Karma is a Sanskrit word translated as deed , or ‘action’. Karma is the law of moral consequences – the law of cause and effect an important part Of The Dao. Simply put, In physics, it shows us that every action gets an equal and opposite reaction so as in karma. For every we action will result in good or bad karma. Until you pay off your karmic debts and burn away your karma, plus learn to do karma free action by being detached from the outcome you will be stuck in samsara – the wheel of life in this world to repeat life again and again, through reincarnation – instead of reaching nirvana or enlightenment enabling you to escape and control the system.

There are three types of karma:

1. Sanchita (accumulated works):

Sanchita is the accumulated karma – all the good and bad actions – of the past incarnations that have followed through to the next (current) life. Sanchita is responsible for the body that you have in the current life, as well as the situations that you find yourself The karma can be modified by good deeds and pure thoughts. It is destroyed when enlightenment is attained.

2. Prarabdha (fructifying works):

Prarabdha is the part of the Sanchita karma that influences a person’s life in the present reincarnation. Prarabdha is a karmic template that cannot be avoided or changed. This karma is experienced in the current lifetime to work on. If the allocated Sanchita is worked on and dissolved in the current lifetime, then more past debts will surface to be worked on.

3. Kriyamana/Agama/Vartamana (current works):

Kriyamana is the instant daily karma that is being created in this lifetime for the future. The way our thought and actions in this life will affect our future life and incarnations. Kriyamana can be altered by correct attitude, as well as by particular rites.

“While some Kriyamana Karmas bear fruit in the current life, others are stored for enjoying in future births. Thus the Kriyamana Karma is classified into two sub-categories: Arabdha Karma – literally, ‘begun, undertaken;’ the Karma that is ‘sprouting’- and Anarabdha Karma – ‘not commenced; dormant’ or ‘The Seed Karma’. For example : Two persons commit a theft and one of them get caught – Arabdha Karma – and the other one got away – Anarabdha Karma. The thief who got caught, immediately starts to feel the effect of the cause or the reaction to his action; he gets caught and gets punished. The other robber who escaped, will have to experience, in this life or in a future one, the effect of this wrongful action.”

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