The Asian Age

Life’s perfectly fair

WHATEVER WE GET IS THE RESULT OF OUR ACTIONS. HOWEVER, IT IS POSSIBLE TO IMPACT OUR FUTURE KARMA BY CHANGING OUR THOUGHTS, WORDS AND DEEDS

- SUMA VARUGHESE The writer is the former editor-in-chief of Life Positive magazine and founder, facilitato­r of the Zen of Good Writing Course. Contact her at sumavarugh­ese @gmail.com

How many times have we groused to ourselves that life is unfair? Each time our sibling got the larger slice of cake, or our classmate got the award we were eyeing, or our colleague bagged the promotion we were working for, we sang that litany.

However, the truth is that life is absolutely, scrupulous­ly fair. We always get our just desserts. If we topped in school, married the spouse of our dreams or have a livelihood that we love, it is because we deserved it.

On the other hand, if everything we touch crumbles into disaster, and misery upon misery piles upon us, it is because we have deserved that too.

How? It is karma that creates the life we lead. What is karma? Karma is the sum total of the fruits of our past thoughts, words and deeds. None of us enter this world with a clean slate. We are the product of our samskaras, the conditioni­ng that coats us based on the lives we have led so far.

The sum total of all the karmas we have earned through all our innumerabl­e lives is called Sanchita karma. The contours of each lifetime is based on the karmas that have ripened and are ready to fruit. This is called our prarabdha karma, and will determine the key circumstan­ces of our present lives — such as the person we marry, the job we hold, when we die and so on.

Now here is where it gets interestin­g. Since our karma is caused by our past thoughts, words and deeds, we can positively impact our future karma by changing our thoughts, words and deeds. Karma is not a fatalistic concept at all. On the contrary, it tells us that we and only we, are responsibl­e for our lives and that we, and only we, can make it better. It is not fate, destiny, God or the devil that has power over us — we are damned or redeemed by our own selves! So quit brooding about the cards life has dealt you and determine instead to deal yourself a better hand. The best thing to do to get out of the hold of karma is to learn the lessons it holds for us. Illnesses, bad relationsh­ips, money problems, have all happened because of our belief systems and behaviours. Introspect and become aware of your own habitual thought and behavioura­l patterns. While you may need a little patience to void the circumstan­ces and situations your karma has thrust you into, I promise you that with patience, the capacity to endure and the willingnes­s to change, you will change your karma! A friend who was not on talking terms with her parents, has a great equation with them today. Another friend healed herself of what is considered to be an incurable disease by her dogged determinat­ion to pursue a cure, and the willingnes­s to look within.

I, myself, have healed from various ailments and relationsh­ip situations because of my commitment to work on myself.

So if you are not happy with your present life, just do the inner work and you will have (not immediatel­y but in the fullness of time) the life you long to have!

Oh, and guess what. If you think we are condemned to live out endless cycles of birth and death, thanks to the karma we keep on earning, life has given us one shot at freeing ourselves of the full baggage. And that is through enlightenm­ent. The moment we have an enlightenm­ent experience, our full store of sanchita karma earned through millions of lifetimes, burns up! All that we are left with is prarabdh karma, the conditioni­ng of our present lifetime. If we deal effectivel­y with that — we are home and free. What a jackpot!

The best thing to do to get out of the hold of karma is to learn the lessons it holds for us. Become aware of your behavioura­l patterns

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