We managed to establish contact with an unfamiliar astral goddess-and from that moment on, nothing unfolded as expected. Project ANIMA began as a careful investigation of altered states of consciousness, but it quickly transformed into something far more disturbing and compelling: a record of contact with an intelligence that did not merely appear, but responded, instructed, and intervened.
This is not a book about belief, fantasy, or visionary aesthetics. It is a restrained, at times chilling account of how a group of practitioners documented recurring encounters, shared environments, and the presence of a persistent figure that behaved not like a symbol of the psyche, but like an active field. The shock lies precisely in the tone: the events are described with clinical calm, almost indifference, and that sobriety makes them impossible to dismiss.
As the narrative unfolds, it becomes clear that ANIMA is neither metaphor nor projection. She manifests as a networked presence-a principle rather than an image-one that does not demand worship, but insists on attention, discipline, and precision. She does not console, nor does she threaten. She tests. And those who enter into contact with her do not remain unchanged.
Project ANIMA offers no final explanations and makes no attempt to persuade the reader. Instead, it documents a process in which the familiar boundaries between inner and outer, psychological and metaphysical, gradually erode. What remains is not certainty, but a quiet, unsettling awareness that a contact has taken place-perhaps not fully understood, but undeniably real.
This is not comfortable reading. It is not entertainment. It is a composed, unflinching record of an encounter with the unknown, written without hysteria and without apology. And that is precisely why it lingers long after the final page.