Karma and Choice

 Affirmation: I choose with clarity. I act with intention. I remember my connection to all things. Each moment invites me to align my inner world with the world I am helping to create.





I’ve been sitting with a question that refuses to stay on the surface:

How are we to live today, knowing that we shape the world even as it shapes us?

Hiro Boga speaks of us as fractals of the Sacred — whole, interconnected, co‑creators with the Great Mystery. That framing pulls me inward. It reminds me that the world isn’t something “out there” happening to us. It’s something we participate in, moment by moment, through the choices we make and the intentions we carry.

These aren’t questions the intellect can answer on its own. They ask for something deeper — a focus on the inner world, a steadying of the heart, a willingness to bring our whole selves to the everyday moments where our lives are actually shaped. They ask us to tend to the habits and routines that scaffold our soul’s purpose, so that our daily choices harmonize with the world we want to help create — not just for ourselves, but for the next seven, fourteen, twenty‑one generations who will inherit the consequences of our living.

This is where karma comes in for me.

Not as punishment.

But as the natural unfolding of our consistent choices.

Karma, in my understanding, is twofold.

It is the truth that every choice has consequences — subtle or seismic, immediate or delayed. And it is the responsibility we carry for the patterns we create through those choices. We are connected to it all. What we do ripples outward, touching others in ways we may never see.

Walking through the world with that awareness requires intentionality and remembrance. None of us are perfect. We misstep. We forget. We act from fear or habit or ego. And then life brings us back to the crossroads again, offering another choice — sometimes one that feels illogical but is true to the heart, sometimes one that asks for the balance of head and heart together.

For me, the heart must be involved.

But not the reactive heart.

The clear heart.

The unselfish heart.

The heart that remembers its connection to everything.

Karma, then, becomes less about fate and more about practice.
Less about judgment and more about alignment.
Less about what happens to us and more about how we choose to show up — again and again — with intention, clarity, and care.
This is the work of becoming.
This is the quiet revolution of everyday choices.
This is how we shape the world, even as it shapes us.

Begin with one choice today.
Not a grand gesture, not a sweeping transformation — just one small, deliberate act that aligns your inner truth with the world you want to help shape.
Pause before you act.
Ask yourself: What is the intention behind this choice? What pattern am I reinforcing? What future am I feeding?
Then choose — with heart, with clarity, with remembrance.
Because karma is not waiting for you somewhere down the road.
It is being shaped, right now, in the quiet, consistent rhythm of your everyday living.

Peace and Blessings

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