Without Disclosing My True Identity
Lord to depart into the wilderness. (Instead of loving and respecting his friends, he moved
out of the community.) But the composers of the Book of Mormon, wise as they are, made
specific note of it, that the command came “even in a dream.”^21
Here is what advanced humans know about dreams, as given in the book titled
Human Reality—Who We Are and Why We Exist!:
There is not a person in this imperfect world who has not experienced a dream in
some form or another. These experiences are “dreams” when we are asleep and
“visions” when we are awake. Sometimes people focus on what appear to be
psychological phenomena through a “visualization technique” by meditating or
concentrating on something that they want to accomplish for themselves.
A careful study of what we have already presented in this [Human Reality]
book will reveal that the experiences associated with the phenomena of the
mind are produced in the part of our imperfect brain that coordinates the
energy patterns of our senses into thoughts. It has been described as our
inner “Movie Theater.”
It is here where we formulate and experience our dreams and visions. It is in
this location where we generate the energy patterns of our thoughts. This
includes the thoughts of psychics and channelers (two examples of many
who claim that they can read others’ thoughts and feelings), those who feel
the foreboding presence of what they describe as “evil,” and those who
believe that they are a “chosen one” with whom unseen aliens or advanced
beings from another unknown world communicate. It is here where their
levels of concentration are projected. In this part of the brain, they create
their own reality apart from the true reality that affects everyone equally.^22
Another perfect example of what people do when they believe that they are
“chosen” above others is found in the book of Alma. The story presented about the
Zoramites perfectly reflects the modern-day attitude and practices of LDS/Mormon
people—those who believe in the Book of Mormon. LDS/Mormons give us a profound
example of how people, when given the choice, can read a story and complacently reject its
good, intended moral, and then completely ignore its relation to their own actions:
[12] Now, when they had come into the land, behold, to their astonishment
they found that the Zoramites had built synagogues [LDS: countless
meetinghouses/temples, etc.], and that they did gather themselves together on
one day of the week, which day they did call the day of the Lord; and they
did worship after a manner which Alma and his brethren had never beheld;
[13] For they had a place built up in the center of their synagogue, a place for
standing [LDS refer to their pulpit as “the stand”], which was high above the
head [the stand is always elevated above the heads of the seated congregation]; and
the top thereof would only admit one person.