DWQA Questions › Tag: final solutionFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesIn Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, Yoda says to Luke Skywalker, “Fear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers248 views0 answers0 votesIs there any parallel in the relationship between Anakin Skywalker and his mentor Obi-Wan Kenobi and the relationship between Lucifer and Michael the Archangel?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers270 views0 answers0 votesGeorge Lucas commented on Anakin Skywalker’s beliefs that fueled his decision to pursue the dark side and become Darth Vader: “[Anakin’s] rationalization is ‘Everyone is after power. Even the Jedi are after power.’ Therefore he thinks, ‘They’re all equally corrupt now …'” In the movie, Revenge of the Sith, when Anakin is fighting his mentor, Obi-Wan Kenobi, in response to Kenobi saying, “Anakin, Chancellor Palpatine is evil!” Anakin says, “From my point of view, the Jedi are evil!” Is this the widespread perspective of the evil, that everyone is chasing power, and all are equally corrupt? Therefore is it duplicitous and hypocritical for anyone to think they themselves are not inherently evil? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers219 views0 answers0 votesThe attraction between Anakin Skywalker and Padme, his love interest, is so intense that it is easy to speculate that they might be genuine twin flames. Is this storyline divinely inspired to further shed light on why twin flame relationships while in the physical are “not arranged” and highly discouraged by the divine? The fate of Padme and Anakin’s overwhelming desire to be with her incentivized his quest for power “at any cost” to himself and ultimately, even the galaxy itself. One would not ordinarily think that such “love” could be such a corrupting influence. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers263 views0 answers0 votesNegative karma is many things, but principally its purpose is to incentivize the being to “somehow” escape the suffering it entails. The divine goal and hope are that the being will be incentivized to pursue greater divine alignment and wisdom, rather than greater levels of power along with greater levels of cunning and skill to more successfully pursue, maintain, and further power over circumstances and other beings. Does karma create the incentive to pursue a solution, but cannot dictate on its own just what solution, and what path, the being will pursue? Is that left up to the free will choice of the being? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers241 views0 answers0 votesDarth Vader’s life was filled from beginning to end with great suffering. As a boy, he was born fatherless on a desolate world and raised in slavery indentured to a very conniving and wholly self-centered owner. He was separated from his mother early in life and found every relationship he ever had to be contentious and problematic. Filled with distrust and an inferiority complex of gargantuan proportions, and later in life as a young adult becoming severely maimed, dismembered, burned, and disfigured beyond recognition, one cannot say that the negative karma he had built up was not being revisited on him in a tenfold fashion. Yet in spite of it all, it appears that karma never shut him down completely and there was always a “path forward” to either attempt to gain further power over others or to pursue divine alignment and rehabilitation. Is it true that karma clearly ups the ante, but also never seems to say “game over” with choices and opportunities for change? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers242 views0 answers0 votesDarth Vader, seemingly unlike his master, Emperor Darth Sidious, was always “conflicted” and torn between good and evil. Sidious commented on it many times, and his son Luke Skywalker said, “Your thoughts betray you father, I feel the good in you, the conflict,” to which Vader replies, “There is no conflict.” But clearly, there was, and it resulted in his destroying the Emperor Sidious rather than his son, and in so doing changing the future of everything, and marking the turning point in his rehabilitation. In order for such a turn back from the darkness and to the light, must there be an internal “conflict resolution?” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers243 views0 answers0 votesAssuming one like Emperor Darth Sidious can never return to divine alignment so long as there is no “conflict” in his being, is it the goal of divine healing to reintroduce that very “conflict?” To reignite the potential for “good” in the depraved being, and offer them a way out? Can Creator share with us how Empowered Prayer and the Lightworker Healing Protocol can save even the most depraved of the fallen?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers216 views0 answers0 votesToday’s questions for Creator are taken from or inspired by Dr. Viktor Frankl’s comprehensive book The Doctor and the Soul. Dr. Frankl was already a world renowned psychiatrist when he and his family were captured and sent to the German concentration camps. He was the only member of his family to survive the ordeal. When Dr. Frankl first entered the camp, he had with him an unpublished manuscript of The Doctor and the Soul. He was horrified as the Nazi guards took the only remaining copy of his life’s work, and quickly destroyed it, utterly ignoring his desperate protests. In a very real sense, Frankl himself became the crucible of the destroyed manuscript’s contents, forced by circumstances to become the principal test subject of his own insights and theories through his own horrific experiences. How much of this was due to karmic factors, versus a backlash from the interlopers for his successful career and contributions to the mental health field?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Metaphysics258 views0 answers0 votesFrankl wrote: “… even a man who finds himself in the greatest distress in which neither activity nor creativity can bring values to life, nor experience give meaning to it, even such a man can still give his life a meaning by the way he faces his fate, his distress. By taking his unavoidable suffering upon himself he may yet realize values. Thus life has meaning to the last breath … The right kind of suffering—facing your fate without flinching—is the highest achievement granted to man.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Metaphysics267 views0 answers0 votesFrankl wrote: “It goes without saying that the realization of attitudinal values, the achievement of meaning through suffering, can take place only when the suffering is unavoidable.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Metaphysics248 views0 answers0 votesFrankl quoted the great psychiatrist Dubois: “Of course one can manage without all that (dealing with a patient’s existential spiritual crisis) and still be a doctor, but in that case one should realize that the only thing that makes us different from the veterinarian is the clientele.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Metaphysics245 views0 answers0 votesFrankl wrote: “Freud once said, ‘Try and subject a number of strongly differentiated human beings to the same amount of starvation. With the increase of the imperative need for food, all individual differences will be blotted out, and, in their place, we shall see the uniform expression of the one unsatisfied instinct.'” But Frankl by dint of direct experience, not supposition, knew better: “But in the concentration camps, we witnessed the contrary; we saw while faced with the identical situation, one man degenerated while another attained virtual saintliness.” Freud’s is the atheist’s “untested” perspective, and one we assume is shared by the interlopers. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Metaphysics259 views0 answers0 votesFrankl wrote: “I am absolutely convinced that the gas chambers were ultimately prepared not in some ministry or other in Berlin, but rather at desks and in the lecture halls of nihilistic scientists and philosophers.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Metaphysics245 views0 answers0 votesFrankl wrote: “Previously the only obvious philosophical tenet that entered into the doctor’s work was the tacit affirmation of the value of health. Now we need to worry about WHY he (the patient) needs the health.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Metaphysics256 views0 answers0 votes