How people treat you is their karma; how you react is yours.
I definitely consider myself a Christian. There's things that I believe in, there's things I have a self-belief on. I know I got a great relationship with God and the universe. I just believe in being a righteous person and karma. Doing unto others as you would have done unto you. I really want to help teach that.
In Boulder entrepreneurship circles, there is a genuine desire to see others succeed and a general belief that karma matters. There's a sense that together we're building something here, and that we're all a meaningful part of it.
My mother believed in curses, karma, good luck, bad luck, feng shui. Her amorphous set of beliefs showed me you can pick and choose the qualities of your philosophy, based on what works for you.
Everyone gets dumped and everyone gets hurt and there's karma to love in regards to what you've done to other people.
I believe in karma.
I'm a very firm believer in karma, and put it this way: I get a lot of good parking spots.
Being vegan just gives you such great karma.
If you give a good thing to the world, then over time your karma will be good, and you'll receive good.
Maybe libertarians especially like Reddit because it is a perfect marketplace of content. Every Redditor is created equal, whether you're the highest karma Redditor or a brand-new Redditor with 10 karma points. No submissions or votes are more equal than others.
Your karma should be good, and everything else will follow. Your good karma will always win over your bad luck.
Every single unfortunate thing that happens, including, for instance, the murder of my parents, I am responsible for. I am responsible for being the son of two people who got murdered. I didn't cause their murder. But if I'm suffering because of it, it's my karma that I have manifested in this lifetime in this particular set of circumstances.
I used to steal a lot. But I don't do that anymore, because I believe in karma.
Do I believe in reincarnation? Well, let's say that I believe in karma. I think you make your own karma.
Once I turned pro, I was like,' OK, this is not fun and games now. This is me. I'm going to come, and I work on karma. I'm not going to go after somebody if I don't have a reason behind it, so as soon as there is some sort of a reason for me to do something that I need to do, then I'll do it.'