Welcome to Gaia! ::

Day Dreams

Back to Guilds

Post Anything 

Tags: Bump, Links to free items, Tank thread, Polls 

Reply Day Dreams
Page Stretchers! Goto Page: [] [<<] [<] 1 2 3 ... 19 20 21 22 23 24 ... 2858 2859 2860 2861 [>] [>>] [>>] [»|]

Quick Reply

Enter both words below, separated by a space:

Can't read the text? Click here

Submit

you want gold?
yah
100%
 100%  [ 32 ]
Total Votes : 32



Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart

PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:45 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:45 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  


Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart



Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart

PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:45 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:45 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  


Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart



Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart

PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:45 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:45 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  


Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart



Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart

PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:45 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:46 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  


Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart



Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart

PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:47 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 11:47 am
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  


Lisenne


Beloved Lionheart



Rose Bunni


Adorable Kitten

10,425 Points
  • Waffles! 25
  • Unstoppable Egg Hunter 250
  • Battery 500
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 12:03 pm
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 12:04 pm
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  


Rose Bunni


Adorable Kitten

10,425 Points
  • Waffles! 25
  • Unstoppable Egg Hunter 250
  • Battery 500


Rose Bunni


Adorable Kitten

10,425 Points
  • Waffles! 25
  • Unstoppable Egg Hunter 250
  • Battery 500
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 12:04 pm
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 12:04 pm
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  


Rose Bunni


Adorable Kitten

10,425 Points
  • Waffles! 25
  • Unstoppable Egg Hunter 250
  • Battery 500


Rose Bunni


Adorable Kitten

10,425 Points
  • Waffles! 25
  • Unstoppable Egg Hunter 250
  • Battery 500
PostPosted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 12:04 pm
Obnoxious In-Laws: The current page quote is a Sumerian proverb.
Oedipus Complex: In the Hittite myth Kingship In Heaven Alalu is overthrown by his son Anu, who is overthrown by his son Kumarbi, who is overthrown by his son Teshub.
Offerings to the Gods: A religious practice that features in cultures all over the world and in recorded history all the way back to Mesopotamia.
Offing the Offspring: Apsu tries it in Enûma Eliš. Tiamat picks up where he left off. Both fail.
The Oldest Profession: While the concept of having sex for goods or services has likely existed for around as long as people have, the oldest known specific example is Shamhat's profession, which was being a temple prostitute.
Only Smart People May Pass: In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, many gates in The Underworld are guarded by fierce minor deities who will only step aside for one who has learned their secret names. The funerary texts of course provided this information.
Only the Worthy May Pass: The Egyptian god Anubis tested the worth of dead people before letting them into paradise, by weighing their hearts on a scale against the Feather of Justice. Any heart that didn't pass got eaten by the monster Ammut, denying that person any afterlife at all.
Orifice Evacuation: In Kingship In Heaven, after the Hittite god Kumarbi became pregnant from eating Anu's genitals, the storm god Teshub had to emerge from his body. He did this through an orifice identified only as "the good place."
Our Centaurs Are Different: Urmahlullu are Mesopotamian lion-centaurs, with lion bodies and human torsos. There aren't any surviving stories of them, just carvings.
Our Werebeasts Are Different: There have been cave paintings over 14,000 years old that depict men with bestial faces, so yeah, it's an old concept.
Out-of-Clothes Experience: Inanna winds up naked in Inanna's Descent to the Netherworld.
Outrun the Fireball: Yes, really. At one point, Gilgamesh ended up in a tunnel with the exit on one side and the sun coming at him from the other, and if the sun doesn't count as a fireball...
Overprotective Dad: Destined to become the grandfathers of heroes like Gilgamesh.
Pale Females, Dark Males: This goes way back to the ancient, old, simple caveman paintin  
Reply
Day Dreams

Goto Page: [] [<<] [<] 1 2 3 ... 19 20 21 22 23 24 ... 2858 2859 2860 2861 [>] [>>] [>>] [»|]
 
Manage Your Items
Other Stuff
Get GCash
Offers
Get Items
More Items
Where Everyone Hangs Out
Other Community Areas
Virtual Spaces
Fun Stuff
Gaia's Games
Mini-Games
Play with GCash
Play with Platinum