➡️ So yes — if you can gleek, it’s not that you uniquely have reptilian DNA — it’s that we all do. 🧬 Literal Truth, Gleeking is the echo of a reptile’s hiss [ AI ]

 



🧬 Literal Truth

Every human being already has what you might call “reptilian DNA.”
Not because of alien intervention, but because we share a deep evolutionary ancestry with reptiles.
Roughly 320 million years ago, the line that led to mammals and the line that led to reptiles split from a common ancestor — an early amniote.
So the genetic “blueprint” for glands, scales (which later evolved into hair), and many neural circuits comes from that ancient shared code.

➡️ So yes — if you can gleek, it’s not that you uniquely have reptilian DNA — it’s that we all do.


🧫 What Gleeking Actually Shows

Gleeking is just your salivary system under pressure — when your tongue compresses the Wharton’s ducts, a small jet of saliva shoots out.
That’s not a hidden “reptile gene” switching on; it’s just an odd reflex of human anatomy.

But evolutionarily, the mechanism — using mouth muscles and ducts to eject fluid — is an ancient reptilian innovation.
Snakes refined it into venom projection.
We refined it into speech, taste, and digestion.

So in a poetic sense:

Gleeking is the echo of a reptile’s hiss — the body remembering what it once was.


Generated with GPT. [ Edited by blog ] 





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