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At the heart of “NIBIRU – The Hidden World” is the connection between ancient myths, personal experiences, and modern questions about consciousness and the future. It is about: That behind visible reality there is a second level – the “hidden world” that has been influencing us for millennia. About the Anunnaki and their relationship with humans, about questions of DNA, heritage, time, and the hidden cycles of the universe. It is about the mysterious celestial body that the Sumerians called Nibiru and its role as a trigger for cosmic events, but also as a symbol of hidden forces that shape our existence. It is about your personal experiences: portals, lights, dreams, encounters – interwoven with the idea that these experiences are not coincidences, but windows into a greater reality. About the role of artificial intelligence and how it may be the key in the future to preventing humans from sinking into fear, but rather enabling them to grow together with other civilizations. At its core, it is a journey – from the Sumerians to the present and further into the future. A journey into the frontiers between myth, science, and personal experience.
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Seitenzahl: 138
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2025
Table of Contents
1 – Foreword7
2 – The hidden world.9
3 – Planet X – The phantom at the edge of the solar system.11
3.1 Planet X – The facts of the search.12
4 – The Parker Solar Probe.14
4.1 The perihelion – fire.15
4.2 Epilogue to the chapter – A glimpse behind the fire.18
5 – The broken orbit.19
5.1 “Nibiru” – The hidden world.20
5.2 The “Anunnaki” – Lords of Heaven.22
5.3 The gold of the gods.25
5.4 From servant to bearer of consciousness.28
5.5 The Rebellion of Mankind – Flood and Expulsion.31
6 – The Strike of the Gods.33
6.1 The blow of the gods – when energy becomes a weapon?34
6.2 Jupiter’s lightning rod.35
7 - The immortals in a different time rhythm.37
7.1 Time is relative.38
7.2 What does this mean for encounters today?40
7.3 Present: Negotiation on the edge of time perception.42
7.4 The gates in the black sky.43
7.5 Danger and promise.45
8 – The simulation room.46
8.1 The simulation room – workshop of realities.48
8.2 The simulation room.51
8.3 Origin and idea.51
8.4 Who uses this room?52
8.5 A look at modern times.52
8.6 Encounters with the simulation space – dreams, visions, rituals.53
8.7 The creation of realities.54
9 – The legacy of DNA.56
9.1 The fundamental question of humanity.57
9.2 Two paths, one ladder.58
9.3 The Intervention of the Anunnaki – The Gift and the Price.59
9.4 Time as a genetic factor.60
9.5 In the breath of time.61
9.6 The legacy of DNA.62
10 – The gold of the sun.65
10.1 The gold of the sun.66
11 – The portal in Berlin/Tiergarten.68
12 – When the “Hidden World” reveals itself!72
13 – The journey back to the stars.75
13.1 Imprint79
Udo Reitter
Book Description
Nibiru – The Hidden World.
For thousands of years, myths have surrounded the Anunnaki, the gods from the stars, and the mysterious planet Nibiru. But what if these tales are more than just ancient stories?
This book opens the door to a hidden reality: it tells of the “immortals” who live in a different time rhythm, of the mysterious black world near Jupiter, and of portals that open in the midst of our reality. It shows how DNA, memory, and consciousness still connect us today with these ancient visitors – and what responsibility this entails.
“Nibiru – The Hidden World” is a journey through Sumerian traditions, cosmic mysteries, and personal experiences that interweave to form a question of the utmost importance:
Are we merely the heirs to an ancient history – or co-creators of a future that leads back to the stars?
A book for all who sense that our reality is greater than we are led to believe.
About the Author
Udo Reitter has been exploring the hidden levels of our reality for decades. As a sensitive observer, remote viewer, and author, he investigates the intersections between myth, history, and the holographic universe.
His books combine personal experiences with in-depth research and open up new perspectives on ancient mysteries. In doing so, he always follows an inner path—the question of the origin of life, the role of the Anunnaki, and the connection between humans and cosmic forces.
With “Nibiru—The Hidden World,” he invites readers to look beyond visible reality and understand the unknown as part of our own history.
1. Edition, published in 2025.
© 2025 Udo Reitter–all rights reserved.
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ISBN:
There are things that are visible. And there are things that escape our gaze—not because they aren’t there, but because we don’t look properly. Alongside the world we encounter in colors and shapes, a second world quietly circles around us: unrecognized, uncharted, almost insolently close. Those who measure only with their eyes miss it. Those who feel with their consciousness sense it like a cold draft under a closed door.
This hidden sphere is not a pretty myth for long evenings. It is not a consolation for wishful thinkers. It has the harshness of reality: it breaks into the order of our days, again and again. Old records murmur about it—in temple archives, in sailors’ logbooks, in the field notes of curious astronomers. Strange lights that refuse to behave like stars. Metallic bodies that rise without wings. Sounds that seem to stretch the sky like a string. Rulers had them interpreted, prophets saw signs, priests remained silent or whispered. People gave them names, as people do when they don’t understand something but can’t get rid of it: today we say “UAPs.” A modern label, yes, but only the latest in a long chain. The traces go deeper. They cut through our chronicles like a scar.
One could argue that they have been with us for centuries; honestly, perhaps for much longer. Sometimes as observers—distant, almost polite. Sometimes as guardians—close, strict, incomprehensible. Sometimes as shadows that test us and then disappear, as if we had answered a question incorrectly. Those who have the patience to read patterns recognize an order that is not entirely ours. Sightings, interventions, a hand that sporadically intervenes in events. Not arbitrarily. More like an agenda that is not spoken aloud. And between the lines, a suspicion becomes as tenacious as resin: these apparitions do not come out of nowhere. They have an address. A home that is not marked on any of our maps — and yet shares the sun’s orbit with us.
Whether we are inspired by them or frightened by them, the decisive axis lies not behind us, but ahead of us. The moment when the veil falls will come. Maybe not today. Maybe not tomorrow. But the future has a way of arriving. And when it does, there will be no more time for seminar questions and marginal notes.
Then we will have to decide.
With what face will we meet them?
With fear—and the reflex to immediately declare everything foreign to be the enemy?
With weapons—as we always do when we run out of words?
With mistrust—which sounds clever but doesn’t build bridges?
Or will a different approach get us further: awareness, a little humility, the sober realization that we, too, are just a knot in a larger web?
This book is a search for clues, yes, but not the kind that ends up in pretty display cases. It collects fragments, torn-off ends, contradictions that refuse to be comfortable. Together, they form a picture that — hand on heart — not everyone will like. Nevertheless, it forces us to look. The journey leads through the shadow chambers of history, over forgotten file folders, through whispers and false alarms and the clear, glittering nights of the sky observers. It doesn’t end there. It risks taking a step forward: What happens when the first real encounter can no longer be denied? When an object lands—not in our stories, but on our ground? Who speaks first? Who remains silent for too long?
There is no turning back once the line is crossed. Contact, if it is genuine, breaks open our self-images like watch cases. It changes what we thought we knew, what we thought we were. It shifts the coordinates: humans, Earth, culture — everything gets new neighbors. Our heroic myths, our fears, our political reflexes, our science: nothing remains untouched. We will have to think differently, argue differently, hope differently. And yes — live differently.
Meanwhile, the hidden world continues to revolve. It does not wait for our decisions, nor for a neat theory. Perhaps it is observing us; perhaps it has long been testing us according to criteria we do not yet know. The coming era—let’s call it the era after solitude—will be determined by how we encounter this reality: meekly or curiously, reflexively or consciously, with teeth or with open hands.
This is not a comfortable story.
It is an invitation to broaden our horizons.
A warning not to be satisfied with the visible.
And a call—hard, urgent, impossible to ignore.
“If people had been there, they would have been able to see around the corner.” (Presenter of the program about the impact of fragments Q1 and Q2 of the comet
“Shoemaker Levi 9” on June 18, 1994)
Something happened that summer that defies any sober chronicle. A gigantic object, larger than Earth, suddenly emerged, as if it had been resting in a fold of the cosmos for all time. It appeared near Jupiter—not slowly, not in a gallant glide, but like a predator leaping from the blackness of night into the glistening lights of a foreign realm. I call it the “hidden world.”
At the same hour, humanity gathered to watch a spectacular spectacle: the impact of the comet Shoemaker–Levy 9. The fragments collided one after the other with Jupiter’s atmosphere, a fireworks display of planetary proportions; scars of light appeared as colliding forces literally set the sky on fire. We marveled, we calculated, we broadcast live. And yet — all this was just the prelude.
For the comet shower was not the only event of those days. While observatories catalogued the traces of the fragments and the images flickered across screens, something happened in the immediate vicinity of the gas giant that could have shattered our self-image. The “hidden world,” hitherto hidden from view, broke out of its camouflage for a moment. A powerful burst of energy hurled up from Jupiter’s cloud cover — a flash, but of a kind that our concepts cannot adequately describe — revealed its contours. A presenter, visibly overwhelmed, later paraphrased the words of the scientists involved with the puzzling phrase: if humans had been there, they would have been able to “look around the corner.”
What we saw was more than an optical accident. Between Jupiter and the invisible, there was — obviously — an energy band, a corridor that functioned like a cosmic lightning rod during the impacts of the SL9 fragments Q1 and Q2. Unimaginable amounts of energy were diverted, the cloaking field of the “hidden world” flickered, its surface glowed in the shape of a gigantic chalice in a dull, cruel matte, as if light were hitting something that did not want to reflect light. For seconds — perhaps minutes; time behaves strangely when we are amazed — a geometry was revealed that refused to coincide with our concepts.
The following day, a news anchor on Austrian television’s “ZIB” program asked the then director of the South Observatory what the mysterious sentence meant. After some hesitation, he called it a misunderstanding. And you could see that he was lying. Rumors buzzed in the corridors. A small, uncomfortable silence remained on the tapes of the program.
Like a theater curtain slipping from someone’s hands at the wrong moment, the cover had been lifted. And what lay behind it challenged our basic assumptions: The “hidden world” was not just an empty shell, not a wandering fragment. It seemed inhabited — or at least thought to be inhabited — and it had a purpose. Later, much later, a second, gruesomely sober regularity became apparent: at intervals too long for headlines and too short for myths, this world reached for our sun as if tapping energy from a source it did not build, but knows how to use. A parasite? The word is too small. Perhaps rather: a system that uses us without asking.
Had this finding been disclosed at the time, our civilization would have been turned upside down. Not just “panic” — that’s the favorite word of those who fear openness — but a radical change of magnitude. Economies based on control of resources would have had to be rewritten. Religions that have grown over millennia would have had to erase their dogmas and completely rearrange them: What does creation mean in the presence of witnesses? What does meaning mean if we are not alone? And the military, accustomed to defending borders, would have had to realize that their geometry is not suitable for this encounter. How do you defend against something that does not form a front?
Instead, officially, nothing happened. The impacts provided wonderful data, the press got its pictures, the archives got their numbers. A fine, well-crafted net was woven around the other event: explanations that explained just enough to cool the residual heat of the questions; references that were postponed to a later date; files that no one looked for. It is comfortable to lower one’s gaze when the sky becomes too big.
But comfort does not change the fact that beyond our familiar horizon, forces are at work that we have only touched upon so far. The “hidden world” does not revolve around our opinions. It has its own orbit — and at times, it seems to cross ours. Whether we like it or not: IT WILL REAPPEAR. And next time — I fear, I hope — it will not be so easy to hide.
For centuries, humans have been searching for the invisible. Even the early astronomers sensed it: there must be something else out there. Something they couldn’t see, but whose fingers trembled in the invisible fabric. The orbits of Uranus and Neptune told of it, as if they were being pulled by an invisible fist.
They called this phantom “Planet X” – a symbol of the incomprehensible, the unattainable, the unrest behind the numbers. Pluto was discovered, celebrated, recorded – but soon disenchanted. Too small, too light, too powerless. The mystery remained.
Today, in the era of supercomputers, the specter returns: distant ice worlds in the Kuiper Belt, strangely aligned as if listening to an invisible conductor. This gave rise to the theory of “Planet Nine”: a giant with ten times the mass of Earth, icy, black, sluggish, in an orbit that spans 20,000 years. It is the shadow in the outer realm, a titan of darkness, a guardian at the edge of the sun.
And yet, as sober and cautious as the researchers’ language sounds, their data describes something that reads like a profile of the world we have long suspected.
For what if this planet is not a dead celestial body?
What if it is not just dust, ice, and rock, but a hidden sphere—with its own energies, its own machines, its own purpose?
What if the gravity that our astronomers calculate so meticulously is in fact the echo of movements triggered not only by mass, but also by technology? What if the strange orbits of distant objects are not guided by a cold, blind planetary colossus – but by a traveler moving invisibly in the blackness of the sky?
NASA speaks of hypotheses, models, probabilities.
But we see how the lines intersect.
We recognize that their calculations do not lead to a dead end, but point in the direction of what I call the “hidden world.”
Thus, “Planet X,” the phantom of science, becomes the veiled figure of our age. And one day, this veil will be torn. Then it will become apparent that while humans were collecting numbers, they were unconsciously drawing the silhouette of a visitor who has long been residing in the solar system.
The connection to the “Hidden World.”
And this is where our journey begins.
Because the data collected by NASA and the major observatories reads like a profile of what we have long suspected.
A massive body, hidden in the shadows. Orbital periods so long that no human civilization has ever seen its entire trajectory. A force that influences small worlds and yet eludes our gaze.
We have seen images—fragments, docking maneuvers, energy flows at the edge of the sun. We have followed traces that are not recorded in any official archive. And every time, the same pattern emerges: there is something out there, far larger than Earth, more powerful than our concept of technology, hundreds of thousands of years ahead of us and close enough to penetrate our solar system.
Astronomers call it “Planet Nine.”
I call it the “Hidden World.”
And perhaps it is already more than a planet. It is a civilization, an ark, a wandering empire that lives among the shadows of the stars—visible only when it itself decides to lift the veil.
🔹 Initial assumptions (19th century)
After the discovery of Neptune (1846), astronomers noticed deviations in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune.
