Facts about the Elohim, Part 2

Story by Inanna Eloah on SoFurry

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Addresses some of the confusion surrounding the identification of the "gods" of the ancient world as both human and Reptilian, and gives an overview of the acts of the Human Anunnaki after their war of genocide against their Reptilian neighbors


More Facts about the Elohim

-Of Our Relationship with the Anunnaki, the human "Gods" of the ancient world.

As I've continued my quest to find out more about my people, I've come to the conclusion that some of my old views were wrong, and that some views I had previously discarded were in fact right.

I've gotten to the point where I now realize that my people were the victims of a genocidal war put upon us by a human-like species from another star system. I've also come to realize that it is these human-like beings that became known as the "gods" of the ancient world. These alien humans had much longer lifespans than Earthborn humans, though from what I can tell they were somewhat shorter than those of my people.

In essence, these beings became close to my people, but either hid or suppressed their motivation for doing so, so as to keep us from realizing what they intended to do. When a particular time came, they attacked us while the majority of my people slept. Most of my people who died were completely unaware that they were dying, and they simply never woke up. I was one of the lucky few who survived the initial attacks, I assume because I was awake when it all went down and I wasn't with the woman who was to take my life. It was later on that I found out what had happened and that it was our closest friends who had committed the genocide against most of my kind on this Earth.

What happened after the attacks took place was that it became completel unsafe for me, or any other surviving members of my race, to move among the human population. We did occasionally move among them though, and in my observations I found out that the woman who was to attack and kill me had taken for herself the new office of "Inanna's Representative." Over several Earthborn human generations, I watched this title change, from "Inanna's Representative," to "The Goddess Inanna's Representative," to "The Goddess Inanna's Heir," to just "The Goddess Inanna," thus completing a multi-generational usurpation of not only my position but also my name. Note that the original claim of "Inanna's Representative" never said anything about me being divine. This is because I personally made no such claim, and in fact no other member of my species on this Earth made such a claim either. We saw the humans as our neighbors, our equals, not as our servants or inferiors. That was something that the usurpers started.

I've also come to an uneasy realization: I've used the word "Anunnaki" to describe my people, but looking at what I know about my own people and cross-referencing it with what I know about ancient mythology, I think the term "Anunnaki" doesn't fit with my kind at all. Ancient Sumerian/Babylonian mythology, as well as ancient Greek mythology, speak of a war waged between the human-like "gods" of their pantheons and an earlier, more chaotic race. The Greek myths called this earlier race the Titans. My knowledge of what happened would seem to indicate that my people, the Reptilians who were here before the human-like aliens who became the "Gods" of the ancient world appeared, would be the "Titans" of ancient Greek mythology, and probably the monstrous brood of Tiamat's children in ancient Babylonian myth. The Anunnaki were the ancient human "Gods," not the Reptilians who preceded them, and thus the term "Anunnaki" is not fitting, and in fact feels more like an insult to me personally, as well as to my people, if I should dare continue calling my kind by that name.

I am fairly certain, though, that we are the Elohim. I don't know why I feel this way, given the fact that "Elohim" literally means "The Gods" in Hebrew. Nevertheless, the word "feels" right to me.

As it was with the woman who took over my name and identity, so it was with all the others who usurped the names and identities of the rest of my people. The God Utu, for example, was a member of the human-like Anunnaki, not the Elohim. There was, I believe, an Eloah named Utu, but he was not a "god," he was merely a Reptilian such as I am. The same is true with Ereshkigal, my "sister" in Babylonian myth, the ruler of the Underworld. The "Goddess" Ereshkigal was human, but the real Ereshkigal was a Reptilian who never called herself a goddess.

Other interesting things worth noting are that the various names given to the "Gods" were not names that my people used. Ishtar, for example, was never synonymous with me, the real, original Inanna. She may have been synonymous with the human-like Anunnaki "Goddess Inanna" that usurped my name and identity. But even that, I think, is probably a mistaken notion. Again, I'm not sure why this would be, just that it is a gut feeling.

In any case, there came a time when I did get a chance to confront the new "Goddess" Inanna in person, and I got the chance to curse her. It felt good, and it still feels good. The curse was simple enough: she wanted to be me, so I made her more like me... physically. Over time she grew feathered wings out of her back, and her plantigrade human feet became bird-like, like the feet of an eagle, to look more like my own digitigrade feet. The likeness wasn't perfect, but I didn't want it to be. She still retained the vast majority of her human appearance, but when anybody did a graven image of her, it would show her with the Reptilian style additions, and in so doing would hearken back to the one whose name and identity she stole.

Anyway, that's basically what I wanted to write. Thanks for reading.