Do you have bad karma? (DIANE S.)

When I think I can, I can.  When I think I can’t, I can’t.  It can be as simple as that.  For instance, If I doubt I can be successful at achieving a goal, chances are I won’t.  I have to believe with all my might that I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.  Sometimes, it can be fear of success or fear of failure.  Or both,  In any event, thinking right thoughts produces right actions.  Thinking bad thoughts, produces bad actions.  What I have to do is constantly be aware of what I am doing so that I am not hurting anyone or causing any problems.  I am here to help people, and to make this world a better place.  Wouldn’t you agree?

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Michael Norwood:

Sounds like a Wealthy Soul life to me, Diane!

Just remember, if we allow ourselves to be pulled in too many directions, there may be nothing left for ourselves. Our first duty is always toward our own balance – and onward from there!

Do you have bad karma? (KATE)

Wonderful responses. Couldn’t help but laugh.  No…not bad Karma just as there are no "bad" children…just naughty children or good children with bad behavior. 

However, there is some substance to "bad moon rising" which would dispel ANY Lunar calandar, eh?

Blessings,
Kate

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Michael Norwood:

Good point, Kate. There are periods when the "bad moon rising" happens more than "once in a blue moon."

I thank God for those "Harvest Moons"!

Do you have bad karma? (LEO)

After reading all the comments on Karma – good or bad it all boils down to one thing, "We are all exactly where we are supposed to be at this given point in time".  The only thing that is certain in life is "change", and just when you get used to that change (or become complacent) you get more change.
The universe has a way to keep us on our toe’s.  Love for one another is the driving force, if we as humans forget to love unconditionally.  This is the nature of some of us, to get wraped up in ourselves. The universe has a way to bring us to our knees, some people learn to be grateful, other’s never do.  Life is a mystery, if we knew the end of our story, would we read the book? I think not.  In our society of instant gratification we often want the end of the story before we have had a chance to learn and grow (which is the story). What would we have learned then? Not very much, I think.   Our great learning experiences are often associated with pain and hurt, that is unfortunate but, most do not learn from the "good times" it takes a force knocking us to our knees to make some pay attention.  A lot of things that are necessary "life" things, such as death are
often misunderstood as a bad thing or bad karma, hey! it will happen to us all, no matter what good or bad we have been delt.
We need to "get over it". So we can get on with the gratutide of being able to have a life such as ours here in a free country.
So many are not so blessed.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts, minds like yours are special Michael,  as you have the ability to make other people   "think" which is at a premium now days.
Leo

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Michael Norwood:

Thanks for the kind words, Leo.

Love your line, "if we knew the end of our story, would we read the book?"

Same goes sometimes for writing a book . . . !

Do you have bad karma?” (Terrie)

It seems that everything that could go wrong has gone wrong beginning the first of December.
While I could get depressed, I decided that it is just spirit cleaning up the old trash to make room for some wonderful new stuff.
Some of that new stuff is that both my daughter and my son are expecting in the coming year.
Yahoo!!!!!

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MN:

I admire your PMA (Positive Mental Attitude), Terri. What I personally find works the best for me when things don’t work out right is another form of PMA – Positive Meaningful ACTION.

Positive Mental Attitude is a difficult thing to maintain without Positive Meaningful Action. I personally will bet on the success of someone who is grumpy but who takes on Positive Meaningful Action over someone who just has a Positive Mental Attitude and is just hoping for the best.

Let your Positive Meaningful Action create your Positive Mental Attitude, and see how much easier it will be to keep a Positive Mental Attitude over the long haul!

(Blessings on the birth of your grandchild, which makes us forget almost all of our challenges!!!)

“Do You Have Bad Karma” (Karen)

Hi Michael, I’m new to your writings and to this blog. I just got home from a discouraging morning to find your email on bad karma v. good karma.  VERY TIMELY!  It put a smile on my face and some much needed encouragement in my soul.  I have a tendency to freak out about challenges in my life…fear I suppose of not surviving through them.  Perspective is a much needed tool in pressing through and persisting to the point of reaching ones goals in life.  Thanks again, and I look forward to getting those books I ordered soon! Encouragement was the way my perceived "bad" karma, turned into "good"!

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MN:

Dear Karen,

It starts with knowing that you need to look for ways to create the Good Karma out of supposed Bad Karma.

And you’re looking! 

Now, just follow through!

Beautiful blessings,
Michael

“Do you have bad karma?” (conclusion)

Dear Wealthy Soul,

In my newsletter 2 weekends ago, "Do You Have Bad Karma?," I
talked about the difference between people who have Good
Karma and those who have Bad Karma. (If you sometimes feel
you may have Bad Karma, you don’t want to miss reading this
at:

http://snipurl.com/b0e5.
and my responses to your responses at:
http://wealthysoul.typepad.com/wealthysoul

Few among us don’t occasionally go through bouts of
wondering if we have Bad Karma.

I actually began writing the "Do You Have Bad Karma?"
newsletter about 2 months ago after almost missing making it
for my Christmas season book promotions, which began in mid
September.

I was at a point of incredible frustration after:

1) My shopping cart of last year caused me thousands
of dollars of losses because of glitches in the
system (one of the most popular shopping carts on
the internet, mind you).

2) My new shopping cart – which was supposed to be
up and ready for functioning in early June as
contracted with the programmer I hired last March –
still wasn’t ready the week my promotions began.

3) My latest reprinting of books, which were also
supposed to arrive in June, still hadn’t arrived the
day my promotions began in September due to an
unheard-of three-in-a-row mis-printings of one of
the covers.

4) Two computers simultaneously doing the computer
thing, and crashing on me during the summer. This
wouldn’t have been so disastrous had the external
hard drive I had done my most recent back-up on
hadn’t chosen to make a perfect trio with its two
computer cousins. This put me about 4-5 additional
weeks behind in work.

5) The week before my promotions started, the
company who I had contracted with (also in that
magical month of June) to do fulfillment of orders
for me called me up to tell me that due to internal
problems, they couldn’t handle any new clients.

What this all meant was that:

a) I had no books to sell.

b) I had no shopping cart to sell them on if I had
had them

c) I had no way to fulfill the orders if I indeed
had the books and had the means for selling them!

And this all occurred the week my promotions were beginning
in September!

(Oh, did I fail to mention not having any electricity or
running water for 6 days after the first of 3
hurricanes hit where I’ve been staying in Florida?)

Now you have to know, I am a person who in business can only
be described as "a planner." I like everything ready and
tested and functioning months in advance of anything major.
And I’ve been very successful most of my life because of
this quality.

My philosophy is that there are enough things that happen in
business and in life where you need to be spontaneous, that
you are best off having a firm foundation beneath you to
springboard from.

So I thought I was in pretty good shape when last January I
decided to forego creating any of the audio series I had
planned, and to take the first half of the year to firm up
my business foundation. I felt this was necessary given the
ever-changing landscape of the internet, as well as the
wondrous but so far quite unperfected technology of it.

(Thus the reason those of us who make a good part our living
through the internet affectionately refer to it as "The
Wild, Wild Web").

So, indeed, reaching that point in September where
everything that could go wrong did (and a number of other
things I haven’t mentioned here), I was really pondering
this question:

"Do I just have bad karma, or something?"

And, I’m sure you have occasionally asked
yourself the same question with all you sometimes are faced.

Well, it really is kind of funny that the week I finally
sent you that newsletter (two weekends ago) happened to be
the most phenomenal week of book sales I have ever had!

Had I been selling my books through Amazon.com or
BarnesandNoble.com as opposed to on my own website, I would
have hit the bestseller list easily, and very likely been in
the Number One spot.

Besides the extraordinary response, the wonderful thing was
that other than my telephone lines being swamped, everything
worked with barely a hitch! This is something to be amazed
at on the internet.

So, do I have Bad Karma?

Or, perhaps, did I just have Bad Karma for the ten months
prior to September?

And are you really having Bad Karma with whatever you
yourself might be going through?

Now, I know there are many worse problems in the world than
a few temporary business-related ones. Several of you posted
beautiful responses on my web blog
( http://wealthysoul.typepad.com/wealthysoul ) sharing just
how difficult things can really get, and just how resilient
the human spirit can be.

I myself grew up with a sister who was slowly dying for 6
years of my childhood.

Was that bad Karma?

In addition to that, I’ve spent 7 more years of my 45 years
as an in-home caregiver for an ill or dying loved one.

Is that bad Karma, too?

Or is it that . . . the transformation of seemingly Bad
Karma into life’s greatest gifts and wealth the insight
people who truly have good Good Karma secretly share?

What do you think?

A big hug to you! (For instant Good Karma, pass it
on!)

Yours for the greatest wealth,
Michael

** Share and publish your response with thousands of people around the world in the response form at the bottom of this page.

Though I love hearing from you personally,
responding on this blog allows you to help someone
else out there who very likely needs to hear exactly
what you have to say.

 

Do you have bad karma? (Gerard)

I agree with most of what you said. But recently I have found that when I change the word "challenges" to the word "opportunities" I find myself in a different space. It’s like saying that Edison did not have failure before he perfected the light bulb…he just had "delayed success". Notice the shift already? It’s like the cup being half-full and half empty. It’s all mental attachment to words that we use to coin situations. "bad Karma" might mean an opportunity to do over something and do it better the next time. One of my calendars in my living room has a sentence of inspiration for each day of the year and oddly enough, the one for my birthday this year said "You can have everything in the world that you want if you are only willing to give up the belief that you can’t." I took that to heart…after all…that was the statement for my BIRTHDAY…and I felt a bit reborn after reading that. So, now you see that I prefer to do away with the "Bad Karma" idea…things are only bad if I personally attach the term "Bad" to them. I am where I need to be in my life doing what I need to do with my life at this very moment. Gerard

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MN:

Words are indeed powerful things, Gerard, and I like your idea of using the word "opportunities" in place of "challenges" or "Bad Karma."

But, then again, I’ve always liked the word "challenges" more than the notion of "Bad Karma" or "problems."  It at once doesn’t deny the very human feelings of sometimes being overwhelmed, yet the word shifts us into the space of doing what the saying says we’re supposed to do with challenges . . . mainly, "rise to them."

But, for the majority of times, when the "challenges" are coming at a nice easy one-at-a-time pace, indeed, I think I’ll try out switching to the word you suggest.

(Better try it on myself first, though. I may end up with a bloody lip otherwise. . .)

Do you have bad karma? (Lester)

Dear Michael –

I am answering directly as opposed to blogging as I just can’t get into yet another dimension of cyber communication.  Email and websites are more than enough things to have to check.  The postings from professional, political, and personal boards fill up my box daily making it hard enough to give appropriate time and consideration.

That being said, I always like to respond to your thoughts and questions.

Had you not made your own list of things for which you are grateful (and responding on Thanksgiving makes this richer), I would have pointed some out to you as examples of your good karma.  I think many people would look at your life and see the blessings and perceive the challenges as merely small bumps along the way.

Bumps and bruises never feel the same to anyone else.  "I feel your pain" can only, be at best, a metaphor or an expression of empathy and concern.    Perhaps in your hands on healing work, you actually did fell others pain, but that is rare.

We automatically yell out something when we stub our toe.  Why shouldn’t we rail against the "karmic" bumps.  But toe-stubbing doesn’t cripple us.

My brother, who is wonderfully successful in most areas of his life has a fascinating way of dealing with "problems".  He says, "Problems — by definition — have solutions.  So you try things.  If you discover after some reasonable effort that there is no solution, it’s not a problem.  It’s a fact of life.  Move on to the next thing."  He really is able to live out through this.  It explains a lot about his success and why I’m the brother who takes an antidepressant.

On the other hand, I was talking to someone just the other day and telling him that periodically — most often during a moment at work — I look around and truly experience myself in my life as "wonderful."  In the truest sense of the word, I am struck full of wonder and feel fully how lucky I am to be me in this moment.  My karma feels great!

I have often asked myself if it is, in fact, some karmic curse that I have not achieved much of what I would have hoped to accomplish personally and professionally and still make the effort to achieve.  There are days when I feel so discouraged that it "feels" like the effort is simply useful since "I’m never going to get what I want anyhow."

In my saner moments, I look at that two extremes of my experience — that I am blessed with a wonderful life — and that I am cursed to never really get what I truly desire.  Then it is somewhat clearer that the glass is neither half-empty nor half-full.  That in order to be one, it must simultaneously be the other and it is in experiencing the totality that I can embrace the richness of my life.

We all know the happy idiots who blithely toss off catastrophe because they are just too stupid to see how awful it is.  Or the kvetches who take pleasure in one-upping with their problems.  (I had a friend who complained to me about something unpleasant at work when I called to tell him of my other brother’s death.  To which I said, "You win.  You have the absolute worst life on the planet.  No one can ever come close to the sheer misery you experience every day.  I’m sorry.")

A long winded response to finding some agreement with your notion that how we respond is our own experience of karma.

But I think there’s more.  I think people who do really awful things create a bad karma for themselves.  It may not manifest in any visible way.  The liars, cheats and thieves often gain much visible success and even seem quite happy with it.  (Wouldn’t we love to think that underneath it they are suffering with guilt knowing of their misdeeds?)  But I do think that in order to have that, the "bad karma" is that it closes them to compassion and empathy — the very things which make us human.  They lose a moral compass that makes for a civilized world.  And their bad karma is often their legacy.

And, I think there is mystery.  That we don’t know that this "challenge" will teach us the valuable lesson if we persevere through it.  It may be a shitty hand and there is nothing more to it than the luck of this draw.

Much of our discomfort comes from not having the answers — not to the challenges and not to the big questions.  That’s why the happy idiot remains cheerful.  He doesn’t even ask the questions.  But for most of us, suffering is real, and we want to believe there is meaning in it.  In our most despairing moments, we feel we suffer in a meaningless void.

At the end of Chekhov’s play, The Three Sisters, the characters are trying to make some sense of suffering and the oldest has come to believe that we can never really answer that biggest of questions.  "If only we knew.  If only we knew.  If only we knew."

So my even longer winded response is:  I don’t know.  But I do believe that in asking the questions, in the search itself, and in sharing with others, we find at least some meaning, some times.  And that is very good karma indeed.

Ever fondly,

Lester

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MN:

You’ve hit on so many great points, Lester, I don’t know where to start. In fact, you may be the only one of the 50+ responses I’ve received to actually have answered the question I posed in the newsletter asking what you do to create Good Karma (ie. creating a "list." {Stay tuned for an upcoming newsletter regarding this}).

And I love your protrayal of your brother’s approach to life:

"Problems — by definition — have solutions.  So you try things.  If you discover after some reasonable effort that there is no solution, it’s not a problem.  It’s a fact of life.  Move on to the next thing."

Dang! Where can I read his blog?

Do you have bad karma? (Kate)

I am compelled to respond to the messages in your November 20 newsletter. Oh, how correct you are!  I have long subscribed, personally, that the Universe unfolds as it should and that there are no coincidences.  For ever so long, when I hear somebody say "what next" I MUST tell them, DON’T SAY THAT!! because this Universe WILL send you what you ask for.

Sparing you the gory details I will say that I have had and still have, some extreme personal challenges in my life. Right now, I have some serious decision making to contemplate about the future course of this life of mine, but I embrace these challenges (albeit, not always lovingly 🙂 ) knowing that from this will come extreme growth and I trust, a healthier and more whole ME.

After all, it is all about the journey, isn’t it?

Blessings on this holiday and may we all continue to give Thanks and Giving.

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MN:

I enjoy the way you put it Kate: "I embrace these challenges (albeit, not always lovingly 🙂 )"

There is a certain holiness yet down-to-earthness in this approach.

And, in a way, when we’re present with those very human emotions, we can even enjoy our own "grumpiness", no?

(By gosh, we may be doing it right now!)

Do you have bad karma? (Lise)

I started responding to you after the first paragraph – You do NOT have Bad Karma – All is as it should in life!

I believe you are a spiritual being having a human experience and since you are made by the Source – who is perfect, you are not a mistake and neither is your life and what occurs… one may not always know why but one can always be sure that its exactly as it should be!

You may not have sent the info in the time frame you had planned but when I get emails from you – its soooo timely that its perfect!  So the timing is as it should, dictated by the Source of all good!

And after finishing to read the rest of your email… I can only say that my belief has changed greatly over the year in regards to the existence of Karma… in fact I truly believe that we are perfect beings living a human experience to learn to be on purpose and all that occurs, occurs to put me on purpose and its all good, great, necessary and exactly as it should – really beautiful – my attitude towards all that I experience is definitely how I influence many outcomes! You may want to call it good Karma, I call it being on purpose.

Lise
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MN:

Yes, Lise! That’s perfect! –

"Being on purpose." A great way to describe how we transform our  supposed Bad Karma into Good Karma. Or, said in a slightly different way – the way we transform our greatest challenges into Higher Good.

And isn’t that the "purpose" of our challenges, after all? To provide us the motivation to keep forging ahead, and ultimately discover that we are much greater – much more unlimited – than we ever thought we could be?

Sounds like a Divine Plan to me!