Eowyn
Wrought out of steel
I'm not a big fan of Edgar Cayce (basically because I'm not a big fan of anyone, as I explained in previous posts), but in my opinion, this is one of the best definitions of karma I've found (bolds are mine):
From the Cayce readings’ perspective the past merely provided a framework of potentials and probabilities. An individual’s choices, actions, and free will in the present would determine the actual experience lived this time around. Rather than being a fatalistic approach to life, it is much more one of nearly limitless opportunities.
Cayce, however, was also familiar with the less positive aspects to this philosophy. He contended that some approaches created a misunderstanding of the real purpose behind reincarnation. In fact an approach to reincarnation that did not take into account freedom of choice created what he called “a karmic bugaboo” – a misunderstanding that provided no arena for the real action and interconnectedness that exists among karma, free will, destiny, and grace. In his understanding, individuals were very much active participants in their life’s journey and not at all simply sometime-reluctant observers. However, even to this day, the theory of reincarnation is often misinterpreted as a fatalistic journey through experiences and relationships that are ours because of our “karma.” In this approach, choices we have made in the past have somehow etched in stone our futures, and life is simply a process of going through the motions. This is definitely not the Cayce approach to karma.
The word karma is a Sanskrit term that means “work, deed, or act”; it has also been interpreted to mean “cause and effect.” Although the readings definitely agree with this concept, perhaps one of their most intriguing and unique philosophical contributions is the idea that karma can simply be defined as memory. It is not really a “debt” that must be paid according to some universal tally sheet nor is it necessarily a set of specific circumstances that must be experienced because of deeds or misdeeds from the past. Karma is simply memory. It is a pool of information that the subconscious mind draws upon and can utilize in the present. It has elements that are positive as well as those which seem negative. For example, an immediate affinity toward an individual is as likely to be “karmic” as is an immediate animosity toward someone else. To be sure, this subconscious memory has an effect and influence on how we think, how we react, what we choose, and even how we look! But the component of free will is ever within our grasp.
In Cayce’s explanation of reincarnation when an individual dies, the next lifetime does not occur immediately, for the soul is given a chance to take stock of all it has come to know. Then, it has the opportunity to decide for itself what lessons it needs to learn next in order to become a more complete individual. The soul chooses to be born again into the earth, generally among people it has known before. A soul can decide to be born into either a male or a female body in any given lifetime or, as Cayce often called it, an “incarnation.” The choices made are such that the soul might best fulfill that specific purpose chosen for a particular lifetime. It selects those surroundings (parents and family, location and time period, etc.) that will best allow for the learning of those lessons it needs for completeness. The goal is to express love fully in all the challenges that the physical life offers. Our experiences, however, are subject to the choices we have made with our own free will.
With our free will, we can turn the challenges life presents to us into stepping-stones toward growth, or we can see them as obstacles and stumbling blocks. Either way, we reap what we have sown. We constantly meet the consequences of previous deeds and attitudes.