Do you believe in karma?
Karma is basically "You do something mean or bad, and something bad will happen to you", kind of like "what goes around, comes around". Share your favourite karma incident too if you like!
Mine: My science teacher was getting all mad at the class, like using a rude tone and getting very impatient, but mostly he anger was directed at me. She was in a bad mood because I hadn’t done my homework from the day before since I’d been sick, but she forgot and insisted she was right in believing I was there. So she goes to use the Overhead Projector, and it blows up (the light bulb shattered, there was a flash of light, and smoke was everywhere).
Yes, I believe in Karma. Jesus taught Karma. He said "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" So, do good so good can come unto you.
I need help with materials relating to my science project? Urgent!?
absolutly.
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YES
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There are better brands of coffee.
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Do you believe santa claus wont give you gifts if your bad?
People just say it to scare you from doing something wrong, thats all…
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yup
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I believe the mind punishes it self if it does something it finds morally wrong.
ADD: In other words, you subconsciously put yourself in a bad situation to relieve guilt over something you did that was wrong. That is Karma.
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Yes
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Comeuppance is never guaranteed.
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I do
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Yeah Karma is life!
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i believe in karma
just like everyday little things like helping someone or just doing a good deed.
i feel like if i do things like that then good htings will happen to me
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no it does not. not at all. people have done some very bad things and live life happy. for example some kings can do what ever they want and nothing bad ever happens to them
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Good and bad things happen to our lives all the time.
The thing is, Karma-believers, after doing something bad, immediately start expecting something bad in the coming future, and through the natural process of good-bad when the bad consequence take place, they attribute it to Karma effects.
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Yes.
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Yes! I really believe in karma…
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Not really I’ve done lots of evil stuff and nothing bad has happened to me
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I consider it as a fair coincidence.
We notice coincidences only AFTER they happen, so Karma can’t be that reliable.
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no…
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Yes, I believe in Karma. Jesus taught Karma. He said "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" So, do good so good can come unto you.
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Karma would be nice if it was real BUT too many people get away with murder.
Karma: is only justice without the satisfaction (Way of the Gun).
~
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No.
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THE BUDDHA WAS A MISOGYNIST
The Buddha’s Prediction
Ananda sat at the Buddha’s side and argued on behalf of the ordination of women. The Buddha continued to refuse the request. Finally, Ananda asked if there was any reason women could not realize enlightenment and enter Nirvana as well as men.
The Buddha admitted there was no reason a woman could not be enlightened. "Women, Ananda, having gone forth are able to realize the fruit of stream-attainment or the fruit of once-returning or the fruit of non-returning or arahantship," he said.
Ananda had made his point, and the Buddha relented. Pajapati and her 500 followers would be the first Buddhist nuns. But he predicted that allowing women into the Sangha would cause his teachings to survive only half as long – 500 years instead of a 1,000.
Unequal Rules
Further, according to the canonical texts, before the Buddha allowed Pajapati into the Sangha, she had to agree to eight Garudhammas, or grave rules, not required of men. These are:
The Eight Heavy Duties are:
1. A nun, even if she has been ordained for 100 years, must respect, greet and bow in reverence to the feet of a monk, even if he has just been ordained that day. (Monks pay respect to each other according to their seniority, or the number of years they have been ordained.)
2. A nun is not to stay in a residence where there is no monk. (A monk may take an independent residence.)
3. A nun is to look forward to two duties: asking for the fortnightly Uposatha (meeting day), and receiving instructions by a monk every fortnight. (Monks do not depend on nuns for this obligatory rite, nor are they required to receive any instruction.)
4. A nun who has completed her rains-retreat must offer herself for instruction to both the community of monks and to the community of nuns, based on what is seen, what is heard and what is doubted. (Monks only offer themselves to the community of monks.)
5. A nun who is put on probation for violating a monastic rule of Sanghadisesa must serve a 15-day minimum probation, with reinstatement requiring approval from both the monk and nun communities. (The minimum for monks is a five-day probation with no approval by the nuns required for reinstatement.)
6. A woman must be ordained by both monks and nuns and may be ordained only after a two-year postulancy, or training in six precepts. (Men have no mandatory postulancy and their ordination is performed by monks only.)
7. A nun may not reprimand a monk. (A monk may reprimand a monk, and any monk may reprimand a nun.)
8. From today onwards, no nun shall ever teach a monk. However, monks may teach nuns. (There are no restrictions on whom a monk may teach.)
Nuns also have more rules to follow than monks. The Vinaya-pitaka lists about 250 rules for monks and 348 rules for nuns.
Historical Buddha, Misogynist?
The Rev. Patti Nakai of the Buddhist Temple of Chicago tells the story of the Buddha’s stepmother and aunt, Prajapati. According to the Rev. Nakai, when Pajapati asked to join the Sangha and become a disciple, “Shakamuni’s response was a declaration of the mental inferiority of women, saying they lacked the capacity to understand and practice the teachings of non-attachment to self.” This is a version of the story I haven’t found elsewhere.
The Rev. Nakai goes on to argue that the historical Buddha was, after all, a man of his time, and would have been conditioned to see women as inferior. However, Pajapati and the other nuns succeeded in breaking down the Buddha’s misunderstanding.
During his lifetime, the historical Buddha was plagued by a chronic misogyny; of this, in the face of numerous documents, there can not be slightest doubt. His woman-scorning sayings are disrespectful, caustic and wounding. “One would sooner chat with demons and murderers with drawn swords, sooner touch poisonous snakes even when their bite is deadly, than chat with a woman alone”, he preached to his disciples, or even more aggressively, “It were better, simpleton, that your sex enter the mouth of a poisonous snake than that it enter a woman. It were better, simpleton, that your sex enter an oven than that it enter a woman”. Enlightenment and intimate contact with a woman were not compatible for the Buddha. “But the danger of the shark, ye monks, is a characteristic of woman”, he warned his followers. At another point, with abhorrence he composed the following:
"Those are not wise
Act like animals
Racing toward female forms
Like hogs toward mud
Because of their ignorance
They re bewildered by women, who
Like profit seekers in the marketplace
Deceive those who come near"
Buddha’s favorite disciple, Ananda, more than once tried to put to his Teacher the explicit desire by women for their own spiritual experience, but the Master’s answers were mostly negative. Ananda was much confused by this refractoriness, indeed it contradicted the stated view of his Master that all forms of life, even insects, could achieve Buddhahood. “Lord, how should we behave towards women?”, he asked the Sublimity — “Not look at them!” — “But what if we must look at them?” — “Not speak to them” — “But what if we must speak to them?” — “Keep wide awake!”
This disparaging attitude toward everything female is all the more astounding in that the historical Buddha was helped by women at decisive moments along his spiritual journey: following an almost fatal ascetic exercise his life was saved by a girl with a saucer of milk, who taught him through this gesture that the middle way between abstinence and joie de vivre was the right path to enlightenment, not the dead end of asceticism as preached by the Indian yogis. And again it was women, rich lay women, who supported his religious order (sangha) with generous donations, thereby making possible the rapid spread of his teachings.
http://buddhism.about.com/od/buddhisthistory/a/buddhistwomen.htm
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That does not seem that bad. Projectors are bound to break sometime.
Usually karma must be seen in the perspective of more than one lifetime. People can get away with lot’s in one lifetime but somewhere down the path, perhaps 20 lifetimes later they will have to pay big time. That’s why there’s very good people who have very bad things happen to them-i know people will hate me for saying this, and i would feel bad when/if something horrible happen as i earned it from past incarnation. But we have all been bad and good, and all have bad and good karma.
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