In the literal sense of the word, some force spoke to me, which simply switched off Big Alexander, inhabited him, and spoke to me in that way. And it was some kind of dark force. I had never felt anything like this from anyone before, including Big Alexander. But here, this dark force spoke to me in such a way that it felt like no one was happy about my presence, like everything was already calculated in advance — who would replace whom, who would be in power, and no one wanted to give up that power. It was like they were all upset about me showing up, wondering where I came from, and everyone was outraged. So, the tone was as if Big Alexander was being used as some kind of microphone, and through him, someone else, maybe those old ones who rule everything, were speaking to me. It felt like someone from them was speaking through him, trying to figure out where I came from and why I suddenly thought I was the main one. And they understood that I knew all the secrets. It was as if they had forgotten those secrets, but now I was revealing them all, and they were like, “Who do you think you are, and what will you become?” I said, “I am the main God.” And they responded, “Are you out of your mind?” It was in that format, like, “We’ll crush you to dust.” And I said, “Try.” That’s the serious dialogue I had in early November 2023.
Question: In the book, you wrote that after reading all the volumes, a person may experience certain changes and an upgrade in their consciousness or soul, and that a kind of mutation may occur in the body — for example, their perception of the world, sounds, light, and so on may change, and they might start eating less. And you said that all of this is normal, that it’s part of a transformation of the entire DNA. The question is: can DNA really change from reading a book? Is that something that can be physically tested and proven?
Let’s put it this way — you’re not speaking to the author of the book right now, but to the protagonist of the book. And the protagonist, as you understand, lives in a mythological sci-fi setting, always sharing everything that seems or appears to him, everything that happens to him — but never once has any of it been scientifically confirmed or even possible to confirm. So yes, purely theoretically, you could imagine that you’re reading a book and it somehow affects you, and afterward you begin to perceive sound and light differently, and everything