Karma

What is Karma?

https://www.facebook.com/DrTonyNader/videos/362414227907655/

Simply stated, Karma is an action and reaction. It's not so much 'bad' karma or 'good' karma, but every action has an implications.

It explains how an action we did in the past can impact us today (or in the future).

What can I do today to let Karma work for me in the future?

Point 1: HOW you perform the action (emotion, attitude, etc.) has an impact to the 'karmatic weight' of it. It's why two people can do the same thing but get different results.

Where is Karma stored? In our conscious.

Karma gets paid on the level of consciousness.

Tony Nader's point is that Meditation allows us to dive into deep into our consciousness and in doing utilize it

Don't make decisions when you are stressed.

Freewill?

32:22 The free will of today is the karma of tomorrow.

Yes - life is based the choices we make.

But Freewill is Cumulative. What you do today is going to impact tomorrow. You do have one, but it's cumulative. It may be 10:1 ratio!


Karma is the law of cause and effect in reality. It's the reaction that occurs from the action. It's our ability to influence a new chain of events. Karma exists in nature. You spill a cup of water outside, and in time, the elements dry up what has spilled. You could probably argue that the drought we are experiencing is karma. That is, our actions have in some way inadvertently caused the drought to occur. It's group Karma.

Group Karma vs. Personal Karma

Collectively, we have a powerful impact on how future events unfold. We see evidence of this everyday. Personally, we make decisions that impact how reality shows up for each us individually.

The key message is:

Our Karma is altered by our decisions. When we decide, we enter the field of karma. This is simply how our world functions.

The 3 doors of Karma

In order of subtleness, there are 3 ways we trigger Karma:

  1. Mind
  2. Speech
  3. Actions

The mind is the least subtle. Speech and words we write (which is a form of speech) have a greater impact. But the greatest trigger is action. The actions we take manifest a karmic effect. Karma is planting seeds and creates new possibilities (outcomes) in how those seeds germinate.

Karma Backlog

Nothing happens until we make time for it.

When you don't allow time to act, you create what I call a 'Karma Backlog.' This is reflected in the long list of unfinished projects, unopened emails, broken promises, and missed opportunities.