The Ripples of Karma
Here I am starting off 2026 with an early blog article. I am now free to work from anywhere, since I no longer have to attend online meetings. Today, on this first working day of the year, I'm writing this from Komugi Cafe at Main Place, a cafe which I am quite fond of. Earlier this morning, I was up early for my morning walk in the park, where I listened to a lecture on the subject of karma by an academic who has studied it from a Hindu and Buddhist perspective.
I agreed with most of his views about karma. For example, the popular notion of karma is that it is some kind of cosmic law of retribution, and that is not exactly correct. Karma, or at least the way I choose to understand it, is just action and its effects.
There is no 'good' or 'bad' karma as such. The effects of one's thoughts and actions (which also originate from thoughts) are a complex interaction of many forces. But every tiny little thought has a consequence in the universe; at the very least, it will change the state of your mind. Neuronal connections are reinforced or disinhibited as a consequence of the thought. The type of change that happens is dependent on the existing state of your complex neural network.
The state of your mind now determines your next thought (and hence action). If you have been cultivating thoughts of hatred towards someone, the likelihood of you taking an action that will lead to negative consequences in your relationship with that person increases. You could have avoided it if you had dissolved your hatred at its conception. That's how you 'burn' karma. Samskaras are just latent states which you had cultivated over time.
How do you dissolve karma? That's where meditation comes in. When you meditate, you can observe all these subtle impressions of the mind. Everything that distracts you when you meditate consists of latent karmic forces, which you had inadvertently cultivated in the past. Understand their origin and allow them to dissipate their energy by channelling them into some positive action. If you sincerely forgive someone who has wronged you, that karma is immediately dissolved. End of story. You close the account. That's one way of 'burning' karma.
'Bad karma' only arises when many negative thoughts have accumulated and reinforced themselves sufficiently to snowball into some physical circumstance that causes you suffering. Do not rejoice too much over 'good karma', for it is also a transient state, which momentarily appears to bring you some pleasure. Gratitude is the right attitude to 'enjoy' your karmic windfall, lest it may inflate your ego, which again could lead you karmically astray. Let go, dissolve, recharge and redistribute. Let our actions and reactions even out the imbalances in the karmic continuum.
What about actions from our past lives? Doesn't the belief in karma also imply the belief in reincarnation and how we reap the consequences of our good or bad actions from previous lives? Well, I would suggest that understanding the effects of karma within your lifetime is already a good start. Whether we have past or future lives is a slightly different discussion, because it involves your grasp of what life is, and how you view yourself, your personality, with all your idiosyncratic likes and dislikes, in relation to the universe. As long as you see yourself as this limited being, you will always have past and future lives. We will leave this as the intriguing subject for a future blog article.
When you grasp the karma that is latent and manifesting at this very moment, the past and the future are immaterial. Learn to handle the karma of the moment, and you will see that all of existence is a continuum, and karma is nothing but its ripples.