
Glimpse After Glimpse,
Sogyal Rinpoche
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Does karma mean that the harm done to me in the past is unchangeable? If my old tapes rule my life, am I stuck with the karma I’ve acquired
over a lifetime? I am careful of how I look at a lifetime of negative words,
actions, and thoughts. Can flipping them to the positive be enough to turn my
karma around into a better direction? These things are hard to discern, depending
on how I perceive the past from where I sit in the present. I can see two
distinct ways to look at the problem of karma: one is to look at it loaded with
nostalgia. Nostalgia is a tricky thing. It can fool me into longing for the
joys and regretting the sorrows of the past. The other way of looking at karma is
a rigorously honest self-examination. Sometimes this takes help because I can
be blinded and side-tracked by nostalgia and get stuck in remorse. I have
witnessed far too many of the people I have worked with“triggered”
when they approach the Fourth Step of AA. The Fourth Step is the one where a
thorough inventory is taken and, on the Fifth Step, we share what is found there
with another human being. Sometimes these two steps ought to be done together.
with the help of someone who can be trusted and who is knowledgeable about how
to direct the karma so that it can be disposed of. One of my favorite people,
Big Al, used to say, “Take the bullet out of the gun and the trigger has no
power.” At any rate, it is damned near impossible to do this effectively on my
own and that is why most AA’s insist that we work the Steps with a trusted sponsor.
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