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After 2001: Our Neotech World



That same closed nutshell of life applies to you. Take this moment to imagine yourself dying: Your vision is fading, going. You look at your wife, your children beside you; but they are fading like fog on a window separating you as darkness begins to envelop you. As they fade, you look as intensely as you can at their wonderful faces, for you know you will never see them again. You have closed your eyes to sleep many thousands of times before. But you know this time will be the last. You know this time, when you slip into darkness, you will never again be part of life. After thousands of times of seeing your spouse good night, this time will be the last time you will see her, ever. Your life is over. At that moment, you alone know perhaps for the first time that once life leaves you, every wonderful feeling of life is really over...forever.

In tomorrow's Neotech Era, our brief seven-and-a-half decades of life in all eternity was considered much too brief for the wealthy and happy ordinary person. The demand for living longer quickly grew. First, disease was eradicated to give us healthy life well into our hundreds. Then, major businesses, financial institutions, and free entrepreneurs recognized the growing demand for longer life. Money, minds, computers, and advanced technology, science, medicine all through entrepreneurial business came pouring together to meet the ultimate demand of slowing down the disease of aging.

With business and technology free to advance rapidly, and with intense happiness coming to all ordinary people, life extension became the sleeping-giant consumer product of all time. For suddenly, happy people's brief time in all eternity became unacceptable. Too brief. Within your lifetime, the new code and Neotech could double your journey through life...or more.

Irreplaceable Youth

Right about now, during the middle of my Third Vision, a story went through my mind's eye. I could see, hear, feel, even smell the surroundings as if I were there. Afterwards, whatever I did, I could never forget the value of life and love. Place yourself into this story that came to me at this moment during my Vision, and feel the value of life and love:

A young man and woman in their 20s jumped onto a rock in a quiet cove. They faced each other. The only sound was the gentle noise of the water cradling the rock. The tall pine trees filled the mountain air with sweet aroma. The autumn evening was crisp; the sun was setting over the lake. The young man knew the moment was right. He reached out and touched her hair then placed his hands on her shoulders. He looked into her eyes and asked her to marry him. She looked deep into his eyes as she said yes. Suddenly her eyes filled with tears as she tilted her head slightly and began to cry and laugh. His eyes filled with tears as they hugged and kissed. "Look at that!", she said as she pointed to a majestic orange and pink sunset glowing over the lake.

They stepped from the rock back to the land. They were overflowing with happy energy. They sat on the ground for a moment as he showed her the ring and put it on her finger. She held her hand toward the sky and admired the ring sparkling in the sunset. He stood up then picked her up, lifted her off the ground and turned in circles. As he turned her around, he saw the pink sky over the lake, then the white full moon between the tall pine trees. The young couple's whole life was before them. Their future together and a lifetime of excitement and happiness was ahead. They had nothing to worry about and everything to look forward to. Everything -- their careers, their marriage, their children -- everything was before them. They were happy and carefree. They celebrated until darkness fell over the lake.

The couple took an exciting path through life: They enjoyed five of God's Six Ultimate Gifts to man. They loved their work, sharing their goals, and they loved each other. Their happiness grew. Their love for each other deepened. But as their happiness grew and their love deepened, life passed by in a flash. They felt the unjust irony -- life for the happy person bringing exciting values to mankind passed quickly. Yet, for the stagnated person, time was a burden. Time passed slowly. For the happy couple, time was a precious gift. Fifty years passed quickly.



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