The Old Blood and Guts Numerology – General George Patton

George Patton was the most brilliant field army commander ever produced by our service or any other. ~ Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces in World War II and 34th President of the United States.

“Old Blood and Guts” was the nickname by which he was known. George Smith Patton, Jr. was the name he was born with. A fiery, flamboyant, charismatic, courageous, dynamic and eccentric warrior whose name is legend, Patton, born November 11, 1885, lived a destiny built for war.

  • What master number gave Patton his leadership and destiny as a general?
  • What number pattern revealed their “team” mentality?
  • What missing number almost cost Patton his career?
  • In what issues are Patton’s whimsy and whimsy revealed?

44-8: The Generalate Master Number

No number is more powerful for manifesting leadership and executive ability than the master number 44-8. This is George Patton’s Lifepath and life script. This was the first clue that his life would be centered on the lessons and experiences of orchestration and administration (8) centered on organization and regimentation (4). Other famous extraordinary individuals with 44-8 on their charts include: Thomas Jefferson (3rd President of the United States), Jefferson Davis (President of the Confederate States during the American Civil War), Ulysses S. Grant (18th President of the United States United States and Commanding General of the Army of the United States from 1864 to 1865), General Douglas MacArthur, Tony Blair (Prime Minister of Great Britain), Mother Teresa (Nobel Peace Prize, 1979); Helen Keller and Pearl S. Buck (Nobel Prize for Literature, 1938) among others. Obviously, this is an esteemed group of historical icons illustrating the power of the Master General’s 44-8 energy.

11-2/8: Team Management and Wars

While most numerology charts are made up of three or four Number Challenges in the Life Matrix, the only Number Challenge in Patton’s Life Matrix (the superstructure of his 44-8 Life Path) is 11- 2/8. This means the intensity of others, the relationship, the contention, the conflict, the opposition, the combativeness, the war and the peace (11-2) developing in the arena of the execution, the connection, the interaction, the participation, orchestration, management (8). Combined with his 44-8 Lifepath, this 11-2/8 Influence/Realty (IR) set was a powerful addition to Patton’s generalship legacy. As Old Blood and Guts exclaimed, An army is a team. Live, sleep, eat and fight as a team. “Team” is a function of 2 “others” in “relationship”. Number 8 represents relationship management.

The 3 Void

In the birth name George Smith Patton Jr. there are no C, L or U-the letters associated with the number 3, the energy of vanity, image, communication, art, health and words. Patton was well known for his fiery but often irritable speech, an asset and a liability. Patton could inspire ordinary men to do extraordinary things with his words and image. However, a lack of thought and wisdom in the use of abusive language, coupled with a lack of restraint, created enormous problems for him in a famous incident involving Private Charles H. Kuhl. Patton thought that Kuhl was faking illness to avoid combat and perceived this behavior as cowardly. Patton slapped, cursed, and kicked Kuhl in the rear, creating an international incident that drew the anger and fire of many Americans and forced Patton to publicly apologize to Kuhl.

Although voids are problematic, an empty 3 by itself will not create this type of extreme negative behavior. There has to be more. In Patton’s case, his second pinnacle and his fourth pinnacle (crown) were both 33-6/3. 33 is a master number of extreme communicative power. With the 3 nullified, it can be written as 3v3v-6/3v, leading to problems related to words, speech, and communication. To be sure, this 33-6/3 (or more precisely, 3v3v-6/3v) was a double-edged sword for Patton and served as the basis for both his extraordinary inspirational speeches and abusive faux language.

extravagance and eccentricity

Patton had a reputation for being eccentric and flamboyant. He loved donning nickel-plated, ivory-handled revolvers with oversized stars encased in a fearless, larger-than-life superstar persona that screamed confidence and victory. If the military had a rock star, Patton was it.

Several number combinations are noteworthy in this aspect of Patton’s mystique. His Soul (desire energies) and PE life output were both 5s. The number 5 is the energy of extravagance. However, there had to be something else to create such a domineering personality. That is number 1, the energy of the ego. Not only was Patton’s Nature (basic personality) a 1, but his 3rd Pinnacle (the center and core of his Life Matrix) is a 55-1, the most unique, original and independent of all. master numbers. This 1 energy combined with Patton’s Expression 6 (from his full birth name), to generate an EP or result 7 (1 + 6 = 7), giving Patton a sense of eccentricity. This characteristic of egocentric eccentricity can be marked as 55-1/7. Add all of this to the powerful 33-6/3 Influence Reality Imaging Master Set and the result was Patton.

Summary

General George Smith Patton, Jr. was one of America’s greatest and best known military generals, a living legend in his day, and arguably America’s most memorable World War II hero. His 44-8 Lifepath and 11-2/8 IR in his Challenges reflected his war management skills and his martial destiny. The 33-6/3 Crown Pinnacle and 2nd Pinnacle played an important role in the use of language and image. The Grand Pinnacle 55-1/7 was a prominent factor in its extravagance and eccentricity. Together, these numerical puzzle pieces created the fabric that helped shape Patton Mystique, making him one of the most intriguing personalities in history. ~ finished

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