Filled Under: eternity
Regain Youth and Become Deathless by Simply Understanding Death
Can You Regain Youth and Become Deathless by Simply Understanding Death?
Is possible to regain youth?
My death experience was about seven years ago now. The information overload I received has taken all that time since to sift through bit by bit. Honestly, even when I’m a couple of hundred years old, I may not have fully grasped all the implications. Most recently, I’ve been working at understanding the closing scene in my 8-minute eternity in the afterlife.
Many people who have death experiences say they were given the option of whether to return to life or not. I was not given that choice. Had I been asked, I think I would have stayed dead. I was sent back with several missions that I still haven’t finished and I was given an extremely odd life option instead. ‘Would I return to death when my tasks were completed or would I prefer returning to youth?’ I didn’t answer—I didn’t even have time to think about it. Suddenly I was alive again.
Can I regain youth and become deathless?
Can I regain youth and become deathless? Can you become young again and live eternally? I think so. In fact, I know so because the afterlife is a place of complete honesty and I wouldn’t have been offered the chance to regain youth if it was impossible. Maybe you suppose that someday when you are dead and gone that science will find a way to reverse the aging process to enable people to regain youth, but given my knowledge of how absolutely truthful eternity is, I think the way to defeat aging and death is here now—or it could be. But I don’t see the regaining youth answer coming from science. The key to beating death is in understanding death itself.
According to the Hebrew Bible, Methuselah lived to the ripe old age of 969 years. Even though Christians usually tout the full Bible as completely accurate, I actually don’t know any Christians who honestly believe that number regarding Methuselah is factual. I’ve heard it suggested that maybe a different calendar in use back then might have accounted for an age discrepancy. What? Were they calling a month a year? I don’t think so. I believe that Methuselah DID live to over nine hundred and the reason he was short-lived at only 969, was that he didn’t know enough about death to turn back the clock on his age and regain youth. Methuselah only understood death well enough to postpone his passing for an extra nine centuries.
What did Methuselah know that you don’t? I’ll give you a hint. What does a faith-healer know about curing disease that a doctor doesn’t?
To regain youth will take more than faith healing
Actually, even if you think you know how a faith-healer heals, that’s not the whole story on regaining youth. Telling you how you can return to youth will take me a few more articles and I’m currently working on some technology to assist—but that’s not ready to go yet. I’ll leave you with the same question I was asked in eternity. I don’t expect an answer from you yet: I just want you to think about it.
Would you regain youth and be deathless?
If you could return to youth and live eternally, would you regain youth? Would you give up the gift of death to live on youthfully in life?
Echoes in Eternity
Echoes in Eternity
I hear your echoes in eternity! I quite enjoyed the year 2000 movie Gladiator but I especially savored one line. “What we do in life, echoes in eternity.” This line was spoken to soldiers who were expected to sacrifice their lives for a dubious cause.
Which Echoes in Eternity are Yours?
This echoes in eternity idea is extraordinarily true. Our actions in life do echo through to eternity and the ramifications of our actions flow back into life from eternity as well. What effects are your current actions having on both your life projections and your afterlife expectations? IE. What echoes in eternity will you hear echoed back from eternity? As the year 2012 approaches, are you sacrificing your future bliss for some transitory and hollow gain?
Maximus the General in Gladiator says to his troops: “What we do in life, echoes in eternity”. But he doesn’t add that what we think in life also resounds in the afterlife. Our actions often run contrary to our thoughts and our words are not echoes of what we thought we said. I’ll offer another quote from the same gladiator movie. “Sometimes I do what I want to do. The rest of the time, I do what I have to.”
Harness the Power of Your Mind
Echoing Effect of Echoes in Eternity
Similar to the way sound echoes become confused when bouncing off canyon walls, the echoes in eternity of our thoughts and actions are muddled by the thoughts of others who are thinking about those actions. Are the messages you want sent to eternity being received clearly? The sure way of sending strong echoes in eternity, is to minimize the collateral interference. I’ll give you an example. You wish to sacrifice something for charity, so you give money to a cause – usually the charity that has spent the most on advertizing. That seems fine on the surface but your echoes in eternity are then affected by what the charitable group actually does with your donation.
“What we do in life echoes in eternity”
Get better echoes in eternity with better actions in life.



