Today’s prompt from Long and Short Reviews is “Do you believe in karma?”
Not to sound like a medieval theologian, but sic et non. I don’t believe in Karma as a metaphysical force that responds to our behavior and creates consequences for us, like some disembodied deity. I do believe, however, that actions beget consequences: if we drink immoderately, we will suffer consequences like hangovers, physical accidents, and liver disease; if we cannot control our emotions or desires, we will create trouble for ourselves and others. If we are quick to anger, we will get in fights or suffer high blood pressure; if we are gluttonous or use food as emotional support, we will be prone to suffering obesity, diabetes, or metabolic syndrome; and if we are sexually profligate, we’ll be prone to bonding problems and STDs. If we persist in bad patterns of thinking — fixating on our woes, our limitations — we can dig ourselves into emotional holes, while focusing what we can change and taking action on it, even the littliest of things, can help us escape such a cyle. Our behavior often prompts the way people respond to us: someone who is outgoing and cheerful will generally be received well, someone who is cold and hostile will be greeted with the same. This is a generality, not a universality: a good person can be readily taken advantage of by a con-artist, and the same con-artists can put a perfect act of warmth and benevolence while being inwardly cruel. Personally, I was extremely socially avoidant in high school, but fortunately a few people looked past that and engaged with me anyway, a prime example of the fact that we sometimes get more than we deserve thanks to sheer human goodness.
Very well put.
Well thought out.
I think ‘Karma’ is what people would like to happen – but tends not to…. But then no ones keeping score, so….
Very nicely said
Yes, exactly. Reap = sow. I don’t believe in some metaphysical force doling out gifts and punishments, but for the most part you get what you put out. You said it better 🙂
Very much in agreement: I don’t believe there’s any metaphysical law or entity meting out just consequences, but I do believe that actions have their consequences.
Possibly because social avoidance in high school is (often) evidence of good qualities?