Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Cause and Effect

'Cause and effect' is quite a universal understanding and can be found in many religions as well. For example, 'reap what you sow' and 'kamma' are commonly used in our daily conversations. What I intend to highlight here today is the concept of 'kamma' and its importance in this life, not the next nor the previous but THIS life.

I noticed that among Buddhists, each time when the subject of kamma appears, somehow the discussion links to past lives and future lives. While I subscribe to this concept too, but hey, wait a minute, don't causes happen in this life and effects received in this life? To me, it must and it will. I intend to discuss this today because otherhwise, the discussion of kamma becomes 'philosophical' as it talks about past and future lives and such discussions may create an impression that focusing on good kamma is for the next life and implies that it doesn't help them NOW.

The law of cause and effect simply means that what you have done has an effect to yourself. The effect may come immediately or later depending on the conditions for it to happen. When I say 'later', it could mean 5 minutes later, 1 year later or 50 years later, all depending on the conditions for the cause to take effect. More importantly, kamma doesn't necessarily mean 'good' or 'evil' outcomes. It is merely outcomes due to the actions (causes)taken earlier.

If you think I am trying to make the concept 'kamma' as mundane as possible, yes, you are right. The intention is to take out the 'hocus pocus' and 'mysticism' out of it so that we can see its working in everyday life.

Here are some examples:
If you leave your cup in the basin after drinking some sweet beverage, you will likely see ants on the cup by the evening.
If you drive more than the speed limit, you will get a speeding ticket.
If you give your boss a tight slap, you will get a warning letter.

See, kamma can be as mundane as the above examples. It is merely about 'what you do has an effect on you' when the conditions are right for the effect to manifest.

Now, in Chinese, kamma is called 因果(cause and effect). But actually an important word is missing which is 缘。缘 simply means conditions. So, 'cause and effect' should actually be written as cause-condition-effect (因缘果).

So for the mundane examples I have given earlier, if the cup is immersed in water at the basin, the ants will not visit because the condition for them to reach the cup is missing. If the driver speeds in an area where there is no speed trap, he will not get a ticket. If you apologize immediately to your boss after slapping him, you may not get a warning letter. All these extra steps are actions that create conditions.

So, the way forward for all sinners, good Samaritans, potential saints is the same. Regardless of what you have done, your choice and only choice to improve is to do good. The effects of the good deeds will create either good effect or create the good conditions so that the past bad actions will not take effect.

By the way, the positive conditions are also partly created by our actions. They are the effects of our actions. In other words, conditions are themselves efffects!

4 comments:

happy.girl5578 said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
happy.girl5578 said...

Kamma sounds practical and right in a way you explain it. Well, i agree there is a cause, then there is an effect. Just that, i still subscribe to the idea that effect can come back to us in any future point of time, which we manage to see and experience it now (present life) or not (says future life). It just a matter of time, some process may need longer time to show result...

May not be same to yours, but my way to see the kamma is, it is like 'saving'. Whatever we have now is what we saved from the past, regardless good or bad kamma. Again, what we do now is to save for the future. So, just have a good habit of 'saving'...

kuature said...

Dear Happy,

What you said is right and I fully subscrube. However, for those who are not clear or new to this concept of kamma 'spilling over a life', the discussion will then become either 'philosophical' or 'intellectual'. Hence my suggestion is that when we talk about this subject with non-believers or people from other faiths, it may be more effective to expalin the concept of kamma in Buddhism related to this life itself.

happy.girl5578 said...

Dear Kua,

Agreed then. Thanks for sharing.