Posted on 12/29/2005 10:35:01 PM PST by paulat
Thanks for the pics. I was wondering how bad it looked.
I will never forget that. I'm going to get flamed for this, but here goes. My daughter, born in 1991, drew pictures of this (when she was 4) even though it happened before she was born. Her pictures were of rainbows with "angels hands" reaching down "to the people who flew out of the plane, to catch them".
Since the aircraft did initially pressurize the hole could not have been there to begin with. There must have been a dent or much smaller hole which the pressurization system could keep up with, and passing 26K the weakened section popped.
Has your daughter ever done anything similar to this since?
Uh... that piece of equipment, whatever it was... hit that plane pretty hard. That right-hand side piece is bent inward quite a ways, and it wouldn't have been by the blowout. This wasn't just a "crease" in the skin like the guy said.
ping - follow up from a few days ago
...But I suppose it might have been bent inward by air rushing by in flight.
But I still wonder if this was really just a "crease". Not buying it.
You gotta remember, though, that the plane was flying at altitude as it ripped open.
Back on the ground...the pics could have been affected by something as simple as breezes...we've had 40 MPH+ at times here in the Puget Sound area in the past couple of days.
If you take a pic with winds blowing...it could very well push those "flaps" inward.
ping
No, that stopped around age 5 or so as far as the drawings. She used to talk to me about seeing angels until age 7 or 8 (and asking when she would meet God, kind of scary, but I never let it show), but a lot of that stopped as she got older. She is now a teenager - consumed with all that goes along with being one.
My youngest however, did a watercolor drawing this fall that I kept. Another angel with feathered wings and all. :)
Yes... that could be.
Quite a hole, at any rate.
I saw a hole just like that once where I used to work. Dude driving a forklift was watching a girl who had sat down on a million bucks in the gene pool walk down a hall and ran one of the forks through the base of a steel I-beam roof support.
He also wore out the side of his head on the steering wheel, warped the fork carriage and got a good talking to by his supervisor (also female).
Of course, at the time I was the maintenance supervisor at the time, and all the crap rolled downhill to me and the HR manager.
ping!
I believe you. My son, when he first learned to talk and for about three years thereafter (gradually declining) would often speak as if he had actually been in heaven.
At that time, we didn't attend church (unchurched for 40 years), and we're not superstitious--we're Protestant, and find Catholics to be wholly superstitious. (No flames, please, we all know it's the truth.) ;) Point is...where was he gettin' it all from?
It was as if he had a slowly dying memory of a better place even before he entered the world.
Now...I ain't sayin' nothin', 'cept he wasn't getting it from anyone we know. We asked him in surreptitious parent/child fashion many times, and we flat-out asked our relatives. No one fessed up.
I would be interested in hearing if any other parents out there have had similar experiences with their children.
As for me, I dimly recall a certain "feeling" or "attitude" toward God when I was very young, around 4th grade or earlier. Memories of motherly love, Freud might say. But I feel it was something more.
Sauron
"we're Protestant, and find Catholics to be wholly superstitious. (No flames, please, we all know it's the truth.) ;)"
lmao! You should have said that on the "President of Bishops condemns SouthPark" thread last night.......
It was flying fast and furious about religion and Catholic especially.
I like FR!
bonk
ping
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