At this point I have absolutely no idea where Lost is going and that's extremely pleasing. HOWEVER. I grew up in California and moved to Guam when I was little and THAT is the route they use to get to the The Island (occasionally). Clearly I have flown over it before. because yes.
I really cannot accept that Locke is dead. I totally did not get that black shirt no fish guy was impersonating Locke, so thanks for clearing that up. I want to think that it's Locke and he figured out that if HE was the one to tell himself he had to die, then he wouldn't, because of the logics and the space time continuum's. alas. we shall see! eventually :|
The fact that Juliet was possibly pregnant (I think they tried to make that pretty obvious with the stomach touching and the whole tea thing as that helps with nausea) makes that scene a bazillion times worse ;_;
Thats exactly what I thought. Although apparently it wasn't so obvious--I watched it with friends and I was the only one who was like, "OOooh, she's pregnant!"
Sobek's ambiguous nature led some Egyptians to believe that he was a repairer of evil that had been done, rather than a force for good in itself, for example, going to Duat to restore damage done to the dead as a result of their form of death. He was also said to call on suitable gods and goddesses required for protecting people in situation, effectively having a more distant role, nudging things along, rather than taking an active part. In this way, he was seen as a more primal god, eventually becoming regarded as an avatar of the primal god Amun, who at that time was considered the chief god. When his identity finally merged, Amun had become merged himself with Ra to become Amun-Ra, so Sobek, as an avatar of Amun-Ra, was known as Sobek-Ra.A repairer of evil that had been done rather than a force for good? Yeah, that sure rings a bell to me
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it's that bow Aretha Franklin wore at Obama's inauguration (i think)
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I really cannot accept that Locke is dead. I totally did not get that black shirt no fish guy was impersonating Locke, so thanks for clearing that up. I want to think that it's Locke and he figured out that if HE was the one to tell himself he had to die, then he wouldn't, because of the logics and the space time continuum's. alas. we shall see! eventually :|
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Sobek's ambiguous nature led some Egyptians to believe that he was a repairer of evil that had been done, rather than a force for good in itself, for example, going to Duat to restore damage done to the dead as a result of their form of death. He was also said to call on suitable gods and goddesses required for protecting people in situation, effectively having a more distant role, nudging things along, rather than taking an active part. In this way, he was seen as a more primal god, eventually becoming regarded as an avatar of the primal god Amun, who at that time was considered the chief god. When his identity finally merged, Amun had become merged himself with Ra to become Amun-Ra, so Sobek, as an avatar of Amun-Ra, was known as Sobek-Ra.A repairer of evil that had been done rather than a force for good? Yeah, that sure rings a bell to me ( ... )
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