
Is Our Time of Death Predetermined? ...Or Can We Live Longer?
© Copyright 2003 by Dr. Johan Boswinkel, Managing Director, Health Angel GmbH, Switzerland; Technical Director, International Institute for Bio-energetic Medicine, UK
(Explore Issue: Volume 12, Number 4)
Could there be a “time of death” gene? A gene that regulates the number of days or seconds that one will live?
Recently I treated a 66-year-old patient who was worried he might die when he was 67. When I inquired, he told me that his father and both his brothers had died at age 67. All had lived the exact same number of days. Under the circumstances, I would be worried too.
It reminded me of a couple of AIDS patients that I had treated several years ago. Both patients were terminally ill, expected to live only a couple of months. Through my therapeutic efforts, within 6 weeks they were restored to complete health. Their specialist for infectious diseases at the University Hospital confirmed this.
Later, reports reached me that they had died: One in a car accident; the other had fallen from a roof. The time of their death was about the same as if they had died from AIDS.
This made me wonder: Did I just make the quality of their lives at the end that much better by removing the symptoms? Was their time up? Is there any way to change the time of death?
In this world there are people who live incredibly long, children that die, and there are many people who drink, smoke and still live to a very old age. There are also people that die early, in spite of a healthy lifestyle.
There are old sayings such as, “His time had come.” It would seem that many things, including the time of death, are predetermined.
Especially in times like these, with the possibility of terrorist attacks and wars looming around every corner, there must be a sincere worry about whether, in fact, your ‘time has come.’
If the time of your time death is predetermined, then you have nothing to worry about. At a fixed time you will die, one way or another. The only question is: ‘What determines this?’