Episode 49: How to Purify Bad Karma

Episode 49: How to Purify Bad Karma

Author: JoAnn Fox: Buddhist Teacher September 12, 2019 Duration: 58:38

The world that appears to us depends upon our mind: our mental habits, our views and beliefs. In this episode, Buddhist Teacher, JoAnn Fox, talks about how to purify our mind and specifically how to purify our negative karma. We can create a new mind and a new world by purifying negative karma and taking positive actions toward creating the life we really want. 

Karma means action. Actions that caused harm to others in the past create our present painful feelings and experiences. We can purify the negative karma we've created in the past through the following purification meditation, which also involves a special mindfulness practice in daily life. 

Meditation to Purifying Negative Karma has four parts:

  1. Power of regret (sometimes translated as the power of release). Generate the strong wish to purify a specific action in the past causing you suffering, that is perpetuating your current way of being that you wish to change.
  2. Power of reliance: Pray for help to any holy being you feel connected to or simply pray, thinking "please help me to purify this." 
  3. Power of opponent force: means we do something to oppose the negative karmic. In this meditation, you can simply perform the following visualization as an opponent force. You can also recite the mantra of purification before the visualization. The short mantra of Vajrasattva is "Om Vajrasattva hum." You might recite this many times, a few times, or 100 times using a mala (Buddhist rosary).  Then visualize a holy being of light comes to the crown of your head. This holy beings sends out liquid light, which enters your crown. The purifying light travels down your central channel, pushing the negative karma down and out of your body.
  4. Power of Promise: Make a promise to yourself to refrain from a certain negative or unhelpful behavior for a specific amount of time (a day or a week). 

Whoever recovers from doing evil 

By doing something wholesome 

Illuminates the world 

Like the moon set free from a cloud. (172) 

 

Whoever replaces an evil deed 

With what is wholesome 

Illuminates the world 

Like the moon set free from a cloud. (173)*

—Buddha, The Dhammapada

References

Buddha.The Dhammapada. Translated by Gil Fronsdale. Shambala, Boston and London, 2011, pp. 43.

Yeshe, Thupten. Introduction to Tantra. (Audiobook). Wisdom Publications, Somerville, 2014.






You'll find Buddhism for Everyone with JoAnn Fox to be a conversation that feels both timeless and immediately useful. JoAnn Fox, a Buddhist teacher with over two decades of experience, guides these discussions with a genuine warmth and a welcome touch of humor, making profound ideas feel accessible. This isn't about abstract philosophy; it's about the tangible ways these ancient practices can reshape our modern days. Each episode, released every other week, delves into practical applications. You might explore how to cultivate patience during a frustrating commute, find a deeper sense of contentment amidst daily routines, or develop the compassionate resilience the world needs. The podcast serves as a gentle, consistent reminder that spiritual growth isn't separate from ordinary life-it's woven right into it. JoAnn's approach demystifies meditation and mindfulness, framing them as tools for anyone seeking more peace or clarity. Whether you're completely new to these concepts or looking to deepen an existing practice, the conversations meet you where you are, offering insights that encourage reflection and, most importantly, action in your own life.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 230

Buddhism for Everyone with JoAnn Fox
Podcast Episodes
Episode 227 - Always Rely on a Happy Mind Alone [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 39:44
Always rely on a happy mind alone. This Buddhist slogan for training the mind isn't about "positive thinking" or just being happy. A "happy mind" refers to a mind that is peaceful and free from delusions, like like anger…
Episode 226 - Tame the Monkey Mind [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 34:59
Register for the free classes, Continuing the Walk for Peace: An Inner Peace Toolkit: https://buddhismforeveryone.com/walk-for-peace-toolkit In this episode, we talk about your monkey. The monkey on your back. You know t…
Episose 225 - Is your mind the Matrix? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 31:30
In The Matrix, the red pill reveals the truth behind appearances and opens the path to freedom. In Buddhism, a realization of the true nature of reality is the ultimate path to freedom. In this episode, we explore how wa…
Episode 224: Finding Happiness in Others' Joy [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 46:26
Imagine feeling a burst of joy every time someone else wins. A friend gets a promotion, your sister finds love, a stranger shares good news, and you feel happiness with them. That spark of delight is the heart of sympath…
Episode 223 - Feed love or Feed Pain [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 39:38
We constantly make small choices that shape the reality of our relationships, whether with our partner, children, friends, or colleagues. They determine whether we deepen connection or cause resentment and distance to qu…
Episode 222: Preventing Anger [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 55:27
Longtime Buddhist Teacher, JoAnn Fox, explores five powerful Buddhist antidotes to anger and aversion: patience acceptance recognizing karma remembering impermanence seeing other people or challenges as spiritual teacher…
Episode 221 - W.A.I.T. What Am I Thinking? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 45:41
Delusions are distorted ways of looking at things that make our mind unpeaceful and uncontrolled. Anger exaggerates someone's faults. Attachment exaggerates someone's good qualities. Both lead us away from reality and ke…
Episode 220 - Self-Compassion [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 37:57
In this episode, JoAnn Fox shares the practice of W.A.I.T.—What Am I Thinking? to help us cultivate self-compassion and retrain the often-critical voice in our minds. Through mindfulness, we can begin to notice the thoug…
Episode 219: The Rain Could Turn to Gold [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 28:34
"The rain could turn to gold and still your thirst would not be slaked," the Buddha said. He was pointing to the endless cycle of craving, the restless thirst that keeps us searching outside ourselves for satisfaction. E…
Episode 218: Weaving Spiritual Practice into Daily Life [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 34:14
The Buddha said that the minds of his followers should "constantly, day and night, delight in spiritual practice." But what practice can we stitch into the fabric of ordinary days? This fan-favorite epsiode explores a sp…