hunt on foot for 45
   minutes, then rendezvous with her father.

   But, instead, Mischelle followed three elk into Alder Creek Canyon, where she fell.
   Suffering from a deep puncture wound to her left leg, she was unable to make it out of
   the canyon.

   Within hours, a winter storm moved in.

   More than 100 volunteers, friends and family members turned out to search for her.
   Most quickly became convinced that Hileman, who suffers from diabetes and asthma, had
   little chance of survival. The search was scaled back Oct. 31, but many refused to quit,
   and 27 people turned out the next day, spreading across the forest on horses and ATVs.
   She was finally found Nov. 3.


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