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What is "KARMA" ?Why do the innocent suffer? Why does God permit evil?
Is God helpless to act or does he choose not to? And if He
chooses not to act, does that mean he is cruel? Or merely
indifferent?
Human suffering is one of religion's most compelling
mysteries: Why do the innocent suffer? Why does God permit evil?
Is God helpless to act or does he choose not to? And if He
chooses not to act, does that mean he is cruel? Or merely
indifferent?
Vedanta takes the problem out of God's court and places it
firmly in our own. We can blame neither God nor a devil. Nothing
happens to us by the whim of some outside agency: we ourselves
are responsible for what life brings us; all of us are reaping
the results of our own previous actions in this life or in
previous lives. To understand this better we first need to
understand the law of karma.
The word "karma" comes from the Sanskrit verb kri, to do.
Although karma means action, it also means the result of action.
"KARMA" means "action." Every action or thought determines a
reaction. In the physical world, the weight of a body creates an
opposite force in the ground. At the emotional level, our
attitude toward someone (or something) is, consciously or not,
reflected back, the other person having the tendency to behave
exactly according to our feeling towards him/her. At the mental
level this is the well known dynamic interaction between the
commanding conscious mind and the executing subconscious
mind.
In YOGA Tradition, KARMA has a much deeper meaning. In this
vision, KARMA is the accumulation of our past actions. These past
actions (triggering actions) are causes which determine other
actions (triggered reactions) in exact accordance with the charge
of the corresponding past actions.
Each of our physical, emotional or mental movements is the
fruit of causes coming from the whole Universe and has its
repercussions in the whole Universe.
For instance, if you do a bad or good action toward someone,
this triggers a reaction which will be equally bad or good, and
which will be directed toward yourself. In this way, you
experience the happiness or suffering that you have produced to
other living beings. The paramount value of this subtle mechanism
is that we learn and accumulate a certain ineffable wisdom that
pushes us toward becoming good and perfect. Of course, this is a
very simple and mechanical explanation; what really happens has a
complexity and profoundness that overcomes even the most
imaginative mind.
KARMA is the storage of our actions, recorded with exactitude
in a special memory. These recordings are like time bombs that
will explode in the future. The sight of an object, the thinking
of a thought, the performance of an act, even though very
transitory, leave a complex trace in the Cosmic Memory (AKASHA),
which lasts beyond time, and leaves also an imprint in the
subconscious mind. This subconscious imprint is called SAMSKARA
(dynamic impulse). The character of a man, his moral or mental
status, his "talents", his "likes" and "dislikes", all are
determined by his SAMSKARAS, which are the product of his KARMA
(past actions). The SAMSKARAS transmigrate from incarnation to
incarnation, being never lost. They act like seeds that will
develop according to a specific pattern, which characterize each
of them and which is closely related to the charge of the action
that produced them.
KARMA has three levels. The first level is the level of the
past actions that are waiting to produce a reaction. This is
called SANCHITA KARMA, the latent KARMA.
The second level is the level of the past actions whose
reactions are fully manifesting, being responsible for our
present life and creating its circumstances. This is called
PRARABDHA KARMA, active or mature KARMA.
The third level is the level of the actions which will be
triggered in the future by our present actions. This is called
future KARMA.
Considering the temporal sequence of actions, each action has
a feedback effect (going backward in time and therefore affecting
all the latent KARMIC seeds that lay in wait) and a direct effect
(going forward in time).
The result of an action is greatly influenced by associated
ideas. When, for instance, a person practices certain austerities
and desires that their fruit should go to the other person for
whom he performs them, it is the other that gets the fruit, and
not the performer.
If you understand the Law of KARMA, you will realize that
there is no destiny besides the human will. Everybody gets
exactly what he/she deserves. This is a Cosmic and Inflexible
Law. There is a perfect justice, even when our limited human
understanding "sees" an "injustice". The human beings build their
own destiny through their actions, thoughts and intentions. If
these have a positive charge, the destiny will be positive. If
the actions, thoughts or intentions have a predominantly negative
charge, the destiny will be negative. Notice that you do not
necessarily have to do bad things to others for having a bad
destiny: people usually do bad things to themselves, and this is
enough for creating a negative KARMA. An important thing here is
the intention. Remember, God or other Superior Cosmic Entities
never punish a creature for being "bad" and never reward it for
being "good".
We live in a mysterious world, in which we, with our conscious
and subconscious mind and belief system, are permanently creating
the "reality" in which we live, manifesting that enigmatic power
called MAYA SHAKTI, through which we see the world not the way it
is, but the way we want it, consciously or not, to be. This is
the same power that the Supreme Being uses to create and manifest
the worlds, and to hide Itself from them. You have to see and
understand deeply this fundamental truth before attempting to
understand the law of KARMA.
Counter-acting latent KARMAS
Now, we come to the idea of "changing the destiny". Generally
speaking, the ordinary human being supports passively and
unconsciously the consequences of his KARMAS (actions). In this
state of consciousness, he/she unconsciously generates other
KARMAS (actions), which trigger correspondent reactions, and so
on. Apparently, this vicious circle has no end.
The YOGA Tradition puts forth clearly that the human being has
the power and the right to change his destiny and find an exit
from this vicious circle. This is called "escaping the wheel of
reincarnations". KARMA itself is called "The Wheel of Eternal
Returning".
We have seen that the state of KARMA, when it is asserting
itself or is about to assert itself, is called mature KARMA. Once
this state is reached, nothing and nobody can stop it from
running its course, nothing can impede its fruition.
As opposed to this, there is the other state in which, the
circumstances being extremely unfavorable for its growth, a KARMA
remains dormant (latent KARMA). The fruition of such a KARMA only
can be destroyed by a counter-action such as charity, spiritual
practice, etc. The preventive measures against the fruition of
latent KARMA are like inoculation to safeguard a person against
the attack of a certain disease. And just as inoculation, though
effective if it be done long before the attack, is yet useless
when the attack has come, i.e., when the KARMA has attained
maturity. The mature KARMA is like a boulder slipped from the top
of a mountain, which knows no obstruction and must have its
course till it reaches the flat land.
The destruction, or burning, of KARMA is one of the most
essential antecedent conditions of enlightenment. But this is
neither the only condition, nor is this in itself
enlightenment.
The main purpose of the Law of KARMA is learning. If, through
understanding and consciously changing your life, you learn a
lesson, the KARMA that was supposed to teach you that particular
lesson through suffering, is automatically burned.
Remember that KARMA is the main cause of our existence in this
world. An individual is not only affected by his own KARMA, but
also by that of the community or race to which he belongs
(collective KARMA). A good or bad KARMA is equally undesirable
for he who yearns to liberation, because it enchains the human
being on the Wheel of Eternal Returning. In YOGA vision, KARMA is
"good" when it permits the human being to realize the spiritual
evolution, and it is "bad" when the opposite is the case. "Bad"
KARMA means that a lot of lessons have to be learned; "good"
KARMA means enough lessons were learned, so the human being can
start the conscious work of inner growth. The advanced YOGIN
yearns to eliminate any kind of KARMA. Only in this way will he
be totally free of any links with the inferior levels of
consciousness, being able to merge continuously into the Eternal
Bliss of the Supreme Consciousness. From then on, all his Actions
will be free of any KARMIC charge. These actions can trigger
reactions, but only if the YOGIN desires so. An enlightened
master has complete control over the fruition of his KARMAS
(actions).
The ageless teachings of the KARMA YOGA system are the
following:
(1) Not even for a moment can a human being be without action.
Therefore inaction or refraining from action must NOT be the aim
of a yogi. Detached and consecrated action is much superior than
inaction.
(2) Certain actions are mandatory and therefore have to be
done but in a state of perfect detachment and consecrating their
fruit to the Supreme Consciousness (God).
(3) We must neither desire nor be afraid of the fruits
(results) of our detached actions. We must consecrate these
fruits to God. Consecration means offering the fruits of an
action to God in a state of humbleness, it means acting for the
love of God. This inner attitude of consecration implies a
profound respect and attention for the action that is being
performed, and a perfect detachment from its fruit. Consecration
implies a higher responsibility, because now the quality of the
action is a measure of the degree of love for God and of
communion with the Cosmic Harmony. In the light of this teaching,
no action is to be considered as being without importance,
negligible or incompatible with the role we THINK (but
don´t know through direct experimentation) we have to play
in this life.
(4) We must never be attached to action itself.
(5) We must never consider ourselves as being the authors of
our actions. We must keep in mind that God is the one who acts
through us. Therefore, BEFORE starting an action (this detail is
essential !!), invoke with fervor the presence of God and offer
Him in a state of humbleness both that action and its fruits.
(6) Any action realized in the spirit of KARMA YOGA (i. e.,
respecting the above five precepts) does not create any KARMIC
chains.
KARMA YOGA makes a clear distinction between:
(a) The INTENT of an action (the state of mind at the time of an
action);
(b) The action itself;
(c) The fruits of the action;
Out of these three elements, only the intent creates new KARMA
(enchains us to the Wheel of Birth and Death). To avoid this, the
intent has to be detached and consecrated to God.
Whatever you identify yourself with, controls you; you control
whatever you dis-identify yourself with.
Here, "identification" has to be understood as
ego-involvement; therefore, the lower the level of
ego-involvement, the higher the level of satisfaction.
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