DWQA Questions › Tag: hopeFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesBoth Patton and General Douglas MacArthur were considered Prima Donnas. Google defines prima donna as, “A very temperamental person with an inflated view of their own talent or importance.” Or, “Anyone who acted as if they were a world-famous talent.” But the irony is they were, indeed, “world-famous talents.” They were two of the most effective and successful combat leaders the world has EVER known. Yet many observers considered them “arrogant pretenders” nevertheless, and despised them for being so. Is this an example of “faking it ’til you make it,” and how much of this behavior was engaged in fully for “effect” but did not, in fact, reflect the men privately? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 12 months ago • Karma186 views0 answers0 votesGeneral MacArthur used to frequently, and many would say recklessly, expose himself to danger in areas with known snipers. In one incident he actually stared out of a window at a sniper training his rifle at him from another building across the street. He then “casually” turned and walked away from the window a split second before a bullet came through the window aimed at him. When asked later about the behavior, he claimed he liked to “test his timing.” This behavior drove his subordinates “nuts.” Yet MacArthur survived the entirety of the war in his early sixties and without so much as a scratch. Patton behaved similarly and also survived the war, only to have his neck broken in the slightest of fender benders. What is Creator’s perspective on this behavior?ClosedNicola asked 12 months ago • Karma187 views0 answers0 votesA lot of terrible and deeply evil figures in history were also prima donnas. So it’s completely understandable that such figures are deeply distrusted. Where does one parse out the positive example versus the arrogant threat? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 12 months ago • Karma194 views0 answers0 votesWhat is Creator’s perspective on “combat stress reaction” or “battle fatigue?” So much of GetWisdom has been dedicated to healing historic trauma the deep subconscious reacts to, as this is understood to be the primary culprit behind MOST of our negative karmic issues and even the rise of evil itself in the galaxy. Yet trauma doesn’t have to be deep and can be right in your face, such as experienced by the soldiers Patton slapped (assuming their distress was quite real, and they were not faking it). Fleeing combat by any means certainly aligns with the karmic and divine imperative to protect oneself, but at the cost of abandoning their duty and comrades, not to mention setting an abysmal example of how to comport oneself in the face of danger. What is Creator’s perspective on this dilemma?ClosedNicola asked 12 months ago • Karma193 views0 answers0 votesThe word “coward” has come to acquire a deeply negative connotation, so much so that it has fallen out of popular use almost entirely, and anyone attempting to use it faces significant backlash, both privately and especially publicly. And the word “brave” is being liberally used to praise victims and laud behavior that seems to lack any evidence, much less significant evidence, of the recipient actually having stood strong against a dilemma. Today there are certainly people who would call Patton a bully and the battle fatigue suffering soldiers he slapped brave, for merely being on the receiving end of his “despicable tirade.” What is Creator’s perspective on the abandonment of the word “coward” and the accompanying neutering of the word “brave,” a word that used to be reserved ONLY to describe one who displayed SIGNIFICANT evidence of having “stood strong?”ClosedNicola asked 12 months ago • Karma167 views0 answers0 votesPatton’s slapping incidents became publicly known when journalist Drew Pearson broke the story on his national radio show. Wikipedia reports: “Pearson’s version not only conflated details of both slapping incidents but falsely reported that the private in question was visibly “out of his head,” telling Patton to “duck down or the shells would hit him,” and that in response, “Patton struck the soldier, knocking him down.” Pearson punctuated his broadcast by twice stating that Patton would never again be used in combat, despite the fact that Pearson had no factual basis for this prediction.” The Allied Command, and especially General Eisenhower, deemed Patton critical to the war effort, and this publicity complicated things enormously. That the media tends to conflate things is taken for granted these days. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 12 months ago • Karma187 views0 answers0 votesJust as things are today, the public was deeply divided over the slapping incidents. So much so, it was said it was the “slap heard round the world.” Half the population defended Patton and the other half demanded his firing. This shows the divide between the application of discipline versus the application of compassion. It is widely assumed that the two are diametric opposites but is that truly the case? What did those soldiers need most—a slap or a hug? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 12 months ago • Karma164 views0 answers0 votesTrauma is highly problematic, whether deeply buried or in your face. How can Empowered Prayer, the Lightworker Healing Protocol, Deep Subconscious Mind Reset, and Divine Life Support heal historic trauma, and also help the recipient to “stand strong” when that approach to a dilemma is the most advised and perhaps wisest course of action?ClosedNicola asked 12 months ago • Karma164 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “Is there any way you can expand on when you said my late husband would be looking for ways to help me from the divine? In which ways are they able to help us? Are they able, and if so, do they connect with our ongoing lives as we live them? Any words of encouragement would be so greatly appreciated as I have been struggling greatly with the aftermath of findings after his passing.” What can we tell her?ClosedNicola asked 1 year ago • Divine Guidance167 views0 answers0 votesCan you tell the wife of a recent suicide victim, why her husband took his life by shooting himself in the next room while she slept? Was there anything she could have done to prevent this tragedy?ClosedNicola asked 1 year ago • Divine Guidance252 views0 answers0 votesIs the lost soul spirit of the husband who shot himself in the next room while his wife slept, safely in the light now, as a result of the Spirit Rescue work we did for him? Does he have a message for his wife?ClosedNicola asked 1 year ago • Divine Guidance214 views0 answers0 votesGiven you have cautioned us that masking symptoms of karmic maladies with medical treatment can be undone by the Law of Karma, as it is relentless, so symptoms may reoccur or a new or even worse problem might develop, how do we manage this potential complication? Do we just ignore medical options, take our lumps, and suffer, except for whatever divine help can do?ClosedNicola asked 1 year ago • Karma229 views0 answers0 votesPerhaps one of the biggest problems facing humanity is “engineered complacency.” What is the fundamental state of human curiosity when suppressed by mind control manipulation? Is the curiosity restrained or actually destroyed? Because if merely restrained, then once the mind control tapers off or ceases altogether, will curiosity EXPLODE within the masses of humanity? Or will there be something akin to cellular memory working that will keep a kind of learned self-suppression going even when the overt mind control comes to an end? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Limiting Beliefs300 views0 answers0 votesWe know the deep subconscious is the principal repository of hidden and not consciously recognized beliefs. How much is conscious belief built on a substrate of unconscious beliefs? When someone says, “I am an Atheist,” as an expression of their belief that God does not exist, can such a conscious belief survive if Deep Subconscious Memory Reset changed the underlying unconscious beliefs underpinning the conscious ones? Can the divine even change the underlying beliefs if the conscious mind has embraced a summation or capstone of the underlying beliefs?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Limiting Beliefs280 views0 answers0 votesWe know the divine cannot act unilaterally to change beliefs in the deep subconscious. Can healing requests by third parties give the divine the needed license it needs to make belief changes, even, and in spite of, firmly held conscious beliefs of the individual client, and if so, how can that be ethical?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Limiting Beliefs311 views0 answers0 votes