I believe that within the next five years, we will no longer think of alien life, UFOs, and extraterrestrials as mere fantasy. Evidence will soon emerge proving that we’ve never been alone. With technological advancements enhancing our daily lives—smartphones, the internet, and modern transportation—we’ll soon understand that this dimension is just one of many. This civilization is just one of many.The secrets of the oceans and the true history of the Antarctic will be revealed, places humans are still to fully conquer.
As we travel effortlessly across the globe, it becomes less surprising that we might one day learn of beings existing among us, not from Mars or Venus, but from different dimensions, right here on Earth. These entities, possibly far more advanced than us, are the ones behind our greatest technological breakthroughs—like the microchip. Information that once took years to reach us now comes in seconds.
Calculations that might have stumped Einstein are now solved by a ten-year-old using tools like ChatGPT in moments. Take the slide rule, for example—once vital, it’s now forgotten. Letters that once took months to reach their destination now arrive instantly across the world. We’ve been told by many witnesses about anti-gravity vehicles developed by Lockheed Skunkworks.
These technologies, though hidden from us for economic and political reasons, will soon become part of everyday life, like our smartphones. Much of this might have originated from what’s considered alien technology. Imagine a vehicle capable of going from Paris to Bangkok in the blink of an eye—no longer just a fantasy, but soon a reality. Just a few years ago, people would line up outside Apple stores for hours to buy the latest iPhones.
Now, we expect them to be delivered in the exact color and storage we want, straight to our homes. What was once a miracle invention has become as ordinary as toilet paper, something they didn’t even have in Versailles or Ancient Rome. People I once knew in Lagos have already forgotten me, out of sight, out of mind. Life is like that—here today, gone tomorrow unless you do something that impacts the world, like Julius Caesar or Hitler. We’re all just visitors, passing through for a millisecond. When the truth is revealed, we might not even care, as the pace of change in our lives has numbed us to the extraordinary. Until then, I return to my dimension, until I’m called upon again to share more thoughts.