AtlasMentalism.com

My blogs

About me

Gender Male
Industry Arts
Occupation Mentalist and Mind Reader
Introduction The son of a psychologist and a computer programmer, as a child, Atlas voraciously read anything that he could get his hands on. In what he now recognizes was a desire to better relate to his parents, he would read the books in their personal libraries, including countless books on varying topics in the field psychology as well as technical manuals on different programming languages. By the age of eight, he had written numerous computer programs and read and understood books with complicated-sounding titles like "The Peter Pan Syndrome". Atlas quickly realized that the input-output system used to relay information to computers was very similar to the five senses that the human brain uses to obtain, weigh, and process data. He began to see the human mind as a computer that could be programmed. Over time, he began to experiment with this idea, and soon married the disciplines of the psychologist and computer programmer. Today, Atlas performs wonders for all sorts of people.