Would You Want to Know in Advance, the Day You Will Die?
The AI Death Clock, Foresight, and the Ultimate Strategy Game for Life
There it was.
23 years. 132 days. 11 hours. 35 minutes. 44 seconds.
An AI-powered death clock had just given me my expiration date—June 25, 2048.
Morbid? Maybe.
Pointless? Not at all.
I’ve spent decades working across industries that deal with mortality—aged care, cemeteries, crematoria, even prison chaplaincy. Death, or more accurately, our relationship with it, has always fascinated me.
Because here’s the truth: Western society fears death. We avoid talking about it. We pretend it’s not coming.
But in other cultures, death isn’t the grim reaper in the shadows. It’s an accepted reality, woven into life, not hidden away.
And that brings me back to this AI death clock. Not as a predictor of fate, but as something far more useful—a mirror reflecting how we live.
What is the AI Death Clock?
The AI Death Clock is an app that estimates how much time you have left to live based on your current habits, health, and lifestyle choices. It asks a series of questions about factors like:
Age, gender, weight, and height
Smoking, alcohol consumption, and diet
Stress levels and social connections
Exercise habits and sleep quality
Using AI and statistical modelling, it provides an estimated expiry date, breaking it down into years, days, hours, and even seconds.
The goal?
Not to predict your death with certainty, but to make you pause and think about how you’re living now.
The First Time I Saw Someone “Die” Without Dying
Back in my voluntary prison chaplaincy days, I met a lot of dead men (and women) walking—not in the literal sense, but in their minds.
Every single new prisoner I met, no matter their background, had the same core crisis: “My life is over.”
Nothing to live for.
No future worth planning.
No reason to care.
That mindset? It’s dangerous.
Because someone with no future focus, no desire, no purpose will shrivel up—mentally, physically, emotionally. Some gave up entirely.
The only way forward? A reset.
Mourning what was lost.
Accepting what is.
Rebuilding hope.
Those who found a new reason to live, who set different goals, who shifted their timeline and mindset—they survived. They did their time well.
And this applies everywhere.
The AI Death Clock isn’t about death. It’s about resetting life.
Would You Want to Know?
I asked James, my co-host on Hong Kong Radio 3, if he’d check his AI death date.
His answer? “I don’t know if I want to look.”
Fair.
It’s an uncomfortable thought. It forces you to face the ticking clock, and for many, that’s unsettling.
But here’s the thing—this app doesn’t predict your death.
It forces you to think about how you’re living.
And that’s where it gets interesting.
Time in a Different Currency
When I saw my “death date,” it didn’t feel real.
Years are abstract.
Then I saw the real breakdown:
279 full moons left
1,196 weekends left
That hit differently.
Time suddenly wasn’t infinite.
Time had a shape. A number. A weight.
How many of those weekends would I waste? How many full moons would I ignore? How many would be truly lived?
This is the ultimate foresight exercise. A strategy game not for business—but for your life.
The Foresight That Matters
I’ve advised companies, leaders, industries on foresight and future strategy for decades.
Predicting the future isn’t the goal—preparing for it is.
This applies to businesses.
It applies to individuals.
So if an AI death clock forces you to consider what really matters, then maybe—just maybe—it’s doing something valuable.
Because what’s the point of living longer if you’re not living better?
How to Decide What Matters (For You & Your Business)
If this app—or this article—has made you pause for a second, good.
Now let’s turn that into something practical.
Ask yourself (or your business) these questions:
- If I had only 1,000 days left, what would I change?
- If I could add 5 more years to my life, how would I use them?
- What am I putting off that actually matters?
- Am I spending my weekends meaningfully—or just passing time?
- Am I leading my business/life toward something truly valuable?
Because whether it’s AI, market shifts, tech advancements, or personal mortality, the same foresight rules apply:
Don’t just wait. Prepare.
Don’t just exist. Plan.
Don’t just survive. Live.
Your expiry date is out of your hands. How you spend the time left isn’t.
Final Thought: What Would You Do?
Would you check your AI Death Clock? Why or why not?
Drop your thoughts in the LinkedIn comments—let’s start a conversation.
And if you want to explore foresight strategy for your life, business, or industry, let’s talk.
I work with leaders, teams, and organisations to map what’s next—and more importantly, what matters.
Keynotes | Strategy Workshops | Future Mapping | Advisory
Let’s make the time we have count.
Listen now to the full segment on Hong Kong Radio 3 (12 minutes)
About Morris Misel
Morris Misel is a business futurist, keynote speaker, and strategy advisor who for 30+ years has advised 1,000s of clients, across 160 industries and presented over 2,700 keynotes and workshops globally.
Heard by millions each year onstage and in media, he helps leaders discover, navigate and profit from new, different, and future possibilities.
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