Most writings on the doctrine of kamma emphasize the strict
lawfulness
governing kammic action, ensuring a close correspondence
between our deeds and their fruits. While this emphasis is perfectly
in place, there is another side to the working of kamma a side
rarely noted, but highly important. This is the modifiability of kamma,
the fact that the lawfulness which governs kamma does not operate with
mechanical rigidity but allows for a considerably wide range of
modifications in the ripening of the fruit.
If kammic action were always to bear fruits of invariably the same
magnitude, and if modification or annulment of kamma-result were
excluded, liberation from the samsaric cycle of suffering would be
impossible; for an inexhaustible past would ever throw up new
obstructive results of unwholesome kamma. Hence the Buddha said:
"If one says that in whatever way a person performs a kammic
action, in that very same way he will experience the result in
that case there will be no (possibility for a) religious life and no
opportunity would appear for the complete ending of suffering.
"But if one says that a person who performs a kammic action
(with a result) that is variably experienceable, will reap its
results accordingly in that case there will be (a possibility
for) a religious life and an opportunity for making a complete end
of suffering."
AN III.110
Like any physical event, the mental process constituting a kammic
action never exists in isolation but in a field, and thus its efficacy
in producing a result depends not only on its own potential, but also
upon the variable factors of its field, which can modify it in
numerous ways. We see, for example, that a particular kamma, either
good or bad, may sometimes have its result strengthened by supportive
kamma, weakened by counteractive kamma, or even annulled by
destructive kamma. The occurrence of the result can also be delayed if
the conjunction of outer circumstances required for its ripening is
not complete; and that delay may again give a chance for counteractive
or destructive kamma to operate.
It is, however, not only these extraneous conditions which can
cause modification. The ripening also reflects the kamma's
"internal field" or internal conditions that is, the
total qualitative structure of the mind from which the action issues.
To one rich in moral or spiritual qualities, a single offense may not
entail the weighty results that the same offence will have for one who
is poor in such protective virtues. Also, analogously to human law, a
first offender's punishment will be milder than that of a re-convicted
criminal.
Of this type of modified reaction the Buddha speaks in the
continuation of the discourse quoted above:
"Now take the case when a minor evil deed has been
committed by a certain person and it takes him to hell. But if the
same minor offense is committed by another person, its result
might be experienced during his lifetime and not even the least
(residue of a reaction) will appear (in the future), not to speak
about a major (reaction).
"Now what is the kind of person whom a minor offense takes
to hell? It is one who has not cultivated (restraint of) the body,
not cultivated virtue and thought, nor has he developed any
wisdom; he is narrow-minded, of low character and even for
trifling things he suffers. It is such a person whom even a minor
offense may take to hell.
"And what is the person by whom the result of the same
small offense will be experienced in his lifetime, without the
least (future residue)? He is one who has cultivated (restraint
of) the body, who has cultivated virtue and thought and who has
developed wisdom; he is not limited by (vices), is a great
character and he lives unbounded (by evil). It is such a person
who experiences the result of the same small offense during his
lifetime, without the least future residue.
"Now suppose a man throws a lump of salt into a small cup
of water. What do you think, monks: would that small quantity of
water in the cup become salty and undrinkable through that lump of
salt?" "It would, Lord." "And why
so?" "The water in the cup is so little that a lump
of salt can make it salty and undrinkable." "But
suppose, monks, that lump of salt is thrown into the river Ganges.
Would it make the river Ganges salty and undrinkable?"
"Certainly not, Lord." "And why not?"
"Great, Lord, is the mass of water in the Ganges. It will not
become salty and undrinkable by a lump of salt."
"Further, O monks, suppose a person has to go to jail for
a matter of a halfpenny, a penny or a hundred pence, and another
man does not have to go to jail on that account.
"Now what is the kind of person that has to go to jail for
a matter of a halfpenny, a penny or a hundred pence? It is one who
is poor, without means or property. But he who is rich, a man of
means and property, does not have to go to jail for such a
matter."
AN III.110
Hence we must say that it is an individual's accumulation of good
or evil kamma and also his dominating character traits, good or evil,
which affect the kammic result. They determine the greater or lesser
weight of the result and may even spell the difference between whether
or not it occurs at all.
But even this does not exhaust the existing possibilities of
modifications in the weight of kammic reaction. A glance into the life
histories of people we know may well show us a person of good and
blameless character, living in secure circumstances; yet a single
mistake, perhaps even a minor one, suffices to ruin his entire life
his reputation, his career, and his happiness and it may also
lead to a serious deterioration of his character. This seemingly
disproportionate crisis might have been due to a chain-reaction of
aggravating circumstances beyond his control, to be ascribed to a
powerful counteractive kamma of his past. But the chain of bad results
may have been precipitated by the person's own action decisively
triggered by his initial mistake and reinforced by subsequent
carelessness, indecision or wrong decisions, which, of course, are
unskillful kamma in themselves. This is a case when even a
predominantly good character cannot prevent the ripening of bad kamma
or soften the full force of the results. The good qualities and deeds
of that person will certainly not remain ineffective; but their future
outcome might well be weakened by any presently arisen negative
character changes or actions, which might form a bad counteractive
kamma.
Consider too the converse situation: A person deserving to be
called a thoroughly bad character, may, on a rare occasion, act on an
impulse of generosity and kindness. This action may turn out to have
unexpectedly wide and favorable repercussions on his life. It might
bring about a decisive improvement in his external circumstances,
soften his character, and even initiate a thorough "change of
heart."
How complex, indeed, are situations in human life, even when they
appear deceptively simple! This is so because the situations and their
outcome mirror the still greater complexity of the mind, their
inexhaustible source. The Buddha himself has said: "The mind's
complexity surpasses even the countless varieties of the animal
kingdom." (SN
XXII.100) For any single individual, the mind is a stream of
ever-changing mental processes driven by the currents and
cross-currents of kamma accumulated in countless past existences. But
this complexity, already great, is increased still very much more by
the fact that each individual life-stream is interwoven with many
other individual life-streams through the interaction of their
respective kammas. So intricate is the net of kammic conditioning that
the Buddha declared kamma-result to be one of the four "unthinkables"
(acinteyya) and warned against creating it as a subject of
speculation. But though the detailed workings of kamma escape our
intellection, the practically important message is clear: the fact
that kammic results are modifiable frees us from the bane of
determinism and its ethical corollary, fatalism, and keeps the road to
liberation constantly open before us.
The potential "openness" of a given situation, however,
also has a negative side, the element of risk and danger a wrong
response to the situation might open a downward path. It is our own
response which removes the ambiguity of the situation, for better or
worse. This reveals the kamma doctrine of the Buddha as a teaching of
moral and spiritual responsibility for oneself and others. It is truly
a "human teaching" because it corresponds to and reflects
man's wide range of choices, a range much wider than that of an
animal. Any individual's moral choice may be severely limited by the
varying load of greed, hatred and delusion and their results which he
carries around; yet every time he stops to make a decision or a
choice, he has the opportunity to rise above all the menacing
complexities and pressures of his unfathomable kammic past. Indeed, in
one short moment he can transcend aeons of kammic bondage. It is
through right mindfulness that man can firmly grasp that fleeting
moment, and it is mindfulness again that enables him to use it for
making wise choices.
II.
Every kammic action, as soon as it is performed, first of all
affects the doer of the deed himself. This holds with as much truth
for bodily and verbal deeds directed towards others as it does for
volitional thoughts that do not find outward expression. To some
extent we can control our own response to our actions, but we cannot
control the way others respond to them. Their response may turn out to
be quite different from what we expect or desire. A good deed of ours
might be met with ingratitude, a kind word may find a cold or even
hostile reception. But though these good deeds and kind words will
then be lost to the recipient, to his own disadvantage, they will not
be lost to the doer. The good thoughts that inspired them will ennoble
his mind, even more so if he responds to the negative reception with
forgiveness and forbearance rather than anger and resentment.
Again, an act or word meant to harm or hurt another may not provoke
him to a hostile reaction but only meet with self-possessed calmness.
Then this "unaccepted present will fall back to the giver,"
as the Buddha once told a brahmin who had abused him. The bad deed and
words, and the thoughts motivating them may fail to harm the other,
but they will not fail to have a damaging effect on the character of
the doer; and it will affect him even worse if he reacts to the
unexpected response by rage or a feeling of resentful frustration.
Hence the Buddha says that beings are the responsible owners of their
kamma which is their inalienable property. They are the only
legitimate heirs of their actions, inheriting their legacy of good or
bad fruits.
It will be a wholesome practice to remind oneself often of the fact
that one's deeds, words and thoughts first of all act upon and alter
one's own mind. Reflecting thus will give a strong impetus to true
self-respect, which is preserved by protecting oneself against
everything mean and evil. To do so will also open a new, practical
understanding of a profound saying of the Buddha:
"In this fathom-long body with its perceptions and
thoughts there is the world, the origin of the world, the ending
of the world and the path leading to the ending of the
world." AN IV.45
III.
The "world" of which the Buddha speaks is comprised in
this aggregate of body-and-mind. For it is only by the activity of our
physical and mental sense faculties that a world can be experienced
and known at all. The sights, sounds, smells, tastes and bodily
impressions which we perceive, and our various mental functions,
conscious and unconscious this is the world in which we live. And
this world of ours has its origin in that very aggregate of physical
and mental processes that produces the kammic act of craving for the
six physical and mental sense objects.
"If, Ananda, their were no kamma ripening in the sphere of
the senses, would there appear any sense-sphere existence?"
"Surely, not Lord." AN III.76
Thus kamma is the womb from which we spring (kamma-yoni),
the true creator of the world and of ourselves as the experiencer of
the world. And through our kammic actions in deed, word and thought,
we unceasingly engage in building and rebuilding this world and worlds
beyond. Even our good actions, as long as they are still under the
influence of craving, conceit and ignorance, contribute to the
creation and preservation of this world of suffering. The Wheel of
Life is like a treadmill set in perpetual motion by kamma, chiefly by
its three unwholesome roots greed, hatred and delusion. The
"end of the world" cannot be reached by walking on a
treadmill; this only creates the illusion of progress. It is only by
stopping that vain effort that the end can be reached.
It is "through the elimination of greed, hatred and delusion
that the
concatenation of kamma comes to an end" (AN X.174). And
this again can happen nowhere else than in the same aggregate of
body-and-mind where suffering and its causes originate. It is the
hopeful message of the third noble truth that we can step out of the
weary round of vain effort and misery. If, despite our knowledge of
the possibility of release, we keep walking on the treadmill of life,
that is because of an age-old addiction hard to break, the deeply
rooted habit of clinging to the notions of "I,"
"mine" and "self." But here again there is the
hopeful message in the fourth noble truth with its Noble Eightfold
Path, the therapy that can cure the addiction and gradually lead us to
the final cessation of suffering. And all that is required for the
therapy is again found in our own body and mind.
The treatment proper starts with correctly understanding the true
nature of kamma and thereby our situation in the world. This
understanding will provide a strong motivation for ensuring a
prevalence of good kamma in one's life. And as it deepens by seeing
the human condition still more clearly, this same understanding will
become the spur for breaking the chains of kammic bondage. It will
impel one to strive diligently along the path, and to dedicate all
one's actions and their fruits to the greatest end of action the
final liberation of oneself and all sentient beings.
Abbreviations
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© 1994 Nyanaponika Thera. Reproduced and reformatted from
Access to Insight edition © 2004. BuddhaNet edition © 1996.
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