What if the answers you’ve been seeking have been with you all along—hidden in the margins of your own subconscious?
Earthling is a true story—one person’s unexpected journey through meditation, automatic writing, and hypnosis. What begins as private journaling soon dissolves into something stranger: voices rising from the page, lifetimes remembered, and encounters with guides who speak of a world on the verge of transformation.
Through raw transcripts and reflections, Earthling touches something beyond the ordinary. Ancient temples emerge in visions, shadowed past lives echo with warnings, and a chorus of voices insists that Earth is preparing for a shift—a choice between collapse and renewal.
Part memoir, part metaphysical field report, this book is for anyone who has ever asked: Why am I here? What is my purpose? What’s coming next?
Earthling doesn’t claim to have answers. Instead, it offers a rare glimpse of what it feels like to be pulled between worlds—caught in the tension of being human and yet sensing something more.
I have to say that this book found me randomly one afternoon when doomscrolling on Instagram. I got to read an ARC and devoured it in less than 24 hours. I wasn’t sure what to expect when I downloaded it. It started off like a journal, and then a bit like a novel. And although the story seems to dance all over, so is life when exploring the metaphysical. As someone who also does “not feel at home among the rest of the world”, this was a fascinating read and a glimpse into an incredible exploration of the higher self. I have long felt separate and out of place, with memories that cannot quite be explained. It is good to know we are not alone. I am very interested in the path forward and the plan for this world described in the book, despite all of the suffering and devastation and ugliness we are experiencing right now.
I give this a 4/5 star rating, only because I really wanted a bit more explanation and detail. A bit more of the HOW, because anyone versed in the study of the metaphysical knows these types of experiences are not so easy to achieve. We get glimpses of the author’s family - which is arguably THE most important part of his life, and is slammed home to him by his guides. I feel our author lost sight of that in his explorations of his higher self and past lives, no matter how many times he was reminded of that. A good take home lesson to the reader.