-
My question is:
Why human beings have different karma?
-
Thank you.
-
Our friend is asking why
each human being has a different karma?
-
Are you sure?
-
(Laughter)
-
Are you sure that every human being
has a different karma?
-
(Laughter)
-
I was quite sure but now....
-
(Laughter)
-
Karma is action,
the word karma means action
-
My name Nhat Hanh means one action only.
-
Nhat means one, Hanh means action,
and I don't know what action it is.
-
(Laughter)
-
Karma may be cause or may be effect.
-
Karma hetu is action as a cause and
karma-phala is karma as a fruit.
-
And cause and effect they are together.
-
You cannot remove
the cause from the effect...
-
...and you cannot remove
the effect from the cause.
-
It is like the corn kernel is the
cause and the corn stalk is the effect
-
but they are not two separate entities.
-
You cannot remove the corn kernel
from the plant of corn
-
and you cannot remove
the corn plant out from the corn kernel.
-
So cause and effect
are not two different entities.
-
And one is the continuation of the other.
-
The plant of corn is a
continuation of the seed of corn
-
in the direction of the future;
-
and the kernel of corn
continues the plant of corn
-
in the direction of the past.
-
Thanks to the corn kernel, the plant
of corn has access to the ancestors.
-
And thanks to the plant of corn,
the ancestors have access to the future.
-
It's a wonderful collaboration
on the base of no-self.
-
There is only a continuation and
that is from the point of view of time.
-
From the point of view of space,
it's the same.
-
There is what we call collective karma
and individual karma
-
and you are talking about
individual karma.
-
And it's different from other karma,
-
but if you reflect on the notion
of individual and collective,
-
you already make a big step.
-
Because the notions of
individual and collective
-
are also a pair of opposites
to be transcended.
-
When a young person
tells his father that:
-
"This is my body. This is my life,"
-
"I have the freedom, I have the right
to do anything with my body, my life."
-
That is a view that I am not you.
-
"I have my own body,
my own feeling, my own life."
-
"I have the right to dispose my life
the way I want."
-
And there are young people say like that.
-
They don't know that they are the
continuation of their father, their mother.
-
And in fact they cannot harm, they do not
have the right to harm their father, their own body.
-
To commit suicide is an offence.
-
You are killing your father,
-
you are killing your mother,
your ancestors when you commit suicide.
-
This body is not yours.
-
This body is a property of your father's,
of your ancestors'.
-
And with that kind of insight, you cannot
behave like the way many people behave,
-
based on wrong view.
-
So to meditate is to see
the nature of interbeing,
-
non-self, which allow you to act properly.
-
and not to cause suffering that is karma.
-
And your body is not
your individual property.
-
It is also collective at the same time.
-
Your body is a collective product
of your nation's,
-
of your people's, of your culture's,
-
of your ancestors'.
-
So you are not strictly individual,
-
you are partly collective,
-
and it depends on a way of looking
that you are more or less collective.
-
Suppose you say that
you have your nerves,
-
your optic nerves behind your eyes.
-
Your optic nerves look like
something strictly individual.
-
It only concerns you,
your optic nerves,
-
that is something absolutely individual.
-
People don't see it,
they are not concerned by it.
-
It concerns only you.
-
That is a notion of
individual and collectiveness.
-
But if you are a bus driver,
-
our lives depend on your optic nerves.
-
So your optic nerves are not
individual any more,
-
they belong to us because
our lives depend on your optic nerves.
-
So your optic nerve is something
you describe as individual
-
but in fact they are collective.
-
So we have the notion of
collective karma and individual karma.
-
And any karma whether it is collective
or individual affects the whole.
-
And the karma, the action
might be better or worse.
-
When 600 people come for a retreat,
-
they read something together as collective action.
-
They do sitting, walking, breathing,
smiling, sharing,
-
and this is a collective action
and we profit from that.
-
There are those in the world
at this time they don't practice like us.
-
and they drink and go dancing, and they
spend their time in a very different way.
-
And we have been able to set aside
three weeks to come together
-
and we are sharing a kind of
collective action here
-
that we believe to be a good action.
-
because every day
we water the seeds of mindfulness,
-
understanding, compassion in us
and the collective.
-
But in the collective,
you can see the individuals -
-
there are those that
do better than some others,
-
there are those of us
who can find it possible to transform,
-
to leave behind the burden of worries
in the first five days;
-
there are those who also
need more than that,
-
only on the third week that
they can release, put down their worries.
-
So in the collective,
there is the individual
-
and in the individual,
there is the collective.
-
And there is no absolute individuality,
there is no absolute collectivity.
-
That is the truth. And that is why
it is another pair of opposites.
-
And if you practice looking deeply,
you can remove them.
-
And you see that
any karma affects all of us.
-
Whatever good we are doing here
is helping the world,
-
so we have to be confident that
the karma is not lost.
-
any thought of compassion and forgiveness
that we produce not only can help us heal
-
but can help the world.
-
So during the 21 days, we have been
producing thoughts of compassion,
-
of loving kindness,
that is our best contribution to the world.
-
And that is why our action of karma
is neither different nor the same
-
because sameness and otherness
is also a pair of opposites.
-
So right view lies in the fact that
-
you are able to remove
all these pairs of opposites.