The teaching on kamma puts you in charge of shaping your life. It’s a good teaching to believe in.
"Some people have problems with the teaching on kamma, but what exactly
is the Buddha asking you to believe in when he asks you to have
conviction in kamma? First, action really is happening — it’s not an
illusion. Second, you really are responsible for your actions. There’s
no outside force like the stars or some good or evil being acting
through you. When you’re conscious, you’re the one who decides what to
do. Third, your actions have results — you’re not just writing on the
water — and those results can be good or bad depending on the quality of
the intention behind the act.
So the teaching on kamma puts you
in charge of shaping your life. It’s a good teaching to believe in. And
how does this relate to discernment? It provides the basis for the
questions you’re going to ask to give rise to discernment. And because
the principle of kamma places a lot of emphasis on the need to act on
skillful intentions to get the good results you want, the basic question
becomes: How can you tell whether an intention is skillful or
unskillful?"
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "Giving Rise to Discernment" (Meditations1)
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