ANCIENT ALIENS: MARRADIANS AND ANUNNAKI: VOLUME ONE: EXTRATERRESTRIAL HOLIDAYS
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The Food
The food is incredibly delicious, elaborate and elegant. The Anunnaki are genetically incapable of digesting the flesh of any living animal or dairy of any kind, so their diet is vegan entirely. Instead of meat, protein is produced from the Mishpech fruit that looks much like an avocado but with a very hard shell which can cook into any recipe.
The “meat” around the big stone is extremely tasty and comes in several flavors, which can be prepared into amazing dishes resembling fish, chicken, beef, etc. The cuisine is beyond compare, and so is the elegance of the presentation; honey, honey cakes, pomegranates, apples, round bread baked with raisins are always included.
Stuffed G’lici Honey Bread with Purple Mushrooms. A classic staple. Knead two pounds of g’lici dough into a long oval, seasoning with orange cinns to taste. Separately, saute half a pound of purple mushrooms in white sugar until soft. Mix the mushrooms thoroughly with the dough and bake at 400 degrees for 90 minutes.
Smiling Aus Chicken. Take four Mishpech fruits and carefully trim along the shells. Reserve. Scoop out the fruit and cut into one inch squares. Take two pounds of Lah potatoes, boil and mash, squeezing in the juice from half the fruits. Mold the potatoes into the shape of a small chicken. Take the shells and boil for ten minutes until wilted. Reserve the water. Trim the shells into feathery wings, a task all children adore. Stick the wings into the chicken. Squeeze the remaining fruit on. Sprinkle the shell water into the bottom of a deep baking dish and center the chicken. Cook at 350 degrees for 20 minutes. Remove and, using a handful of raisins, form a smiling face on the chicken.
The Table
A traditional table includes gold utensils, crystal, and lace tablecloths. The cats are invited to partake of their own special foods which are arranged on low tables for their convenience, and also are served on gold plates and lace tablecloths, though of course they do not use utensils. Their water is served in crystal bowls.
The Party
The party continues into very late into the night, and includes dancing to the stately Anunnaki music. These dances are quite similar to Renaissance performances. For example, the Kalip-ah is much like the Bassedanse, a memorized sequence of steps performed in a long line in triple time. Another dance, the Merubah, is like the Ballo, a more intricate dance performed by a set number of participants in complex figures. They fit the Renaissance-like fashions very well. The tall, handsome, and elegant Anunnaki, all young, all graceful, present an extraordinary scene, especially children forming circles with their own special type of pirouetting dance called the ‘Filin, looking like fairies from the old folktales.
When the two suns rise, everyone separates and go back into the gondolas to return home. By mind power, the entire feast is cleaned and plates stored within seconds.
ROMANCE
AND VARNISHING
Despite being cousins, the Anunnaki and the Marradians approach love, sex and romance in very different ways. Over time, there will be books specifically dedicated to relationships among the ancient aliens. For now, we’ll focus on the primary winter mating holidays: Yom ha-Or for Anunnakis, the Mingling of Lights, and P’eto, the Marradians’ Varnishing ceremony.
Yom Ha-Or, the Anunnaki Mingling of Lights
The Anunnaki’s physical construction is different from humans in several ways. One of the most notable is the absence of external genitals. But that does not mean that they do not have sexual relations or that they do not fall in love. Their love is permanent – they don’t even have the words for infidelity, or mistress, or affairs, and they don’t understand the nature of jealousy or mistrust. Their “Union,” which is what they call the marriage, is achieved through a fascinating phenomenon called The Mingling of the Lights.
There are certain things that cannot be described, things that human language has no words for, and the mingling of the lights is one of them. We can describe the physical procedure – and unlike human sexual behavior, there is nothing in the Union that is embarrassing or disturbing to even the most traditional and old-fashioned people, but the experience itself is impossible to relate.
The couple retires to a bedroom, which traditionally has no windows. That is because it is not seemly to have the lights, which can be intense, seen by people who may be walking in the gardens. They begin to visualize golden lights emanating from their bodies like soft, flowing veils. Slowly, the light grows, and eventually, each person is surrounded by a bubble of the most brilliant light. The bubbles come together, touching each other exactly like floating soap bubbles, and merge into one glowing orb.
The light grows stronger and stronger until the whole room is illuminated by undulating, flowing strands of light, a little like the strands that can be seen in the sky during the aurora borealis. And the sensations one feels are the incarnation of beauty, at once mental, physical, and spiritual, since it cannot be anything but a combination of the three, and it mounts and increases until the light explodes into a shower of stars and the Union is achieved.
And that is all we can say because human language is too limited. In Anunnaki, there are many words to describe the Union in all its aspects. So if you can recall the most wonderful sexual experience you ever had, with someone for whom you had pure love and respect, perhaps you may have an inkling, but only that. Until humans evolve mentally, spiritually, and physically, until they can shed all the negative traits of infidelity, jealousy, and fickleness, all they can have is a pale imitation of the Union. Hopefully someday that will happen, because the Union, unlike human sexual relations, can only ennoble and enrich you, can never be negative, can never cause pain or embarrassment. It is the essence of purity and happiness.
The Yom-ha-Or starts in the evening and continues throughout the day. Engaged couples, close friends, and married couples are not the only ones celebrating – everyone in the Anunnaki society is part of the celebration of love.
The food focuses on fruit, sweets, cakes, pastries, glazed and dried fruit, marzipan – anything sweet, and always served in an ornate style. The dinner itself usually constitutes of elegant soups, very fancy salads that include edible flowers, and various kinds of bread. Parties, balls, gatherings, theater, opera, concerts are the general evening entertainment for Yom-Or.
The prominent colors for clothing is are yellow, orange, and gold, all meant to evoke the beauty of the light of the Union.
P’eto, the Varnishing
The winter months when bitter cold grips most of Marradia is the traditional time to extend the species through the act of sex, or P’eto, The Varnishing. Unlike the fabled Marradian Safe Sex technique, the Lorna Pleasure Bubbles Pose and Beneath My Waves, Marradian extra-species mating from the earliest day of galactic conquest, their intra-species behavior is simpler, almost poignant.
The history of the P’eto begins with the story, as does much of the race’s lore, of one brave Marradian: Devi of Miloxi, a rich and powerful woman who turned pain into a model for timeless love.
Early in their evolutionary cycle, Marradians were all about conquest, leaving little room for the niceties of emotions. Victory was for the greater good, sufficing as the only love which knitted together society. Anything that intruded was viewed as weakness, and weak citizens had no place. You married and bred and served. Marradians were good, everyone else, an enemy. Very simple.
Devi believed this, too. She was engaged, or bonded, to a handsome soldier To’l, serving with the Fifth Imperial Fleet in the Juniah Star Sector, where Marradia had just finished a long and bloody war of triumph.
The Juniahans were a fanatic race of tall purplish warriors. To protest the surrender, a cluster of Juniahans unleashed a suicide attack on their capital city. To’l was with his Marine detachment and killed along with fifty other sailors; Juniahan civilian casualties numbered in the thousands.
Robbing a wife of her husband and children of their father was cruel; to cheat a woman out of a chance, her still unborn children out of life, by taking their father was unforgivable. A Junia
han prisoner was sent to Devi’s home, where she was expected to dismantle his limbs over a period of many months, or however long she derived pleasure.
Except Devi could only see T’ol’s face in the eyes of her prisoner. Two warriors. Her parents fretted over her disgrace, but Devi couldn’t maim the alien; finally she fled to protect her family from her failure. Devi traveled inside the snow-swept Miloxian Mountains, a dangerous place at any time, but especially in the dead of winter. Wild winds triggered an avalanche, and her fire sticks and communications devices were buried, along with all her food. Devi was trapped inside a cave, hungry, freezing, her left leg gangrenous.
A Yambo Bear approached. For those unfamiliar with Marradian animals (the subject of later books), the Yambo stands about eight feet high, weighs nearly five hundred pounds and has sleek grey fur, as if regularly combed. Using the commonality tongue composed of gestures and short words, the Yambo offered to nurse Devi.
But the Yambo wouldn’t do so until they shared a Renn, or common emotion. For Devi, it was despair at the loss of T’ol. Despair was unfamiliar to the Yambo, which he interpreted as anger, for which he had only disdain as a wasteful feeling. Believing she was lost, Devi sobbed hysterically. Sadness the Yambo knew all too well and, laying his massive paw on her forehead, rocked her to sleep.
When Devi woke the next morning, the cave had been freed of rocks, her leg was healthy, and a fire crackled with roasting Cil vegetables. She returned home and freed the baffled Juniahan, who proceeded to commit several terrorist attacks before being killed.
Devi devoted her life to the warmth of the love, the belief there was more to a relationship than having a man penetrate a woman with his massive pleasure bubbles. She began pilgrimages of other couples to the Miloxian Mountains where they stayed inside a cave until finding a commonality of emotions to seal their love -- more than the need to extend the superior race.
Now traditional partners to the annual Varnishing, the Yambo Bears leave one of their testicles as offerings. They have five and freely regenerate. Boiled and eaten hot, the Yambo testicles are an extraordinary aphrodisiac.
Unlike other Marradian holidays where drink, food, dress and song take center stage, the P’eto is simple. As Lod the Large taught:
Tisha vi reglach
Ami morri
Or, love is hard enough, let it be.
That said, the Varnishing does have a simple ritual. Other than the boiled Yambo testicles, a Marradian couple prepares a meal together -- without sharing the recipe.
The Utry Outri, or The Building, seeks commonality before the actual Varnishing. Independently, the lovers gather the groceries. One might begin with some greens while the other tosses in seasoning. Poultry might meet beef. It could all turn into a soup. Or stew. Sometimes, a very unusual dessert. Whatever the melding of the ingredients, the couple have shared and built it together, digging deeply into their finely tuned taste buds where they eat the meal naked, serving each other out of wooden spoons.
While doing so, some true traditionalists might also sing the Song of Yambo, another priceless treasure with few surviving lyrics other than:
Yambo tinis, ega
Yambo tinis, fru
Yambo tinis, pas
These words, sung with hands held tight, translate:
Yambo testicles, fresh
Yambo testicles, strong
Yambo testicles, pure.
A fitting metaphor for the purity of the P’eto.
PART TWO:
MARRADIAN AND ANUNNAKI HISTORY AND CULTURE
CHAPTER ONE:
MARRADIAN LIFESTYLE
Initial Contact
As a biographer, you encounter strange things on a daily basis, but nothing had prepared me for the email I got some years ago, asking me to write a new biography of a “hybrid” woman, part human and part Anunnaki. Her name was Victoria, but she was later renamed Ambar-Anati by her Anunnaki family on the Planet Nibiru.
Intrigued, I agreed to meet the man who was to be my co-author. He was a well-established figure in UFO/USO research and alien civilizations. Too busy to write the book himself, he decided to be a liaison between Victoria and myself, supply me with pertinent research, and eventually take care of publishing. What biographer could possibly resist such an offer? I was committed before I even saw the contract.
My coauthor promised extensive information, including Victoria’s diaries, but I had some awe-inspiring surprises. For example, a bundle of yellow, fragile sheets, wrapped in acid-free paper, was a 300 years old hand-written translation by a medieval Ulema scholar (more about the Ulema in future postings). It was a copy from an ancient Anunnaki tablet from Ba’al Beck, the mysterious underground city!
After the book was published, I could not stop myself from continuing the research. To my dismay, I found a small but important mistake. The book includes information about the aliens called The Grays, and explains their culture, their connection with us, and their feud with the Anunnaki. But The Grays’ correct name is The Marradians.
The Marradians are an ancient civilization originating on Nibiru just like the Anunnaki. Governments and military personnel, who have dealings with them, know the name, but prefer to keep it secret. The name “The Grays” is based on the misconception that they are small, ET-like creatures, but the Marradians don’t look like that at all. Both the Anunnaki and the Marradians look human. The Anunnaki are remarkably handsome, the Marradians are not – but they can easily mingle with us, and even to interbreed. There are plenty of descendants of both species among us!
The Anunnaki had left earth, though they do plan to come back. The Marradians are here. Thousands of years ago they have established underwater colonies in many parts of the world, and they travel between Nibiru and Earth through specific “portals.” They see themselves as the original inhabitants of Earth, and they despise humans, whom they claim were originally created by the Anunnaki in laboratories.
In future books we will tell you everything we know about the Marradians. Not only the danger they represent to us (and they do!) but also about their lifestyle, culture, fashion, sex life, politics, history, treatment of hybrids, food, and their love-hate relationship and extreme jealousy of the Anunnaki.
If you have information, or wish to discuss any point, visit our website at http://madmelsavestheworld.com/, and please leave comments, requests for future subject, arguments, news, and sightings – anything you like!
Who Are The Marradians?
The Marradians and the Anunnaki are never at peace. In future postings you will hear much about the bloody history of Nibiru, but even during uneasy truce the hatred between the two Nibiru groups never stop. Among the complex reasons for the enmity one relates to their physical appearance, so it is important to understand what they look like and how they dress. As you know by now, a common misconception is that all aliens look like a small grey creatures with bulging eyes. Don’t believe it. Neither the Marradians nor the Anunnaki look anything like it.
What do the Anunnaki look like?
The Anunnaki are impossibly handsome. They are tall, athletically built, and have large dark eyes and black hair. It is no wonder they were thought to be gods in Sumer and Babylon.
Anunnaki males often married earth women, and their strong genetic influence fathered beautiful children. Marriages between female Anunnaki and Earth men are much rarer. Both male and female descendants are statuesque and have the huge dark eyes and black wavy manes. Some movie stars, past and present, are unquestionably the possessors of Anunnaki genes. You can meet many descendants around ancient Anunnaki stations in Spain, Italy, Lebanon, and Latin America.
The Anunnaki tend to wear simply cut robes of gorgeous materials – silk, velvet, embroidery, and gold and silver cloth. Their Jewelry is magnificent. Male and female outfits are very much alike, but the clothes are not exactly unisex; there are subtle differences between the genders.
What do the Marradians look like?
The Marradians are more
diverse in their looks than the Anunnaki, much like Earth people, and not particularly handsome. Their descendants easily mingle in our crowds. Since they are still here, you can meet their descendants all over the world, but the influence is particularly strong in Eastern Europe.
The female Marradians are independent and emotionally stronger than the males. They pay little attention to fashion. It is interesting to note that traditional female Russian clothes have been strongly influenced by the Marradians.
Unlike the democratic Anunnaki, there is a strong class consciousness among the Marradians. The nobility dresses differently from the lower classes.
The male Marradian is either a bully or a weakling. They are not to be relied on since they fear anything and everything. The bullies are invariably vicious. However, they do change according to situations. A bully who is demoted can return to his previous nebbishness, and vice versa. What unite them all is extreme selfishness.
The Marradians are surprisingly intelligent. They learn quickly and they are incredible linguists. When they come to join the military undersea bases, they can adjust within days. Many are technological geniuses. But they are petty, nervous, and anxious, and tend to boasting and kowtowing as they feel is needed.
The Marradians’ hatred for the Anunnaki is mingled with jealousy. They envy the Anunnaki’s incredible looks and physical strength, and at some point of their history had developed a strange psychological protective mechanism – they started to cross dress for formal occasions. This had nothing to do with sexual orientation or compulsion, but strictly with the desire for elegance; they associated female clothing with better looks. They have followed Earth fashions closely through several periods, particularly during later history, such as the Victorian and Edwardian fashions. Currently, they still have an obsession with elegant clothes, and are never happier then when trying to put together an outfit. Their taste is not subtle. If they wear an evening dress, it would have plenty of sequins or ruffles. If they put on a pearl necklace, it will be opera length, and perhaps several ropes instead of just one.