You often hear things like—“Namjap and prayers will erase your karmas,” or “Your bad karma will vanish through devotion.”
Yes, I agree—the shastras do say this. But let me take you a little deeper.
👇
It’s not magic. It’s the mind—your conscious and unconscious layers—that stores everything.
Every karma—good or bad, every emotion, every action, even from past births—is perfectly stored.
You don’t remember it consciously, but it’s all there—buried deep in the unconscious.
Now, when you do Namjap, good deeds, prayers—it’s not about deleting anything. It’s about adding higher impressions, mixing better samskaras into the existing store.
Gradually, as this mix becomes more Satvik, your mind begins to shift. The inner realization grows.
You don’t run from karma—you start rising above it.
And that’s when transformation begins—your difficulties dissolve, not by escape, but through internal clarity.
Think of your consciousness as a massive cassette player.
Whatever you watch, hear, feel—even what you casually scroll through—is getting recorded.
So if you’re spending your free time in Namjap, good thoughts, spiritual reflection, you’re rewriting that tape.
But yes—not everyone can do this easily.
If your nature is Tamasic, if the body-mind complex is heavy or restless, it will resist.
For such minds, real change only happens after hitting a wall—through deep suffering, a jolt, a breakdown.
Only then does the Tamas start to break.
The path is different for everyone—but the direction is always inward.
Whether through devotion, wisdom, or pain—you return to the Self.
You often hear things like—“Namjap and prayers will erase your karmas,” or “Your bad karma will vanish through devotion.”
Yes, I agree—the shastras do say this. But let me take you a little deeper.
👇It’s not magic. It’s the mind—your conscious and unconscious layers—that stores everything.
Every karma—good or bad, every emotion, every action, even from past births—is perfectly stored.
You don’t remember it consciously, but it’s all there—buried deep in the unconscious.Now, when you do Namjap, good deeds, prayers—it’s not about deleting anything. It’s about adding higher impressions, mixing better samskaras into the existing store.
Gradually, as this mix becomes more Satvik, your mind begins to shift. The inner realization grows.You don’t run from karma—you start rising above it.
And that’s when transformation begins—your difficulties dissolve, not by escape, but through internal clarity.Think of your consciousness as a massive cassette player.
Whatever you watch, hear, feel—even what you casually scroll through—is getting recorded.
So if you’re spending your free time in Namjap, good thoughts, spiritual reflection, you’re rewriting that tape.But yes—not everyone can do this easily.
If your nature is Tamasic, if the body-mind complex is heavy or restless, it will resist.
For such minds, real change only happens after hitting a wall—through deep suffering, a jolt, a breakdown.
Only then does the Tamas start to break.The path is different for everyone—but the direction is always inward.
Whether through devotion, wisdom, or pain—you return to the Self.
You often hear things like—“Namjap and prayers will erase your karmas,” or “Your bad karma will vanish through devotion.”
Yes, I agree—the shastras do say this. But let me take you a little deeper. ... It’s not magic. It’s the mind—your conscious and unconscious layers—that stores everything.
Every karma—good or bad, every emotion, every action, even from past births—is perfectly stored.
You don’t remember it consciously, but it’s all there—buried deep in the unconscious. ... Now, when you do Namjap, good deeds, prayers—it’s not about deleting anything. It’s about adding higher impressions, mixing better samskaras into the existing store.
Gradually, as this mix becomes more Satvik, your mind begins to shift. The inner realization grows. ... You don’t run from karma—you start rising above it.
And that’s when transformation begins—your difficulties dissolve, not by escape, but through internal clarity. ... Think of your consciousness as a massive cassette player.
Whatever you watch, hear, feel—even what you casually scroll through—is getting recorded.
So if you’re spending your free time in Namjap, good thoughts, spiritual reflection, you’re rewriting that tape. ... But yes—not everyone can do this easily.
If your nature is Tamasic, if the body-mind complex is heavy or restless, it will resist.
For such minds, real change only happens after hitting a wall—through deep suffering, a jolt, a breakdown.
Only then does the Tamas start to break. ... The path is different for everyone—but the direction is always inward.
Whether through devotion, wisdom, or pain—you return to the Self.
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