I watched Korina Sanchez’s popular show, Rated K, and one January 18, 2026 episode segment titled “Alien Blood” grabbed my attention. It featured singers and actors Rannie Raymundo, his brother Lance, and Brazilian TV personality and actress Daiana Menezes - who have asserted that they possess alien blood and are part human, part alien, or hybrids, as they put it. I’ve got to be honest: it stirred something in me. If ordinary folks can discuss “alien blood” with such certainty, it pushes me to be more open in conversation and to write more about my longtime thoughts: that we’re not alone and that each of us carries elements of something cosmic inside.
This line of thought makes me curious about ancient texts and what they might be hinting at - texts that many of us read as mere legends. I’ve been especially drawn to the Mesopotamian tablets and the Book of Enoch. They feel like pieces of a larger puzzle that could be telling a shared, otherworldly story. The Book of Enoch, with its vivid accounts of fallen watchers and hybrid beings, seems to echo some things mentioned in Mesopotamian lore. It makes me wonder if there could be a link between the biblical Elohim and the Babylonian Anunnaki, a kind of missing thread that ties together myths from different cultures.
The idea that there could be a connection between these ancient texts fascinates me. If there is a thread connecting the Book of Enoch and Mesopotamian tablets, what would that mean for how we understand the Bible and humanity’s origins? Would it suggest that our ancestors encountered beings not fully human, or that myths arose from real technologies and encounters that people then interpreted as miracles or divine acts?
And what about Jesus? In a world buzzing with speculation about ancient astronauts and hidden knowledge, where does Jesus fit in? Was he simply human, or could there be something more in his story - perhaps a supernatural DNA of sorts? The Bible’s narratives of angels, miraculous births, and extraordinary powers can feel otherworldly when read in isolation. Read in isolation, they can seem like fables, but when I consider them alongside global mythologies - peppered with gods, heroes, and miraculous episodes - the parallels become striking. It’s as if many cultures were noticing similar phenomena and describing them through their own lenses and symbols.
I’m not claiming I’ve got all the answers. Instead, I’m inviting a dialogue about how we read sacred texts and myths in our modern, connected world. If we open up to the possibilities that these stories might be echoes of ancient encounters, they could challenge what we believed about human origins and divine saviors. The conversation becomes less about needing a single, definitive explanation and more about exploring different perspectives - what if we’re all part of a larger, cosmic mosaic?
Ultimately, whether or not I fully buy into every claim, I appreciate the courage it takes for people to share extraordinary ideas publicly. It pushes me to explore, question, and seek broader context - to read ancient texts not as rigid doctrines but as living conversations across time and culture. If we approach them with curiosity, we might uncover more questions than answers - and that, to me, is a compelling journey.
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