blog - discussion - books
B048: What happened when the uprising caused the Anunnaki to leave Earth? – Part 12
Today we want to tell you something about Enki’s mind, because you should understand how a being thinks and feels that is several tens of thousands of years old. When an earthly human reaches the age of forty, his so-called wild time, which starts shortly after puberty, is almost over. During this time, the human experiences many ups and downs that will strongly shape him. The time after that ushers in a calmer period in which the human reflects on many things and then no longer considers himself to belong to the younger generation. Once a human has come to this realisation, he henceforth acts outside the young and wild group of humans. Because the person over forty will no longer participate in the activities of the young and wild group, the person now observes the goings-on of this group. In doing so, the person recognises many ways of acting that will arise group-dynamically and this realisation allows the person to grow because he or she can take more and more distance from his or her previous actions. This leads to the person beginning to recognise themselves in all younger humans, which in turn brings about a serenity because the person understands that most actions are brought about by the group or society. The forty-something person can now better relate to the actions of his or her past. But this is only possible if the person is no longer active in the environment from which they now reflect their actions. If the forty-something person still thought that he or she had to participate in the activities of the young, wild generation, he or she would not be able to look at the actions objectively and therefore would not be able to reflect properly. You reflect on your actions at all times when you take distance from the societies that prompted your actions, but only now will you reflect on those actions in such a way that you can also derive knowledge from them. When the being Enki reflects on his actions, it is always in the same way that you reflect on the actions within the group. Enki is not at all able to reflect objectively on his actions because he belongs to the group of young, wild Anunnaki until the end of his life. Since an Anunnaki still looks young after several thousand years of life, the Anunnaki also never leaves this group. Only when parenthood is sought might an Anunnaki reflect on his or her previous life, which many prospective Anunnaki parents also attempt. The social pressure on the Anunnaki parent is great, so they will move from one group to the next. However, they are not able to reflect on their previous actions without outside influence. When a young, wild human leaves his social environment to start anew, this is the time of great insight because the young, wild human can adapt his actions without outside influence. Reflecting on his actions in the previous group has revealed many things that the human now wants to change. It can be seen as a new start. When a human leaves his social environment and is under constant observation, this generates an expectation that is produced by the observing society and which the young, wild human must live up to. An Anunnaki who leaves his social environment because he aspires to parenthood might evaluate it as a new start where he could reflect on his past actions in order to act differently afterwards. However, the Anunnaki is under constant scrutiny because Anunnaki society has high expectations of the new parent, so society’s expectation wants to be met. Even if the Anunnaki can reflect on his life so far, his hands are tied because parenthood dictates a certain behaviour in society. Therefore, the reflective Anunnaki slips from one role to the next without being given the opportunity to change his behaviour, because he must constantly fill a role in order to fulfil social obligations. If the Anunnaki has a high social standing, then it is almost impossible for the Anunnaki to leave that social group to be able to reflect on his previous actions and thus he can never adjust his actions. An Anunnaki can be exactly the same Anunnaki after thousands of years without ever being able to put his opinions on issues to the test. There are no social groups among the Anunnaki that are separated by outward appearance. A thirty-year-old Anunnaki is a young, wild Anunnaki, just like a three hundred or three thousand year old Anunnaki. Enki is such a young, wild Anunnaki, who now, after several ten thousand years, still shares the same adjustments on issues that distinguished him as a three hundred year old Anunnaki. What are these Anunnaki doing all these millennia, you may ask, and we will tell you. They ensure that the status quo of society is always maintained. The Anunnaki, as social beings, cannot evolve spiritually in terms of how they interact with other beings. The Anunnaki society is doomed to always remain as it appears at the moment and as it was when Enki was already ravaging the Earth. In the last two million years Anunnaki society has hardly changed. Look back at how your society has undergone one change after another over the past decades. Such change is almost unthinkable among the Anunnaki and the last major change Anunnaki society experienced was when dominions were only allowed to be ruled by queens. Since that time, nothing has fundamentally changed, by which we mean the social structure of the Anunnaki. What can you conclude from this, we ask? If you have no way of leaving the dominant social group, you can never start afresh to reflect objectively on your actions in the previous group, so you almost always remain as you are. No matter what group you leave, it always ensures that you take a social leap and you can reposition yourself to live your new actions. The Anunnaki can only do this if they do not have high status and if they can reflect on their previous actions unobserved in another group. But since there are hardly any such group changes in Anunnaki society, the Anunnaki remain as they have always been. An Anunnaki will accumulate knowledge, which also generates knowledge gains, but since there are no group changes, an Anunnaki does not see the need to change anything in their ordinary actions. It is rather that an Anunnaki who reacts differently from the decades before is looked at askance, as if he had an obvious flaw. No, the current Anunnaki will not change their actions towards their own kind or other living beings because the mind of an Anunnaki cannot and must not evolve. The Anunnaki society does not tolerate general changes in behaviour because they also do not understand that there are beings who are allowed to change their actions. It is to be seen as a weakness if an Anunnaki were to change his mind on an important subject, because then he can no longer be regarded as reliable. Enki can be relied upon because he is also never allowed to change his opinion on a subject, otherwise it would be judged as a flaw. Even if Enki were to change his opinion towards earthly humans, he could never act differently, which is why it is also impossible that Enki could refrain from his plans for revenge after all these millennia. The social pressure on Enki dictates that he must take revenge for his expulsion from earth, come what may. Enki will one day come to earth with his entourage and he will act skilfully to gain the trust of earthly humans. But he also cannot help but harm the humans on earth because he cannot and will not change himself. Enki will try to take revenge and he is doomed to do so as long as he lives. Since Enki could theoretically exist for another eighty thousand years, you will also have to defend yourselves against his desire for revenge for that long. He must not and can never refrain from doing so, so there will certainly be many occasions when the Anunnaki will launch covert actions that will be a disadvantage to earthly humans in the long run.