So, I’ve been going down a serious rabbit hole lately at 3 AM, and I can't look at the Adam and Eve story the same way anymore.

We’re all taught that Eve was the first woman, made from a rib, right? But if you actually dig into the older texts (like the Alphabet of Ben Sira or even obscure hints in Isaiah), there’s this whole other figure: Lilith.

Here’s the part that messes with my head: Unlike Eve, Lilith wasn’t made from a rib. She was made from the same dust as Adam. She was his equal. And because she refused to "lie beneath" him (literally and figuratively), she was scrubbed from the canon and rebranded as a baby-eating demon or a "screech owl" (night monster).

But I kept digging, and it gets darker.

I started looking at the Mesopotamian side of things, specifically the Sumerian tablets. The descriptions of the "Lilitu" spirits and their connection to the Anunnaki bloodlines… the pieces fit together almost too well. It stops feeling like a religious myth and starts looking more like a record of genetic intervention—or a prototype that rebelled.

I got so obsessed with this connection that I spent the last week putting together a video breaking down the timeline and the texts. I’m not a scholar, just a guy trying to make sense of the deleted history.

If you’re into the darker side of theology or the Anunnaki theories, I’d love to hear what you think. Is she a symbol of feminist rebellion, or actual evidence of pre-Adamic entities?

👉 Here is the deep dive: [https://youtu.be/2HX1U-tFOmU\]

by VastPalpitation9213

6 Comments

  1. This gratuitous use of AI is doing nothing to support the validity of your “research” – presenting everything as narrative fact just makes it feel like story time. I suggest approaching this story with more personal authenticity, if you are capable.

  2. For what it’s worth, this is also referenced in the Zecharia Sitchens interpretation of the Sumerian tablets/Annunaki story. The initial trials involved a different method of hybridization but failed for specified reasons. Then they succeeded with Adamu.

  3. In genesis god creates man and woman first… then it goes on to expand upon the Adam and Eve story… traditionally this is viewed as a macro level creation story, man and woman together, and is later expanded on at the micro level to describe in detail Adam and Eve. But one can look at this from a chronological aspect as well, god created man and woman together… and then had a second attempt at the whole ordeal and decided man first then woman second …. I don’t know but I find it interesting that the first few chapters of the Bible kind of says god created humans twice… but not really