Well, it's not a very interesting place to start (which is why virtually no one does it), but the absolutely key, most crucial question you could pose to yourself is this: "Do I really believe it's possible there's another planet in the Solar System, and that the ancient Sumerians knew about it because that's where their 'gods' said they were from?"
That question was answered for me in this article, from which there was no turning back:
I simply cannot ascribe it to mere happenstance. Once we have accepted that Nibiru exists, we can then move on to the more interesting task of characterizing it.
What this helps to avoid are, on the one hand, flat denials of "Planet X", and on the other, endless tales full of nonsense about Nibiru.
Well, it's not a very interesting place to start (which is why virtually no one does it), but the absolutely key, most crucial question you could pose to yourself is this: "Do I really believe it's possible there's another planet in the Solar System, and that the ancient Sumerians knew about it because that's where their 'gods' said they were from?"
That question was answered for me in this article, from which there was no turning back:
Planet X / Nibiru: An Analysis Of Akkadian Seal VA/243 (7/27/2013)
I simply cannot ascribe it to mere happenstance. Once we have accepted that Nibiru exists, we can then move on to the more interesting task of characterizing it.
What this helps to avoid are, on the one hand, flat denials of "Planet X", and on the other, endless tales full of nonsense about Nibiru.