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Whatever happened to those bigger-than-life sensations? As adults, going to McDonald's or body surfing in the ocean no longer seemed bigger than life. Did bigger-than-life sensations happen only as children? And was that why most people longed for their childhoods?
Until now, under the old code, those bigger-than-life sensations happened only as a child, and they came from early-on new experiences of life. But my Third Vision showed me that under the new code in the next millennium those bigger-than-life sensations also happened as an ordinary adult, and they came from building new experiences -- building life. I saw ordinary people living bigger than life in the exciting Neotech Era. They were rich, successful, and building upon life itself through achieving dreams that they never even contemplated in the 20th century (the Fourth Ultimate Gift).
For example, back to my Vision, the young boys were now full grown and, with their Dad, they often still jogged together. Now as creative dream builders, exciting thoughts still filled their minds and flowed from their tongues on their runs: The new product worked on for two years was now ready for test marketing. The data pointed to a whole new marketing approach in Brazil. The new TV ad looked good; now came the airing. The Slavic translation was completed and ready for marketing. A breakthrough was unfolding in the domestic direct-mail brochure. The full-page newspaper ad would run in next Tuesday's national paper. Another book was near completion for publishing. The half-hour television show was in editing. The goal of retail locations had come to life with the opening of the first location. The seminars in Australia showed promise. Product line was expanding monthly. Wow, everything here was bigger than life. A lifetime in this fairy tale!
In the next millennium, adults enjoyed bigger-than-life sensations every day, just like children. Life was sensational. Emotional and financial stagnation disappeared and eventually left our memories.
The fourth and final new frontier of happiness in tomorrow's Neotech Era also reached back into childhood to the carefree happiness that got lost in adulthood. Consider that life was bigger than life for the father and his sons. But in this 20th-century society, under the old code, they could never have the same carefree sensation they did as children. You see, a sadness grew in them -- the tragedy of moving toward "the end".
When the grandsons were children, Grandma and Grandpa were as young as Dad was now. Dad was over sixty now. When everything was bigger than life as children, everything was also carefree. Grandma and Grandpa were still young and Dad was in his prime. Everything was wide open and life had so many adventures for the grandsons. No one really knew about or talked about death. Death was so far in the future that, as children, the grandsons never even thought once about it. They were just happy and carefree. As they grew older, however, old-age and death closed in on their family.
Grandpa was gone now. The father and his sons were too busy with their worldwide business to go back to see Grandma. The aunts, uncles, and cousins were spread across the country and busy with their lives. Grandma sat alone, every day, trapped in the silence of no one there: nothing and no one but the memories. She went to bed at 7:00 pm every evening, for just getting ready for bed gave her something to do.
One of the cousins or uncles visited Grandma every once in a while. When they did, her life lit up. Those short-lived happy visits also brought a sad nostalgia into the beach house as they brought back memories of the way things used to be, before the tragedy of life -- death -- closed in on Grandma and took her husband and friends.
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