A Scientist Who Unlearned the System
Ronnie Rebona
In the vast cosmic arena of literary exploration, Ronnie Rebona emerges as a visionary, navigating uncharted realms that resonate with the mystique of ancient extra-terrestrial enigmas and the virtual landscapes of modernity.

They say the pen is mightier than the sword, but for me, it has always been a tuning fork. A way to make sense of the frequencies that surround us, to distil noise into meaning, to search for clarity in a world addicted to confusion. I never set out to be an expert. I still don’t claim to be one. What I am — unapologetically — is a writer in love with questions, a learner in dialogue with the unknown, and a stubborn observer unwilling to trade his eyes for consensus.
I started writing to help video gamers strike a better balance between real and virtual worlds through developmental learning and practical exercise. I’ve now written more than 50 books, with close to ten million words in published print, yet I approach each blank page the same way I did when I first began — humbly, inquisitively, and with an open mind. Some of those books delve into alternative cosmology, others into ancient history, metaphysics, psychology, sovereignty, and spiritual awakening. No genre is off-limits if the question is meaningful. And no dogma is safe if the evidence doesn’t hold.
You’ll find my name — or rather, my pen name — stamped across The Flat Earth Trilogy, a three-volume series that dismantles the cosmological assumptions we’re all expected to believe without question. But let me be clear: these books are not about convincing you. They’re about inviting you to see again. To look with your own eyes. To examine what we’ve been told, what we’re shown, and what we’re never meant to notice.
A Scientist Who Unlearned the System
I trained as a scientist. My professional background includes research in chemistry, psychology, and product formulation. For years, I was involved in corporate innovation — from new food technologies to chemosensory research, even working with some of the biggest names in pharmaceutical development and consumer health. I lived, breathed, and benefited from the mainstream scientific method. But I also saw its limits. I witnessed how inconvenient data is buried, how alternative models are ridiculed without engagement, and how entire fields become faith-based rather than evidence-led.
It didn’t happen overnight, but cracks started appearing in the polished veneer of scientific certainty. The more I explored off-script ideas — not just to rebel, but to understand — the more I realised that institutional science is no longer a tool for discovery. It has become a priesthood. An orthodoxy. A fortress of belief masquerading as reason.
So I did what many are afraid to do: I began to unlearn. Not emotionally, but methodically. I checked sources. I replicated experiments. I engaged with forbidden texts, anomalous accounts, archival maps, obscure diagrams, suppressed patents. I travelled, I asked, I tested. And through that process, the model of the world I had carried since childhood began to erode. In its place came something older, stranger, and far more coherent.
Writing as Recovery
Writing, for me, has always been a recovery. Not from trauma necessarily — although modern schooling, culture, and conditioning certainly qualify — but from the spiritual numbness of certainty. The industrialisation of knowledge has made people believe that wisdom is final, that truth comes with a certificate, and that doubt is a weakness. I believe the opposite. Doubt is where curiosity lives. And curiosity, when cultivated honestly, leads to awe.
I don’t write from a place of final knowing. I write from the thick of the forest, not the peak of the mountain. Every book I release is a field report from the frontlines of unlearning. They’re not answers, they’re offerings. Not creeds, but clues. If they serve as torches for those still wandering, then I’ve done my job.
There’s a reason I keep my real name — largely separate from my author identity. Not to hide. Not to pretend. But because Ronnie Rebona isn’t just a pseudonym. He’s the explorer in me. The truth-hunter. The late-night scribbler who chases stars and symbols and soundwaves until the puzzle starts to show its shape. Ronnie is the part of me that refuses to be domesticated by credentials. He’s the neon light in the dark room. Always shining. Always awake. Always writing.
The Flat Earth Trilogy
Let’s talk plainly about the elephant in the observatory: Flat Earth. Not as meme, not as mockery, but as a model worth genuine exploration. My trilogy — The Illusion of the Globe, The Architecture of Reality, and Science or Scientism? — isn’t about sensationalism. It’s about deconstructing the unprovable and rebuilding the plausible. About examining how we know what we think we know — and who benefits when our knowing is scripted.
I never woke up one day and said, “I want to believe in a flat Earth.” I asked questions, followed data, and tested assumptions. When no curvature could be measured across vast distances of still water, I noted it. When space footage showed harnesses, glitches, and editing inconsistencies, I documented it. When ancient cultures all described a fixed, domed, enclosed Earth with a central North and concentric circles beyond, I studied them. When NASA’s image repository turned out to be computer-generated composites and not actual photographs, I raised an eyebrow. When flights, fuel loads, Antarctic treaties, and celestial mechanics all seemed to confirm a different geometry, I wrote it down.
But I also explored belief — how deeply we attach to it, how fiercely we defend it, and how brutally we exile those who dare to challenge it. That’s why these books are not just about physics or maps. They are about power, perception, and programming. They are about breaking spells. Because cosmology is not a neutral science — it is the framework that dictates our place in the universe. And if that framework is false, then our potential has been deliberately limited.
Spiritual Awakening, Without the Fluff
In recent years, my writing has turned inward as much as outward. Not just the layout of the Earth, but the architecture of the soul. Not just the maps above, but the terrain within. I began writing a new series of books focused on stages of spiritual awakening — again, not from a place of authority, but companionship. Because awakening isn’t a destination. It’s a journey through layers of illusion, ego death, cosmic rebirth, and radical responsibility.
This work — like everything I do — is grounded in a flat Earth cosmology. That doesn’t mean religion. It means reality. It means a spiritual framework in which you are central, not accidental. Designed, not random. Protected, not adrift in infinite void. A framework in which Earth is a realm of testing, remembering, and returning.
The stages of awakening I explore don’t require belief. They require honesty. The courage to face what you’ve buried. The willingness to let go of what once comforted you. The readiness to be reborn into something more real. If you’ve ever felt like you were meant for something deeper, you’re not alone. If you’ve ever looked up at the sky and sensed design, you’re not mad. If you’ve questioned every institution, model, and map handed to you, you’re not broken — you’re beginning.
Rage Quit Remedy — The Parallel Path
While many know me as an author, there’s another thread woven through my life’s work: health, cognition, and peak performance. I created Rage Quit Remedy, a line of clean, functional drinks and supplements designed to support gamers, athletes, creators, and thinkers — people like me, who push their minds and bodies to the edge, who value mental clarity, and who refuse to settle for chemical-laced junk disguised as fuel.
My background in product formulation meant I wasn’t guessing. I handpicked ingredients like guarana, spearmint, green tea, turmeric, ashwagandha, and nootropics to support focus, energy, recovery, and wellbeing — without the artificial nasties. Rage Quit Remedy is more than a brand. It’s an extension of my philosophy: clean inputs, clear mind, honest output.
In a way, RQR and my books share the same mission — to awaken, empower, and elevate. Whether I’m writing about the firmament or formulating a drink for clarity, the goal is the same: to support those willing to live fully awake.
The Why Behind the Words
If you’re still reading, then maybe you’ve felt it too. That pull. That suspicion that the world is not what we’re told. That intuition that we’ve been robbed of something sacred — not just land, or knowledge, but our place. That’s what drives me. Not fame. Not agreement. But the sacred act of reclaiming meaning.
I don’t write for algorithms. I don’t write to trend. I write because I can’t not write. Because every time I unearth a pattern, decode a symbol, or find a fracture in the official narrative, I feel a little more human. A little more free. And I want that freedom for you, too.
My books will never demand your belief. They’ll invite your investigation. I won’t tell you what to think. I’ll challenge you to think again. That’s the essence of my work, whether I’m publishing a ten-thousand-word deep dive into ancient maps that shouldn’t exist, or filming a short TikTok explaining the harness errors in ISS footage. The medium shifts. The mission doesn’t.
Where To From Here?
I don’t know where this path leads — not entirely. But I trust it. And I trust those who walk it beside me. Readers. Seekers. Skeptics with open minds and wanderers with open hearts. If you’ve come this far, then you’re one of them. One of us.
You’ll find more books coming — special editions, expanded guides, new series, visual diagrams, symbolic glossaries, decoded timelines, and possibly even community courses and live events. You’ll see more of Rage Quit Remedy on shelves and screens. You might even see some fiction down the line, crafted in the same spirit of truth-hunting but through narrative and myth.
However this unfolds, know this: I’ll keep writing. I’ll keep questioning. And I’ll keep offering the sparks I find to light up your own journey.
Because we’re not here to conform. We’re here to remember.
And remember this — the lie ends where your curiosity begins.
See you on the edge.
Ronnie Rebona




