


THE JOURNEY
Dominium: Our Hidden Reality is a scientific, philosophical, and metaphysical exploration of some of humanity’s oldest and most unsettling questions: What is reality? What is consciousness? Where did we come from? Are we alone in the universe? And what if the story we have been taught about our origins, our existence, and our destiny is incomplete?
About the Book
The work emerges from the author’s profound unease in the face of the unknown. This is not only the unknown that manifests in the heavens, in ancient ruins, in accounts of contact, in spiritual phenomena, or in experiences considered paranormal, but also the unknown that dwells within human consciousness itself. In Dominium, the mystery is not only outside us. It is also within us, in the way we perceive, interpret, and participate in reality.
The book proposes that reality may be far broader than what we perceive through our physical senses. The visible, material, everyday world may be only one layer of a much more complex structure, composed of information, consciousness, memory, time, energy, hidden dimensions, and forms of intelligence that we do not yet fully understand.
From this perspective, Dominium crosses the boundaries between different fields of knowledge. Ufology, theoretical physics, metaphysics, spirituality, parapsychology, anthropology, mythology, ancient civilizations, anomalous phenomena, instrumental transcommunication, reincarnation, consciousness, and the study of time are treated not as isolated topics, but as pieces of the same puzzle.
The work questions the rigid separation between science, philosophy, and spirituality. It does not reject reason, but proposes an expansion of reason itself. The book invites the reader to consider that many phenomena ridiculed, ignored, or classified as impossible may not be mere illusions, but signs that our current model of reality is still limited.
In its pages, Dominium investigates the possibility that humanity is experiencing a kind of civilizational amnesia. This amnesia is not only connected to the forgetting of ancient cultures or vanished civilizations, but also to the loss of a deeper understanding of who we are, what consciousness truly is, and what the true role of human beings might be within the hidden architecture of the universe.
The book explores the idea that ancient traditions, mythologies, sacred symbols, accounts of gods, celestial beings, lost civilizations, and contact phenomena may preserve distorted memories of real events or interactions with non-human intelligences. These memories, preserved through myths, religions, symbols, and belief systems, may point to the existence of something deeper than mere collective imagination.
At the same time, Dominium analyzes the UFO/UAP phenomenon not merely as a technological or extraterrestrial issue, but as a phenomenon that may involve consciousness, perception, memory, time, and the very structure of our reality. The book suggests that certain encounters with the inexplicable seem to cross the boundary between the physical and the mental, between the objective and the subjective, between the material and the spiritual.
In this sense, the observer ceases to be merely someone who witnesses a phenomenon. The observer becomes part of the experience. Consciousness comes to occupy a central role in the investigation, not as a secondary detail, but as a possible key to understanding how these phenomena manifest, interact, and transform those who experience them.
Another fundamental axis of the work is the investigation of time. Dominium approaches time not merely as a chronological sequence of events, but as a more complex structure, possibly related to memory, consciousness, information, and the existence of parallel or multidimensional realities. The book questions whether past, present, and future are truly separate categories, or whether they are part of a deeper architecture in which consciousness plays an essential role.

The work also examines reincarnation from a speculative and critical perspective, not merely as a spiritual doctrine, but as a possible system of transition, memory, forgetting, and control of consciousness. In doing so, Dominium offers a bold interpretation of the cycles of existence, the limits of free will, the fragmentation of identity, and the possibility that human consciousness is part of a structure far vaster than that recognized by traditional religions or materialist science.
Throughout its journey, the book guides the reader through themes such as holographic realities, fractals of matter, information physics, sacred geometry, past civilizations, Mars, the Moon, the Anunnaki, time travelers, multiverse visitors, mental machines, interdimensional intelligences, instrumental transcommunication, spiritualism, abductions, anomalous memories, and hidden systems of control.
Yet despite the breadth of these themes, Dominium is not merely a book about external mysteries. It is, above all, a work about human consciousness in the face of the unknown. The central question is not only “what exists out there?” but also “what are we capable of perceiving, remembering, and understanding?”
The work invites the reader to cross a threshold: to leave, for a moment, the safety of ready-made explanations and enter a territory where science, philosophy, spirituality, and anomalous phenomena converge. It is not a matter of blindly accepting any hypothesis, but of investigating with intellectual courage what may have been dismissed too soon.
Dominium: Our Hidden Reality is, therefore, a journey through the visible and invisible layers of existence. It is a search for the origins of humanity, the nature of consciousness, and the forces that may lie behind the reality we believe we know.
Rather than offering definitive answers, the book raises new questions. And perhaps that is precisely where the true investigation into the nature of our reality, and of ourselves, begins.