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Yoga >>
Karma Yoga >>
Views on Karma Yoga |
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Views on Karma YogaThe views on Karma Yoga are many and varied.
We give below some of those. Together with the freedom required to steer oneself toward the final goal through the thick waters of Karma is something else.
That is called detachment, which is tricky, at best, to maintain. The law of karma says: "As you sow, so shall you reap." This deters the attempts toward spiritual practice regardless of one's action.
Good or evil, the effects due to man will ultimately work themselves through his or her life. Hence, detachment might not be fully fulfilled till a person reaches the pinnacle of perfection.
While karma has just been presented as nearly impossible for an individual to fully work though, a lot of folks follow spiritual ways with the sole intention of doing just that. These people are called karma yogis who, once they have committed themselves, lead a life of selfless work. They are just given the bare necessities with regard to personal situations. Like their lives, the concept of karma appears terribly simple and reasonable. Then again, reason and logic play a minor role in human emotions, but prevail most often in human action. This conflict between logic and emotion gives rise to many of the complexities of concerning the inescapable and inevitable karma.
One response to this concept of karma is that of almost compulsive commitment. It happens to be the hallmark a lot of Yogis were raised on, instilled so deeply by their elders and gurus that through all of their actions they were completely aware of this: 'What comes around goes around,'. What it all boils down to is that Karma Yoga is not so much a practice exclusive only to Hindu religion. The fundamental and logical nature of Karma Yoga’s seem almost a delicate art and a science. In fact, if they are studied in detail, it let’s you make progressions towards a destiny of selfless, spiritual personal harmony. |
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