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So just curious has anyone got some good karma stories? e.g. has someone screwed you over only to find themselves scrwed over?
So just curious has anyone got some good karma stories? e.g. has someone screwed you over only to find themselves scrwed over?
No good deed goes unpunished.I gave up my seat on the bus for a sweet old lady once... Then I had to stand the rest of the ride... Does that count as Karma?
I gave up my seat on the bus for a sweet old lady once... Then I had to stand the rest of the ride... Does that count as Karma?
I gave up my seat on the bus for a sweet old lady once... Then I had to stand the rest of the ride... Does that count as Karma?
I gave up my seat on the bus for a sweet old lady once... Then I had to stand the rest of the ride... Does that count as Karma?
Nah, the problem is I don't believe Karma is a real thing. I've given up a bus seat plenty of times. I'm fit, I can stand for the 30 minutes it takes to get wherever I'm going. Older folks don't always have that luxury and having a seat can help them out a lot.The problem is, you don't see where the good karma that results from this. The immediate benefit is that the sweet old lady gets to rest while sitting. The delayed benefit, or one that is "invisible" (or should I say several) is that other people see that you are kind (30 years from now, a kid who saw you today will return the favor to you as an adult, remembering the kindness you extended to the lady years ago).
SOMETIMES, good karma can be finding that $10 bill on the street, but a better example is someone giving you a bowl of soup to take home to enjoy one day.
What happens after I gave up my seat is sometimes immediately dependent on giving up that seat (the person will thank me, or smile big, or you can see that glimmer in their eye and you know they know humanity isn't a complete loss yet). Other times what happens after, if the person didn't thank me (I don't need to be thanked) and then got mugged, it's independent of the seat completely. Being mugged wasn't at all related to me giving up a seat or their reaction. They were mugged because some rotten crook mugged them.
Blaming it on Karma takes some of the blame off the crook, and that's just wrong. It was the act of the criminal that triggered the crime, not because the victim did something bad sometime prior.
Then how if good action is to be done without expectation could good action result in finding a $10 bill later that same day?It's a little more complicated than that...
I forgot to mention that good action is to be done without expectation, but simply because it is the right thing to do, with no expectation or motives attached to the action.
If you read again the last posting I made, it explains why people who do good have something bad happen to them, while criminals get away with bad actions (the Financial Mob comes to mind - not one of the perps in charge of the activities have EVER gone to prison). This means that a person who does good now, might have committed something in the past life or life from 4-1000 lifetimes ago, and it is just now bearing fruit. The criminal committing crimes today and getting away with it apparently was a good person previously, and now he is reaping the fruit from that time. There are times when the person is caught relatively soon. That would be karma coming around very quickly, and some people, like those admitting on their death bed their crimes, may not experience the karma until another life.