DWQA QuestionsCategory: MetaphysicsA viewer asks: “When the perpetrators go back in time in order to redo a period of time, does the aging of our bodies revert back to the state it was in at that previous time, or do our bodies continue aging through that process, thus aging twice as much?” What can Creator tell us?
Nicola Staff asked 7 hours ago
Going back in time means literally turning back the clock, so it is a transition in time and space back to a point in the past where life would resume. In effect, nothing is lost because then what has been taken away remains as a canceled future extension, not yet lived, because it has been obviated through the time travel preventing its occurrence. So, in effect, no consequences through increased aging of the physical body will have any bearing—that is effectively undone by going back in time.