Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Did Et Make Me???


Guest Zenda

Recommended Posts

Kia Ora,

DISCLAIMER...

You can blame Astro Liz for this thread.... ;):D

Science fiction or science fact[for some]???

Do any of you believe in extra terrestrials ??? and could it be possible ets had a hand in creating life on earth???

And as trans-people, are we just an experiment ???

Could it be possible???

Serious food for thought and perhaps a smile or two...

Metta Jendar :)

Link to comment
Kia Ora,

DISCLAIMER...

You can blame Astro Liz for this thread.... ;):D

Science fiction or science fact[for some]???

Do any of you believe in extra terrestrials ??? and could it be possible ets had a hand in creating life on earth???

And as trans-people, are we just an experiment ???

Could it be possible???

Serious food for thought and perhaps a smile or two...

Metta Jendar :)

Any and all is possible when you have an open mind...... In this vast univerese why not......

Link to comment
  • Admin

When I was young I believed in their existence. I even became a member of a couple of support groups.

But over the years I've become much more skeptical about the whole subject.

There may be some incidents that have yet to be explained, but a lack of explanation doesn't amount

to proof of anything in my book.

I always come back to this key question: If you were an alien race and came billions of miles through

space to this planet, why would you only make yourself visible to a few people at a time in the most

remote locations? Why not just land and announce yourself?

I am a firm adherent to the priciples of Occam's Razor. ET's don't pass Occam's test.

Carolyn

Link to comment

I have always believed that there are others out there and that if there is life here there surely there must be life somewhere else in the universe, and who is to say they are not much more advanced as we are, and there may be others that might not be as advanced as we are.

I do believe in god, but could god have been an alien?

The bible says god created the heaven and earth, and that we are created in his image, could that mean we are nothing more than a science experiment for an alien race out there and that once in awhile they come back to check on us to see how we are doing, and that us being trans is part of that experiment.

So many questions that will probably never be answered.

Paula who is an alien :rolleyes:

Link to comment

considering the size of the universe (material wise, otherwise it's infinite in my opinion) there has to be other life, most probably simple lifeforms. but intelligent life? ofcourse, but do note that lot's of those existing lifes end because of a meteorite or there sun dying. so the chances for a lifeform to advance really far, needs some amount of luck, we're still lucky no meteorites hit us yet (again). all hail jupiter for that ^^ we're not advanced yet to escape such a disaster. maybe some species have, let's hope ^^

oh and they coming here? steven hawkins theories say that if you go faster than the light, you go back in time. but he also said it's impossible to do that. which make aliens coming here, to have at least mastered a speed close to light AND surviving all those years coming here. or they could bend space...

just my thoughts on it ^^

Link to comment
Guest AshleyRF

There likely is intelligent life out there somewhere. The vastness of the universe is so grand that non of us can even imagine how much is out there. We are less than a spec of sand on all of earths beaches compared to the vastness of the universe.

Do I think "we" are an alien experiment? Actually I think all humans are an alien experiment. Humans are the only things on earth who can not form a natural balance to their existence. We move into an area, overpopulate it, destroy the nature that was there, and use up all the natural resources and then we move on to new areas. I don't know of any other living thing that will willingly destroy it's on home other than a few viruses.

I have often wondered if aliens did not visit this planet many many moons ago and create humans as a cross between themselves and some animal that was currently here. Their reasoning behind doing this? My guess is that at the time, this planet was uninhabitable for them for some reason ( most likely because of our atmospheric gas composition). There is some resource that they want here, so their only option was to create us to slowly change the planet into something they could inhabit long enough to retrieve the resource they want.

Or maybe there is nothing else out there. Maybe we are completely alone is the universe. Maybe (for those of us who believe in her) God created all the universe just for us. Who knows what her plans are for us. Maybe she made all of this with the intentions that it will all benefit us one day.

Link to comment
Guest Joanna Phipps
I

The bible says god created the heaven and earth, and that we are created in his image, could that mean we are nothing more than a science experiment for an alien race out there and that once in awhile they come back to check on us to see how we are doing, and that us being trans is part of that experiment.

So many questions that will probably never be answered.

Paula who is an alien :rolleyes:

Hmm this raises an interesting point, if we are made in God's image does that mean he is gender dysphoric? 

Link to comment
  • Admin

Tonya, I have two things to say about your post.

First, I agree completely.

Second, I'm Impressed!

Girl, have you got a doctorate in astrophysics, or what?? :)

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment
Guest Joanna Phipps

Okay so... yeah, lets say there is a sentient species similar to ours that's, oh lets say close by, at 500 light years. If we build a very good space ship, and can attain 50% light speed, it will take 1,500-2,000 years to get there, and just as long to get back. ( You cant just instantly accelerate to 50% light speed, or decelerate from or you'd be destroyed instantly. ) Also, if you figure the odds of a system holding life at 1 in 1,000,000 stars, then on average the next closest star with live would be over 1,000 light years away at best..

several physicists have actually done the math and a Star Trek type warp drive is possible we just dont have the technology for it YET, maybe ET does or maybe they have figured out some kind of translight drive... who knows. If they are even a thousand years ahead of us their science would look like magic to us. 

Link to comment
Guest Astro_Liz
You can blame Astro Liz for this thread.... ;):D

Nope, can't blame me! It was... uh... the hamster... yeah, he's got it out for me! I've been framed!!

I pooped right now, but I promise to respond since I actually inspired something! :blush:

Sleepy time,

~Liz~

Link to comment

Well fortunately there is an entry about this very subject in my favorite book - the electronic book with the friendly message flashing on the front - Don't Panic!

Considering the number of stars in the Galaxy that have planets and the even smaller percentage of them with all of the necessary elements for life to evolve or survive that it can be proved mathematically that there is no life in the Universe at all.

Love ya,

Sally

(A mere figment of her own imagination sustained in yours which must be a product of hers since you don't exist but then neither does she so I suppose it doesn't really matter.)

Link to comment
  • Admin
Considering the number of stars in the Galaxy that have planets and the even smaller percentage of them with all of the necessary elements for life to evolve or survive that it can be proved mathematically that there is no life in the Universe at all.

Love ya,

Sally

Sally, I will grant you that, based on what I've seen on Earth so far, there is no evidence of

intelligent life. Present company (the members of LP) excepted, of course!

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment

In the words of the great Captain James Tiberius Kirk of Starfleet, "Beam me up, Scotty, There is no sign of intelligent life here."

Live long and prosper,

Sally

Link to comment

Kia Ora,

:rolleyes: Perhaps we have been breed as a food source for higher life forms such as fleas and mosquitoes... :o

And trans-people were just a new food types on the 'super'market shelves...Who knows???

Metta Jendar :)

Link to comment
Guest Astro_Liz

Well Tonya nailed most of what I was going to go in to, so saves me that much typing!

Now its time for Liz's crazy beliefs...

The short and simple, I believe we were created by a team of "aliens" and are actually part of a grand teraforming experiment. Yup, told ya I was crazy... :blink:

I think mars was the first attempt of this experiment given its past lush history, however its atmosphere could not sustain the natural processes that were established and it rapidly deteriorated. The second try, the planet we call earth, is the current run of the experiment.

So, why do I believe this, well, I could easily write a novel on it all as I have spent my life trying to find the clues everywhere in the world. Interesting hobby huh?

If you start with a simplified understanding of how the earth was formed, it was a large molten rock with a very primitive atmosphere. However, nothing happened on this rock. It was lifeless and did not contain the materials to produce it.

Now we look to our nearest neighbor, the moon.

"At one point early in this process a very large planetesimal struck Earth off-center and blowed and sprayeded much of Earth's rocky mantle into space. The planet got most of it back after a period of time, but some of it collected into a second planetesimal circling Earth. It's still there—it's the Moon. Since this theory took center stage in the mid-1980s, it has become everyone's favorite. And as geophysicist Don Anderson once explained, "The objection that such an event would be extremely rare is actually a point in its favor, since the Moon is unique.""

This process reduced the earths mass and gave its rotation along with magnetic core. It also gave us a single moon, which is incredibly rare in the astrophysics world. Usually you should get two or three.

Now to the "ah ha!" moments, at least a few anyway....

The rotation, position, mass, of our planet earth is perfect in every way to support our particular form of carbon and water based life forms. These variables produced the atmosphere we have today. Now once again though, life just doesn't pop up.

I believe bacteria/virus/amino acids/etc from another external body was introduced into this newly formed, but otherwise still uninhabitable, planet. I believe this was the initial seeding of the planet. In our own body, and the cells of every other living thing, resides a little guy called the Mitochondrion. They don't share our DNA and thier structure is vstly different from every other system, and they provide the needed power to our cells to divide, change, evolve, and reproduce.

The endosymbiotic hypothesis was popularized by Lynn Margulis. In her 1981 work Symbiosis in Cell Evolution she argued that eukaryotic cells originated as communities of interacting entities, including endosymbiotic spirochaetes that developed into eukaryotic flagella and cilia. This last idea has not received much acceptance, because flagella lack DNA and do not show ultrastructural similarities to prokaryotes. See also Evolution of flagella.

According to Margulis and Sagan,[6] "Life did not take over the globe by combat, but by networking" (i.e., by cooperation)[7].

The possibility that peroxisomes may have an endosymbiotic origin has also been considered, although they lack DNA. Christian de Duve proposed that they may have been the first endosymbionts, allowing cells to withstand growing amounts of free molecular oxygen in the Earth's atmosphere. However, it now appears that they may be formed de novo, contradicting the idea that they have a symbiotic origin (Gabaldón et al. 2006).

It is also believed that these endosymbionts transferred some of their own DNA to the host cell's nucleus during the evolutionary transition from a symbiotic community to an instituted eukaryotic cell. This hypothesis is thought to be possible because it is known today from scientific observation that transfer of DNA occurs between prokaryotic species, even if they are not closely related. Prokaryotes can take up DNA from their surroundings and have a limited ability to incorporate it into their own genome.

Anyway, that is all just one part of one area of my thinking on all this. Pushed to evolve into the beings our creators invisions, maybe in their own image. Notice the subtle religious tie there.

If anyone is still interested, I'll get into moments in history where changes were imparted to sociatal roles that pretty much kept us from destroying each other or having constant physical relations, both of which would not let our full minds develop.

Let me know...

*hides in the crazy corner*

~Liz~

Link to comment

Astro Liz,

Does this mean that this theory from the 1980s has totally displaced the "Moon Popped out of the Pacific Ocean Theory"?

It does go with the theory that the Earth is a giant computer with all organisms being part of its matrix - so does that mean that Douglas Adams was right?

Are we really the ones being studied by the hyper-intelligent pandemisional creatures (mice) and watched by the others (porpoise) ?

Love ya,

Sally

Link to comment
Guest jamo-chelsea

continuing the "we're bugs" theory

consider the shape of our solar system then consider what an atom IE. H2O looks like. similarity? indeed.

perhaps this is just the form nature chose to use, or perhaps.....

WE(the galaxy) are just a leg on some intergalactic trans-dimensional beings coffee table

:huh:

before anyone asks....yes i am an idiot heheh

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   7 Members, 0 Anonymous, 128 Guests (See full list)

    • Maddee
    • April Marie
    • SamC
    • Betty K
    • LaurenA
    • MaryEllen
    • Abigail Genevieve
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.3k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,058
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Aleksandria
    Newest Member
    Aleksandria
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Conner_Sent_By_Cyberlife
      Conner_Sent_By_Cyberlife
      (22 years old)
    2. CtN1p
      CtN1p
    3. heyim_finn
      heyim_finn
      (21 years old)
    4. Jayn
      Jayn
    5. joni_girl_1988
      joni_girl_1988
      (51 years old)
  • Posts

    • Jani
      I used to but now its just lip gloss every now and then, in a subdued tone.
    • Ivy
      Yeah, a lot of times I don't really have anything to add to the conversation. There are some threads I seldom post on.
    • Ivy
      I have seen some things about this.  As I remember it was not very trans-friendly. The people doing these things seem to minimize the positive aspects of transition, and maximize the potential problems. Basically, make it as difficult as possible (without outright banning it) to discourage anyone from doing it.
    • Willow
      Good morning    woke up to some light rain this morning.  Maybe I should run out with a giant umbrella to cover the car.   Ha ha ha.     I’ve had really nice cars before but never something like this.     @KymmieL I hope you got to go on your ride. Back when I had my Harley we went out for a ride almost every weekend. We would head either SW down the Shenandoah Valley or Skyline Drive which danced along the tops of the Mountains or we would head west into West Virginia and just travel along until it was time to find our way home.   occasionally I wish I still had a bike but I usually quickly for get that. The only thing I ever wanted as a young person that I never had was a late 50s vette.      
    • April Marie
      I admit to wearing make-up. Actually, I'll admit to enjoying wearing make-up. For me, it's been part of learning about myself as a woman and finding a style and look that reflects my personality.    Sometimes, it will just be a bit of mascara and a touch of lipstick. But, most often I wear foundation with setting powder, gel eyeliner, mascara, a little blush on my cheek line and lipstick. I also use an eyebrow pencil to darken my brows a bit.  Infrequently, I will add some eye shadow.   Most of my make-up is from Mary Kay although my lipsticks or from various manufacturers and eyeliners are mostly Maybelline. My wife purchases most of her make-up from Mary Kay and so we order together from our local representative. Of course, I don't have much brand experience but I'm happy with the Mary Kay products and find myself transitioning almost entirely to their line of make-up.
    • KathyLauren
      I did early on, out of necessity.  Regardless of how close you shave, beard shadow shows through.  I just used a bit of foundation, setting powder and blush.    I didn't use much eye makeup.  I started out with a bit of eye liner, but I thought it gave me a "trying too hard" look.  So I mostly didn't use any.   With covid and masking, I stopped using makeup altogether.  Why bother when no one can see your face and the mask smears the makeup anyway?   When restrictions were lifted, I didn't go back to wearing makeup.  My face feminized quite nicely over the first few years of HRT.  I'll never be pretty, but I look more female than male.  (Or I like to tell myself that anyway.)  With several years of electrolysis, and with what facial hair remains turning white, I don't have much beard shadow, so there is nothing to cover up.
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
      Do you use make-up? If so, why and what  types?
    • Heather Shay
      Pride is primarily about yourself, even when it is not you who did something that you are proud about. You can also be proud of something someone else did, who you associate with, such as your children or your favorite football team. People can feel proud of their culture, their family name, or their appearance, none of which require them to actively contribute to the praiseworthy thing1. However, the opinions of others are of crucial importance, as best demonstrated when you purposefully do something that other people praise. Pride is a social emotion, and to feel proud, you need other people’s (real or imagined) confirmation that you have a reason to feel that way. Because of this, other people can also ‘be in your head’ and prevent you from feeling pride. Namely, what is praiseworthy is subjective. Things that may be considered good in a certain (cultural) group may not be praiseworthy in another (e.g., if you grew up in a family that greatly values academics, your athletic abilities may not evoke much praise). Moreover, what is praiseworthy is relative (e.g., if you are a good runner in an athletically average school, you may regularly feel proud about your times; but if you move to a school with highly competent athletes, these same times may seem unremarkable to you). Thus, the more exclusive your quality is in your surroundings, the prouder you feel. Pride has recognizable features. Although its static facial expression (typically a smile or laugh) does not clearly distinguish it from other positive emotions, it typically results in a bodily posture, gestures, and behavior that are clearly recognizable: lifting your chin, looking people in the eye, walking confidently, or in extreme cases, raising arms above your head. In a way, you try to make yourself larger and more noticeable, as if to say: ‘look at me!’ You may also exhibit more perseverance in your activities2. People generally find it very pleasant to experience pride, as it elevates our feeling of social self-worth and status3. At the same time, many social groups, religions, and cultures (especially those that are highly collectivistic, such as the East Asian or African culture) believe that pride needs to be checked. Unchecked pride leads to arrogance and misplaced feelings of superiority (‘letting something get to your head’, ‘hubris comes before the fall’), and social groups typically do not tolerate members feeling like they are superior or deserve special treatment.  
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • April Marie
      Thank you @missyjo! You do wonders for my ego.   It turns out that pastel colors were the "thing" at Kentucky Derby Day so my dress was perfect. I went with white 5" heeled sandals and a wide-brimmed fuscia hat. Dinner and Mint Juleps added to the fun of watching the (recorded) festivities and races.   Perhaps, we'll repeat it for the Preakness in 2 weeks.   Right now it's just blue striped sleep shorts with pink flowers, a pink t-shirt and flip flops. I can't tell you how much wearing  sleep-rated breast forms at night has done to quell my dysphoria. 
    • April Marie
      I can still rock 5" heels.
    • April Marie
      Good morning, everyone!!   My wife and I had our yearly Kentucky Derby Day evening. Dresses, heels, hats, Mint Juleps and a light dinner while watching the festivities and races. Relaxing and fun. I think we'll do the same for the Preakness in two weeks.   It's rainy and cool here today so it's pretty much going to keep me indoors. Ahh, well. A day of rest.   Enjoy and be safe!!
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...