The universe is far more mysterious than we thought. The author, who grew up on a diet of science fiction, UFOlogy, ghosts, and ghouls, now confesses that he has had close encounters with supernatural beings, mysterious dimensions, time travel, and God. He is also an atheist whose rejection of the divinity of God led him to speculate that the existence of God is best explained if we assume that he is a machine so advanced that he not only is intangible but inhabits a cosmological dimension that has yet to be discovered. D.E. Wexler tells his story in caveats both personal and scientific, but in the end seeks to explain some of what he has experienced through the lens of particle physics and cosmology, but without the math which he readily admits is incomprehensible to him. There is much he admits to leaving out, including reunions with dead relatives and what that means for the afterlife. He does allude to a universal soul, which he describes as a final resting place of sorts for departed souls, a collective mind which he insists is God himself. D.E. Wexler finds that when God speaks directly to him, the message can brief and straightforward, but sometimes ambiguous as if he requires one to contemplate deeply on the matter. Finally, the author must confront predictions of his own catastrophic death, and decide if he should exercise the option he thinks he has been given through free will to take the steps required to avoid his fate and embrace an alternate future that is completely uncharted.
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