I remember a yoga teacher giving a very powerful class, one of those meant to shake people out of the slumber of their minds. At some point, she said something that stayed with me: many very “bad” people end their lives in comfort, surrounded by success and security.
Her point was simple, but uncomfortable. We shouldn’t assume that doing
good automatically guarantees good outcomes. And we shouldn’t expect that
people who act badly will always be punished, an idea that belongs more to old
movies than to real life. Reality is messier. And there are several reasons for
that.
One of them is human complexity. One of the worst people I knew growing
up - a real bully - is now a respected judge in a small town. Who would have
imagined that? Maybe parts of that old behavior still exist somewhere inside
him. But for his family, friends and community, he is seen as a good, honorable
person.
The truth is uncomfortable: a “bad” person for you or me can be an
“excellent” person for someone else, or at another stage of life.
Almost everyone, at some point, has asked this question: why do people
who lie, manipulate or act selfishly sometimes seem to prosper - financially,
socially or professionally - while others who try to live with integrity
struggle? It can feel unfair, confusing, even discouraging, and I talked about
it in a former post.
That is another reason: life does not operate on immediate moral
accounting and results are not always synchronized with behavior. Someone may
be highly skilled, confident or intelligent, and those qualities can bring
external success regardless of inner values. In the short term, this type of efficiency
can easily be mistaken for virtue.
A third reason is that there is also the illusion created by
appearances. What we usually call “good things” are often external
achievements: money, recognition, power, comfort. But outer success does not
guarantee inner peace. Many people who look like they are “winning” are quietly
dealing with anxiety, emptiness and broken relationships. We rarely see that
part of the story.
At last, from a karmic perspective, the picture becomes wider. A person
may be acting poorly now and still enjoying the fruits of positive actions from
the past. Karma does not work like instant messaging; it works more like
agriculture.
Imagine this: you planted broccoli seeds last week, but you also have an
old mango tree in your garden. For a while, you will enjoy sweet mangoes. But
don’t worry… the bitter broccoli is coming to you... A person who is enjoy a good
life, maybe it is just a question of a stock of mangoes and their broccoli
is not ready yet to be consumed.
But, in another tone, looking carefully, lasting fulfillment rarely
belongs to those who harm others. Temporary gains fade and not wanting to sound
cliché, but inner qualities - honesty, compassion, stability - create a
kind of wealth that cannot be taken away.
So perhaps the better question is not why good things happen to “bad”
people… but what kind of good we are talking about.
External success is loud and visible, while inner success is quiet and
deep.
Sooner or later, what is planted within, mango or broccoli, is what grows.
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