Bettering Your Past,
Inevitably human predicament and knowledgeable about the craft.
Adapting Your Future
Eyes are gazing into tomorrow's picture
What goes around comes around.
The sky isn't falling down
Don't hold onto a thoughtful frown
Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.
To give it to my loving friends to keep!
Weeping like candles their colored waxes agony of soul left a hollow outer form thorniest of problems
Life is full of problems
Smile and weep wondering life is serious or not
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. And in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you give.
Dependin' on the way you feel that you live.
In essence, karma tells us that whatever we do will come full circle to our doorstep—sometimes, somewhere.
Why me? Why not me? Why am I not healthy and robust
I never fussed
Destined to endure the worst in all seasons of life
Face countless challenges and strife.
There is no time like Spring,
When life’s alive in everything,
The sun so bright.
Life seems a dream,
no worries in sight
As thunderstorms boomed artilleries cracked
As insanity, brutality, calamity
Trickery, larceny,
Everything faced
And human activity assaulted
suffer unbearably,
With a terrible sense of finality
Thoughts flit like a fragile bird with wings broken
With griefs unspoken,
Taking a breath, feel like chokin',
In the fall Dreary weather and dreary days
Before melancholy winter arrives
Winter's sleep akin to death,
Just take a deep breath
Because I am December born
Stars can't be torn
The warrior can't be worn
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you—
because someday it will be done unto you.
The Sanskrit word karma means “act,” “action,” “word” or “deed.”
Suppression, wrong and greed
The law of karma as it is traditionally taught says that our thoughts, words and deeds—
positive and negative—
Create a chain of cause and effect, and that we will personally experience the effect of every cause we have
set in mSeasoSeason Karma, therefore, is our greatest ,
Returning to us the good we have sent to others.
It is also our greatest teacher, allowing us to learn from our mistakes.
The cycles of season are cycles of karma
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you—because someday it will be done unto you.
Any day of life could be last of life or liberty, so small pleasures were worthy of pursue
The Sanskrit word karma means “act,” “action,” “word” or “deed.”
These days are reigned by greed
The law of karma as it is traditionally taught says that our thoughts, words and deeds—positive and negative—create a chain of cause and effect, and that we will personally experience the effect of every cause we have set in motion.
How to shut off your emotions?
If you didn't you'll explode
moved onward in the track valiantly,
Imploding yet spirited in a revelry,
Karma, therefore, is our greatest promoter, returning to us the good we have sent to others.
If I had my druthers
Man is a museum of diseases,
I would like to all rare cancers to cease
A lodging of impurities ;
Fire burn all our uncertainties
Water wash away impurities
He comes today and is gone tomorrow,
He begins as building blocks from collapsing stars
Departs as the stardust returns to the Cosmos
While Karma is also our greatest teacher, allowing us to learn from our mistakes.
Because the law of karma gives back to us whatever we have sent forth as thought, word or deed,
Some think of it as punishment.
Not so. Values our greatest accomplishment
Think you were born the talents
Good things that have happened to you in life.
Now think about the limitations and challenges.
Both have to do with karma.
Karma simply tells us that what happens to us in the present is the result of causes we ourselves have set in action in the past—whether ten minutes ago or ten lifetimes ago.
The law of karma is the law of love.
There is no greater love than having the opportunity to understand the consequences of our action—or our inaction—so that our soul can grow.
Karma teaches us to love and to love and to love as no other process can.
It gives us hope.
As you creep and grope
Along the slope
Motivated by hope
Share all our unique talents on the stage of life in only one lifetime?
The passengers whose destiny in this life may have been cut short through this disaster will also be given another opportunity to live and complete their soul journey.
Buddha tells us: “What we are today comes from our thoughts of yesterday.... If a man speaks or acts with an impure mind, suffering follows him as the wheel of the cart follows the beast that draws the cart.... If a man speaks or acts with a pure mind, joy follows him as his own shadow.”
As thou hast done, it shall be done unto thee.
—book of Obadiah
At the scene of his arrest, Jesus reiterates the law of karmic retribution.
One of his disciples cuts off the ear of the high priest’s servant.
Jesus tells his disciple to put his sword away, “for all who draw the sword will die by the sword.”
Jesus then compassionately heals the man’s ear, blessing the servant and saving his disciple from reaping the karma of having harmed another.
The apostle Paul also sets forth the law of karma when he says,
“Every man shall bear his own burden.... Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.... Every man shall receive his own reward according to his own labor.”
Although you may not have had a memory of a past life, you’ve probably had the sense of being familiar with a person or place on first contact. Perhaps it was meeting someone for the first time and feeling that you were already old friends, or having an instantaneous and inexplicable loathing for someone who just walked into the room.
There is a good reason why we don’t usually remember our past. God pulls down the shade, so to speak, when we enter the birth canal. This curtain of forgetfulness is an act of mercy. We have an assignment for this life and we can’t really focus on more than one life at a time and make a go of it.
Now and then God may show us a frame or two from a previous life episode. When we are allowed to take a peek at our karmic book of life, it is for a purpose. It may be to quicken our souls to remember the commitments we made before coming into embodiment. Perhaps we need to understand the underlying cause of a negative episode from the past so we can have compassion, forgive and move on. But it’s not essential to know all about our past lives in order to deal with our karma and make spiritual progress, and we shouldn’t force it. If God wants us to know, he will show us, one way or another.
A past-life memory is not something to be taken lightly. When you become aware of a past life, the karma of that embodiment comes to the fore. You can no longer ignore it. You may even become burdened by the memories. So one reason the records of past lives should not be opened prematurely is that we’re not always ready to deal with them or with the karma they bring into our lives. That’s why God only lifts the veil on our past lives when there is something our soul must learn from that memory and we can handle it.
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