kar·ma /ˈkɑrmə/
noun
1.
Hinduism, Buddhism. action, seen as bringing upon oneself inevitable results, good or bad, either inthis life or in a reincarnation: in Hinduism one of the
means of reaching Brahman.
2.
Theosophy. the cosmic principle according to which each person is rewarded or punished in oneincarnation according to that person's deeds in the previous incarnation.
3.
fate; destiny. Synonyms: predestination, predetermination, lot, kismet.
4.
the good or bad emanations felt to be generated by someone or something: Lets get out of here. Thisplace has bad karma.
Karma is a concept that is a part of a variety of Eastern
religions. It makes up the laws of cause
and effect. In the religions of which
karma is a part, one’s deeds and actions affect all incarnations of one’s
soul. That which one has done in a
previous life affects the current life, and so on.
Basically this: What
you do in one life (to either yourself or others) will carry to your next
life.
Karma is central to Hinduism, Buddhist, and Jainism although
the concept of karma does differ between these religions. For this post, I am not going to focus on
Eastern religions. Instead, I am going
to discuss the New Age theosophy of karma and my thoughts and feelings on it.
To the New Ager, the Pagan, the Neo-Pagan and others, this
is rather like the threefold law. Simply
put, What goes around, comes around.
This is something that I grew up hearing from my Western
family members. Any time anyone did
something selfish, mean, nasty, or just plain douchey, either my grandmother or my
mother would say, “What goes around comes around.”
For a while, I sort of believed it. I would still like to, but I call bullshit
right now. Considering all that has
fucked up in my life, I’d be led to believe I had been Hitler in a past life or
something, while some of the dicks I have encountered must’ve been akin to Joan
of Arc. Nope, not gonna fly with me.
Do I believe in reincarnation? I think it’s plausible, or at least as
plausible as anything else concerning what happens to us after death. Do I believe bad things can come back to a
person? Maybe, but is there some sort
of cosmic guarantee? Not that I’ve
seen.
I’ve seen plenty of people get away with being complete and
total pricks their entire lives, seemingly with no negative consequences. “But, Nar,” you might be saying, “you don’t
know where they are or what’s happening to them now.”
True, I do not. And
if I can’t see it, I don’t know that ANYTHING is happening.
“Patience, young grasshopper”, you might be thinking. Pfffft!
I think that the concept of karma is – at least in this
context – too close to that of sin. I
read a really great post from last year’s Pagan Blog Project that discussed
this very idea. I wish I could remember
the name or address of the journal.
As Christians (and many of us were at one point), we are
told that we will pay for our sins, either by going to hell or maybe by coming
down with a nasty case of boils all over our bodies or something. Who
knows. I never really paid *that* much
attention.
Again, I call bullshit.
Why? Just because I don’t have
absolute proof? Well, that and the fact
that I honestly don’t think the Divine is so invested in our puny little human
wheelings and dealings that It feels like punishing us for shit. Plus, I don’t believe in sin. There are some things that shouldn’t be done
because of that whole Golden Rule thing, but there are a whole lotta people who
don’t think about that concept, either.
Why do bad things happen to good people and good things to
crappy people? The way I look at it is,
we all get a turn. Some days you’re the
pigeon. Other days, you’re the statue. I
think the universe shits on each of us in turn, but through OUR HUMAN
ACTIONS. For example, child molesters don’t always fair
too well in prison.
I think that the concept of karma, cause and effect, good
stuff and bad stuff coming back to us, lies within. One reason I think that is the fact that the
goddamned piece of shit maggot fucker who poisoned my parents’ dog is still
alive and well. If I want results, I’d
have to get those results myself.
Believe me when I say I have many, many plans that I would absolutely
love to execute, but going to jail for that scummy son of a whore isn’t worth
it.
What you send out into the universe might come back to bite
you in the ass, but not because of karma.
If you try to cast a big, bad, boogey spell on someone and they find out
and come and punch you in the crotch, there you go. There’s your karma. The
only way being an asshole is going to affect your current life is if you get
caught and someone decides to do something about it. Fortunately for many assholes in this world,
most people are pretty damned apathetic.
Slacktivism is the new thing these days.
No one wants to go in for a good old-fashioned ass-whooping because then
WE’D get punished for that. Punished by the po-po, not karma.
Our crappiness is answered for either in this life or not at
all. Don’t put all of your eggs in one
basket. We don’t even know if anything
does happen after death, so there’s no guarantee that a child molester or
warmongering dickface politician will get his or her comeuppance later.
Act. If someone cuts
you off in traffic, give that asswipe the finger and don’t worry about coming
back as a cockroach in your next life.
If someone kicks your dog, you go rip that person’s face off and dance
on it.
Karma isn’t going to get you
satisfaction.
A little glove-slap, on the other hand…
2 comments:
A big round of applause to you, madam, for correctly recognizing that karma is consequences in the present life due to actions in a past life. Yes, and... three gold stars. And a cookie.
And a fun post to read, too; thanks for sharing :)
I have enjoyed following your blog and would like to offer you a Liebster Award! Check out my post for more details: http://hedgedpaths.wordpress.com/2014/05/26/liebster-award/
This is karma for being an awesome blogger.
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