Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Mind Beyond Matter: The Mandela Effect

Rate this book
What is the Mandela Effect? Time Travel? A glitch in the Matrix? Quantum Immortality? A Shift in Consciousness? Amalgamating Timelines? A Natural Occurrence? Or, is the molecular structure of Physical Reality actually changing right before our eyes? This is the true story of one man's Paranormal and Supernatural Experiences ...

148 pages, Kindle Edition

Published May 19, 2018

43 people are currently reading
36 people want to read

About the author

Anthony Santosusso

1 book2 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
16 (57%)
4 stars
3 (10%)
3 stars
3 (10%)
2 stars
2 (7%)
1 star
4 (14%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Dominik Kirtaime.
Author 1 book183 followers
September 5, 2018
The author covers various issues the effects has which creates so many questions. The theory of multiple timelines and how our consciousness takes us to different ones was really interesting.
Profile Image for Aaron Esthelm.
284 reviews2 followers
December 25, 2025
I mean it's clearly the writings of a man who has something going on mentally. I'm not a psychiatrist, therapist or anything of the sort. Tony my friend believes fully what he writes and I believe he accomplished the goal he set for himself in writing this. it's not often you get a glimpse into the mind of someone so disconnected with reality. I for one am grateful for the opportunity. It's harmless at the end of the day. if Tone wants to believe the monopoly man had a monical I don't give a shit. he wants to think the stars spoke to him? have fun space man. enjoy the ride. Thanks for sharing your timeline with me.
51 reviews5 followers
July 12, 2021
Stream of consciousness with bad grammar

Mr. Santosusso should have enlisted the help of an editor before publishing this book. In its finished form, it comes across as a disorganized stream of consciousness, which might be acceptable from the standpoint of poetic license, were it not for the terrible spelling and grammar scattered throughout. Mr. Santosusso repeatedly uses the pronoun "myself" as the subject of a sentence, as in "Myself and a friend had a discussion." He also substitutes verbs as adjectives, using the term "Dominate Consciousness" instead of "Dominant Consciousness," and randomly capitalizes nouns and verbs for no apparent reasons. All of this, on top of the disjointed timeline of his narrative make the book practically unreadable.

The underlying thesis of the book is that your faulty memories are not what they seem; i.e., faulty memories. Instead, we are Multidimensional Beings with Dominate Consciousnesses shifting among Timelines (these being examples of misspelled and randomly capitalized words in this book). Of course this hypothesis clearly violates Occam's razor. Our memories are inherently unreliable, fading and shifting over time, and false memories can readily be implanted in our minds through hypnosis and indoctrination. Realizing that each of us carry around a load of false memories might be embarrassing to some people, but it is not paranormal in any sense of the word. In fact, we should consider it a perfectly normal part of the human condition, so there is no need to explain it using an ad hoc hypothesis of a "Dominate Consciousness" shifting among alternative Timelines, whatever that means.

The one positive thing I can say about this book is that Amazon only charged $0.99 to download it.
Profile Image for Jo Ellen.
1 review2 followers
Read
September 13, 2020
Some of his examples were compelling, others I attribute to memory failure that we all experience. I use " Sex and the City" as an example. It's plainly listed that way on Amazon as of this date. I think he should have had someone proof the manuscript for grammar and spelling, it was annoying. Some of his Mandela effects for spelling were just his mistakes. That said, I remember Elvis dying in 1973, the monopoly guy had a monocle and cane, it was Berenstein Bears, Jiff was the name of the peanut butter, and Curious George had a tail.
Profile Image for Bill Holmes.
19 reviews1 follower
January 2, 2020
If you’re affected by ME, I recommend this book. The author presents very interesting and insightful ideas and explanations. I appreciate people who are brave enough to share their personal experiences no matter how outrageous they seem.
7 reviews
March 21, 2020
Great Book

This book was well worth ! I enjoyed reading your book. Keep working and helping us find the truth and your journey continue to blossom and grow and you explain in such great details about this Affect that I can relate too.
18 reviews
February 5, 2021
Interesting

The writer takes you along his path of learning and digesting changes. I started to see things differently about 2015 and also working through my own theories. It's true your understanding is what you make of it. Always ask questions.
11 reviews1 follower
February 27, 2020
Very interesting read

I liked the stories the author told of his life. The three stars are for it's vagueness and the writing style itself
Profile Image for P W.
2 reviews
December 20, 2020
How to with John Wilson bring me here
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Bubbles.
18 reviews1 follower
September 17, 2018
Synchronicity

The Mandela effect is real. I've been on a journey to discover the truth my entire life. On that journey I found out that my memories, my life and even my blood type was no longer what current reality said it to be. When you realize everything, your entire life is different or no longer exist the way you remembered it. That can be quite frightening. It's a down right MIND BLOWING EXPERIENCE.
Well I'll just say, I dropped down to my knees and I BEGAN TO PRAY! That's When I found others like me.
I'm still on that journey today but with amazing, wonderful people that I consider friends/family.
I thank GOD everyday for putting them on my path.
Thanks Susso for being brave enough to expose the truth.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.