Many inwardly refuse to believe aliens exist, completely dismissing my claims of meeting them or traveling to an alien planet. But after reading Adventures on Guoke Planet, with its detailed descriptions, their hearts are shaken, and their once-firm disbelief starts to crumble.
The collapse of faith is painful. That’s why many curse me on WeChat, attack me, report me, threaten me—demanding I admit my alien planet trip was fake or, at least, that it was just my soul or consciousness, not my body. If Adventures on Guoke Planet were pure fabrication, they’d laugh it off and not bother adding me on WeChat to rant.
Some might ask: if someone firmly believes aliens exist and suddenly overwhelming evidence proves they don’t—that Earth is the only inhabited planet in the universe—wouldn’t their faith collapsing be painful too? Those folks might feel a little disappointed, but not pained.
Why? Because those who deny aliens don’t base it on scientific reasoning. It’s a conservative, narrow-minded inertia—a reflex to disbelieve everything. Influenced by a combative mindset, they habitually reject all, siding with victors and authority. They lack personal ideas—authority’s view is theirs. They don’t reason; they pick teams and stances.
Those who believe in aliens tend to have open minds, reasoning rationally: with the universe so vast, how could Earth be the only special case? It’s like the geocentric model claiming Earth is the universe’s center.