Will Pearce’s journey proves that a diagnosis is not a conclusion.
The Will to Live system guides those with cancer, addiction, depression, or any other disability to transform each one into meaningless pieces of an eternal life.
Dr. Berger took a bold move and cut within 1 millimeter of Will’s spinal column, which did far more than weaken his seizures; it gave him his life back.
Belief is a transformative force which creates the internal strength to walk through the path of darkness into the light. When embraced, broken lives become healed; when ignored, life can rarely be cured.
Faith is the conviction of the soul with the eternal God that flows within each one of us and promises it will never, ever separate from our souls, and it is needed to heal.
Guided by faith, mortality becomes meaningless when death is accepted as a passage from one life into another.
Once death is accepted, broken lives can be rebuilt into cherished ones.
When death is accepted and life is rebuilt, the paths of forgiveness and repentance can be walked. Forgiveness releases internal pain caused by others; repentance releases internal anger lashed out by the patient upon others.
Based on the belief that a power beyond life can heal even the most damaged individuals, The Will to Live system includes programmatic steps that build on the former.
Calming the Mind & Body stabilizes daily life, which is necessary before a patient can begin the Transformation of Life path. After life is transformed, The Path of Redemption opens, which allows patients to replace internal pains with a connection to God and the soul.
Stabilizing a broken life begins with accepting disabilities and recognizing their impact. This step creates a foundation to rebuild a broken mind and body.
Establish a “Personal Army”: Family, friends, and others unite to manage a patient’s daily needs.
Heal the Mind: Develop and activate a strategy to overcome mental disabilities.
Rebuild the Body: Establish disciplined habits through diet and exercise.
With guidance from a psychologist, patients learn to accept the reality of a broken life—not with fear, but with clarity. This clarity sets a path to build a life worth living.
The Acceptance of Death: Death becomes the harmless passage from one life into another.
The Rebuilding of Life: When death is no longer feared, patients can begin to rebuild a broken life.
Forgiveness and repentance lead to redemption.
Patients are guided through a structured process to release the anger they carry towards God, others, and themselves.
Once this anger is released, they can recognize the eternal connection to God and the soul.