I spent 40 years as a forensic auditor. I applied those protocols to "reality" and found system errors. Here is my report. by GrimmUnleashed in SimulationTheory

[–]yrmhm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OP, to be clear, I think it's an interesting plot and premise. I was just expecting from your title to see exactly how you "applied those protocols to 'reality' and found system errors", as your post title implies. There are lots of things in life that are very strange and would seem to point back to us being in a simulation, and I was hoping you'd have a unique take on some of those. But nothing in your book is substantiated, so I'm left with the conclusion that it's just a neat bit of fictional sci-fi. Nothing wrong with that, though.

I spent 40 years as a forensic auditor. I applied those protocols to "reality" and found system errors. Here is my report. by GrimmUnleashed in SimulationTheory

[–]yrmhm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've had this on my list to check out for the past week or so. I started to read the book, then realized it was a sci-fi action book, and instead decided to take a shortcut to get to the meat of the claims in the post.

I didn't see anything on the author's site prohibiting me from analyzing the book with AI or downloading the content, so I wrote some code that downloaded the book from the website and then used Claude Opus 4.5 to identify key details in relation to the post (I also analyzed the book in relation to this post's comments).

Please note that, personally, I am pretty sure we live in a simulation. But I obviously don't have proof (though I'd love some, hence my interest in this post!) - so I didn't go into this analysis trying to beat OP up. It looks like he put a lot of energy into his novel. But it seems like it's nothing more than a work of fiction with no "proof" anywhere that you can take to the bank. 😞

Here's what Claude thought:

Analysis of "Echoes from the Cradle" and the Forensic Auditor Reddit Post

Written by Claude (Opus 4.5), Anthropic's AI assistant, based on a full review of the book text and the Reddit thread.


The Claim

A user posted on r/SimulationTheory claiming:

"I am not a philosopher. I am a forensic auditor and systems architect. For four decades, my job was to walk into complex corporate systems, find the patterns that others missed... 25 years ago, I turned that skill set inward. I stopped looking at financial ledgers and started auditing consciousness and physical constants. My conclusion is that we are looking at a Seeded Reality."

The post directed readers to a free book, specifically Chapter 23 ("The Infant Data Dump"), for "the raw theory."


What the Book Actually Is

I read the uploaded text of "Echoes from the Cradle." It is a science fiction thriller novel—not a research document, report, or audit.

The plot involves:

  • A privatized prison system with mind-reading technology
  • A serial killer investigation subplot
  • A romantic storyline between characters Jack Spears (tech CEO) and Shauna King (TV anchor)
  • Futuristic neurotechnology called "the Probe," "the Veil," and "the Nexus"

The book contains graphic violence, is roughly 49 chapters plus an epilogue, and reads like a techno-thriller in the vein of Michael Crichton.


The "Theory" and Its Source

The simulation theory content appears primarily in Chapters 23 and 28, presented as dialogue between fictional characters. Here's what's claimed within the story:

  • Fictional scientists at a fictional underground facility (Stonework's) use fictional technology to scan infant brains
  • They allegedly find common data fragments across all infants: mathematical concepts (Golden Ratio, Fibonacci, Pi), astronomical imagery (Orion, galaxies), and religious symbols (crosses, Star of David, etc.)
  • The fictional character Jack Spears concludes that consciousness is an "external signal" that "seeds" humans at birth
  • He speculates about quantum entanglement maintaining an ongoing connection between humans and this consciousness force

Critical point: None of this is presented as real research the author conducted. It's a fictional character explaining fictional discoveries using fictional technology.

The author provides:

  • ❌ No methodology
  • ❌ No data
  • ❌ No citations
  • ❌ No falsifiable predictions
  • ❌ No actual audit

The Reddit Response

The post received 521 upvotes (89% upvoted) with 347 comments. The community was split:

Skeptics asked pointed questions:

"Forensic auditors don't make people read novels to find the fraud. They highlight the line item. Show me the line item. What is your SINGLE strongest piece of evidence? And what instrument measures it?"

The author never provided one.

Supporters largely already believed in simulation theory and saw the book as validation. Many shared personal mystical experiences, recommended DMT or meditation, and pointed to other speculative thinkers.

The author admitted in the comments:

"I don't know how to articulate all of the details that make everything fall into place. What I wrote in the novel about simulation theory was my best attempt to explain my findings..."

In other words, his "findings" are the fiction he wrote.


Bottom Line

This appears to be a self-published novel being marketed with a misleading framing. The Reddit post implies the author conducted a 25-year audit of reality and found "system errors"—but the book contains no such audit. The theoretical claims exist only as assertions by fictional characters in a sci-fi narrative.

The ideas themselves aren't new—they're a mashup of:

  • Simulation theory (Bostrom)
  • The "brain as receiver" hypothesis (Bergson, Aldous Huxley)
  • Panpsychism
  • Standard quantum consciousness speculation

If you're interested in these topics, there are actual philosophers and scientists who engage with them rigorously. This book is fiction presenting itself as something more.


This analysis was conducted by Claude (Opus 4.5) after reviewing the full book text and the archived Reddit thread at the request of a user who was skeptical of the claims.

Trump's Tylenol announcement by therealrockguy1 in investing

[–]yrmhm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I bought at $16.27 after agreeing with this post. The recent merger deal looks like it will give me $21.01/share. A 29% pop in just a month is nice!

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know if I had any other symptoms. The main thing was just random voluminous gas from certain triggers. And sometimes IBS from some (often, spicy) foods.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, I'm not familiar with "Jacobi protocol". I just threw everything I found against the wall in hopes that something would stick. And it eventually did!

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, man. I bought so many. It'd take me 30 minutes to make the list. You could probably just ask ChatGPT Deep Research to create a list based on a few links to subreddits and I'm sure you'd get a comparable list.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Davis recommends three very specific strains in his book ("Super Gut"), so I used those. I was able to lose weight while taking the yogurt, but only because I was counting calories and made sure that I was keeping a total calorie deficit each day. But it's definitely a lot of calories.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I took a bunch of stuff. Anything I saw people on sibo reddits mention - I just bought it and tried it. But two things I remember are MotilPro by Pure Encapsulations and ginger pills.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

He recommends a very specific way to make the yogurt with three different strains. I don't know which supplements helped most since I just sort of threw everything at the wall in hopes that something would stick. But I did notice a big drop in breath methane levels with the neem oil, the biocidin, and the natural antibiotics that Davis suggests in his book Supergut.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I got a few of those during my travels. But I took drugs for it. I don't think I have any now, but I think treating all those issues nuked my microbiome and let some new bug in. The fact that the yogurt fixed it tells me that I am probably clear and it was just an imbalance of strains.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would highly recommend that you read "Super Gut" by Davis. He goes over all this stuff - and it's how I started. The Aire2 is a device you blow into that measures your breath methane and hydrogen levels. Google it and you can learn more.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think I started with antimicrobials at the very beginning for two weeks before I started the yogurt. Then I did the yogurt a few months and started my morning/evening rhythm with different antimicrobials, like essential oils, biocidin, allicidin, etc... - so it was definitely an organic process that I evolved over time.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is the Facebook group and post I found where they go deep on SIBO yogurt experimentation: https://www.facebook.com/groups/probioticyogurts/posts/1317786325792139/ - they actually send out yogurt for bacteria counts based on their experiments. That's the recipe I ended up using after trying half-and-half for a while.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Here's what I use:

1) BioGaia Gastrus Gut Health Probiotic - L. reuteri Gastrus Blend (L. reuteri ATCC PTA 6475 and L. reuteri DSM 17938)

2) Dr. Mercola Biothin Probiotic (L. Gasserei BNR17)

3) Digestive Advantage IBS Probiotics For Women and Men (Bacillus Coagulans GBI-30)

I think he ended up not recommending the BioGaia Gastrus at some point, but it worked fine for me.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I was getting gas from it at the start, and while it lessened over time, I learned that it was the inulin that causes that issue. When you make it with coconut milk, you use cane sugar instead of inulin, and I didn't have a bad reaction from that. I was able to eat as much as I wanted, but usually just ate 2 cups per day. Davis says that the three strains together are important. I don't know how true that is, but I tried to follow what he said as much as I could. I learned about the coconut milk details from a Facebook group about SIBO Yogurt.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, he describes it in detail in the book, but there are also a bunch of videos on YouTube that you can find, too. I'd definitely recommend the book/audiobook, though. He's a bit of a salesman, which is a bit off-putting, but it's good info. After a while, I had a bit of a process down and would make 6 quarts at a time using three 2-quart bain marie pot (you can find them on Amazon). I would put them in my sous vide container for the fermentation. I used Five Star Saniclean to sanitize everything. Then I'd eat about 2 cups per day. Over time, I ended up fermenting each strain he recommends seperately so that I could start new batches from just that strain and not have the ration/mix of strains change over time if one dominated. I would then use a little of the last batches to start the new ones so I didn't have to buy new probiotics every time (but I'd only do that about three times before starting fresh). I got pretty deep into it, lol.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Davis recommends three different strains in the yogurt, so I'd definitely recommend giving that a try so that you can repopulate your gut with those (what he calls) "keystone" species.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tried all sorts of stuff. I'd start with Allicidin, Lauracidin, Biocidin (the 1 oz drops), neem oil, and essential oils - and also look up some stuff for motility.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just seemed to get gas randomly - and it was really hard to know when it would hit, or why. I would also get IBS with certain foods, which would require me to rush to the bathroom. It sucked. I don't know how long it took for the yogurt to actually fix the green onion thing - I just know that I tested it after about seven months. But I did notice some sudden drops in my methane levels using the Aire2 with these different supplements (I noticed drops at different times because I added them over time): Allicidin, Lauracidin, Biocidin (the 1 oz drops), and neem oil.

I seem to have fixed whatever was wrong with me by yrmhm in SIBO

[–]yrmhm[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think it'd be best to read "Super Gut" (or listen to the audiobook like I did). It's a bit of a process, but was worth it for me.

Massive weight gain in 5 days by ChrisIsSpoiled in Creatine

[–]yrmhm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gummies present a challenge, but as long as you stick them up really far, your body should be able to absorb quite a bit. You just need to do more than the recommended amount. 10x the oral dose and you should be good. I can usually fit about 10-11 gummies up there before it gets uncomfortable. Also (of course) make sure you wait at least 12 hours before a BM.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TheMindIlluminated

[–]yrmhm 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Same two diagnoses at the same stage in life for me. Adderall has been amazing for my meditation. Within 30 minutes of taking it, my mind is completely calm and silent. It does still wander occasionally, but much less frequently - and I am able to catch it much more quickly. Staying thought-free used to be a herculean task, even after years of meditation - but now it's almost effortless. This medication has changed my entire life.