Angie's Diary | Online Stories & Articles

Angie's Diary | Online Stories & Articles

Regarding The Bermuda Triangle

Posted by on Mar 14th, 2013 and filed under Articles, Lifestyle, Science, Spirituality, Storytelling, Travel. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

 

Things to question or talk about - Regarding the Bermuda Triangle

If you are interested in the unknown, I would appreciate your thoughts regarding the statements below, and others you may know about.

In 1945 five bombers left Fort Lauderdale, flying over the Bermuda Triangle, all five planes disappeared.  A rescue plane supplied by the navy, disappeared.  Some say they were snapped out of reality, but to where?

Bermuda Triangle 300x169 Regarding The Bermuda TriangleThere is more to Christopher Columbus concerning his trip across the Atlantic.  The log revealed while traveling to find a New World, the compos malfunctioned, at the same time a fireball hits the ocean.

In 1970, a man named Gurien, spotted a strange cloud above the Atlantic.  He said, “It was donut shaped, and a hole in the center containing dark swirling lines.  At the same time the air patrol lost his plane on the screen, he explained the electronics malfunctioned.  They found him three minutes later.

The exact spot is what some people call “The Zone of Silence.”  A zone filled with powerful energy.  Perhaps this is the gateway told by Albert Einstein, “A burst of energy to get where you want to go?”

Highly magnetic dark holes, as told by those who have seen the opening in the sky.

Ships return to shore, completely empty of a once, existing crew.

Unexplained, why equipment stops working.

Nothing works around this area, including cell phones, radios, etc.

Could this be a larger rotation, a pinhole we read about throughout the universe?

All comments are welcome.


 


Angie Recommends:
Lady-Justice-and-the-Cruise-Ship-Murders-by-Robert-ThornhillBecoming: The Life & Musings Of A Girl PoetThe Deliverer



Sitemap

4 Responses for “Regarding The Bermuda Triangle”

  1. RMitchell says:

    Nancy,
    I'm a pretty qualified person to comment on the Triangle. From around 1995 til 2001 I was a commercial pilot who flew at least 12-24 flights from Miami to Puerto Rico a month, sometimes making stops in the Turkish Islands along the way. Looking on the map, I was right inside the area of discussion.

    Truthfully, I never saw or experienced anything unusual, day or night, except for the occasional meteor or shooting star which is completely normal. I even made a flight on New Years Eve 2000 while other flights sat idle due to lack of ticket sales and concern over possible technical glitches.

    So much has been said about this region. I'm one who believes that anything's possible, but having logged thousands of hours in the sky, I've yet to see anything noteworthy. Those planes which were lost or had unusual events happen to them, I have no answers, other than some mysteries will never be solved.

    Enjoyed the article,
    Randy Mitchell

  2. Oh Randy, let me say I am thankful that you never did see anything strange in the area where so much has been claimed by experts, even pilots, and oithers, to have occured. I would never want to be in their shoes.

    Have you ever wondered about those who believe in the dark hole, when you pass and go to the other side, where people are waiting, again - a dark hole. And I have some pretty reliable sources that this does occur, for reasons we will know one day, but this gives me hope - while the fear of being zapped away, relates to fear.

    I thank you for your time, words, experience, and knowledge. Always, Nancy

  3. RHPolitz says:

    Given the fact that the area is subject to violent atmospheric storms and that the P.R. Trench is over 30,000 feet deep, and that the number of lost ships and aircraft for that area is no greater than any of the other well traveled sections of our seas, one can make the argument that fantasy is always more interesting (and sells more newspapers and books) than fact.

    Having said that, however, I do find the stories interesting. All "facts", things that we accept as real and true, are based on assumptions. What if those assumptions are wrong?

  4. "And yet there are events that seem to say that our rules, out beliefs, even our common sense," Now doesn't that answer your questions? Always, Nancy

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

VIP Author Info

Nancy Duci Denofio

Author – Ghost Writer – Editor – Advocate – Public Speaker – Seminars on Writing – invited guest reader and Radio Host on Page Turners. She is also a Series Editor of "Poetry is Life".

She won "Woman Writer of the Year" at Notre Dame College in 1994. Nancy writes in several genres – her love is memoir, and non-fiction. Her writing of memoir has given a new way of telling your life story with “Poetic Memoir.”

Her long time project, a book spanning four generations, based on a true story from 1897 to the present day, from the mountains of Sicily, to America. This summer two books will be released “Yesterday’s Child” and, “Did You Ever Want to Fly?” Her first in Poetic Memoir "What Brought You Here?" was published by Dystenium LLC in 2010.

Nancy wrote and spoke on health care from Boston to the White House. Her goal, to interview all Presidential Candidates one on one, which she did, some as long as two hours. She was Honored by President William Jefferson Clinton, for her work on “American’s for Disability Act.”

She spoke side by side with the late, Senator Edward Kennedy for “Save Our Security,” at
Faneuil Hall in Boston.

When Nancy returned to N.Y. she began working on the first Senate Campaign, for Hillary Rodham Clinton, in her district.

A fighter for Health Care for All, brought a recent opportunity, she was asked to serve on the advisory board for the “Broderick Brain Foundation.”

Born in Schenectady, NY, she now resides with her husband in Saratoga Springs, NY.

My Earned Florins & Rank

  • You need to be logged in to view your earned Florins

Top 10 Contributors