Sunday, June 7, 2026

Chapter 14 - How Green Tara Works Within Karma?

Karma — The Invisible
Architecture of Protection


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Nothing arrives without a cause.
Nothing departs without leaving a trace.
What we call misfortune
is often the universe keeping its most honest accounts.

What Karma Actually Is

Of all the teachings in the Buddhist tradition, none is more widely misunderstood — or more deeply liberating when properly understood — than karma. In popular usage, karma has been reduced to a kind of cosmic scoreboard: do good, receive good; do harm, receive harm. Simple, satisfying, and almost entirely missing the point.

The Tibetan word for karma is las — meaning action. But what the teaching points to is not merely action in the physical sense. It is the entire chain of cause, intention, action, and effect that flows through every moment of experience. It is the recognition that nothing arises without a cause, and nothing that arises leaves without planting seeds for what comes next.

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In the most precise sense, karma is not a system of reward and punishment. It is a description of reality — of how things actually work, at the deepest level, whether we are aware of it or not.

Every thought plants a seed — in the mind that thinks it, and in the world that receives it.
Every intention shapes the quality of the action that follows from it.
Every action — however small — sends ripples through the interconnected fabric of existence.
And every ripple, in time, returns — transformed, amplified, or softened — depending on what it encountered along the way.

This is not a frightening teaching. It is, at its core, one of the most hopeful things the Buddha ever said: our experience is not random. It is not the result of an arbitrary universe, an indifferent god, or pure misfortune. It is the precise and intelligent result of causes — causes that, once understood, we have the power to work with.


Karma Is Not Punishment

Perhaps the most important misconception to release — and we are in the right chapter for releasing things — is the idea that difficult karma is punishment. That when hardship arrives, it is because we have done something wrong and are now paying a price.

This is not the Buddhist understanding. And it is not, more importantly, a helpful or accurate way to relate to difficulty.

Karma is not the universe punishing us.
It is the universe returning us — with great precision and great patience —
to the lessons we have not yet fully learned.

The difference is profound. Punishment implies a judge — an external authority deciding our fate based on whether we have been good or bad. The karmic teaching implies something far more intimate: that we ourselves, through the quality of our intentions and actions, are continuously shaping the conditions of our experience.

This means difficult circumstances are not evidence of failure. They are:

Seeds planted in a previous time — perhaps long forgotten — now ripening into experience.
Conditions arranged, with extraordinary precision, for a specific quality of wisdom to emerge.
Invitations — often uncomfortable ones — to meet ourselves more honestly than we have before.
And sometimes — as Chapters 11 and 12 explored — a form of protection wearing a face we did not initially recognise.

Understood this way, karma becomes not a source of guilt or dread — but a source of genuine agency. If our experience arises from causes, then by purifying our intentions and actions, we are directly participating in shaping what comes next. This is deeply empowering. 



Green Tara and the Karmic Flow

A question sometimes arises in the minds of sincere practitioners: if karma is the precise law of cause and effect — if everything arises from prior causes — then what is the role of Green Tara? Does her swift compassion somehow override the karmic order? Does invoking her name change the rules?

The answer that the great masters offer is both subtle and beautiful: Tara does not override karma. She works within it — as its most compassionate expression.

🌿

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How Green Tara Works Within Karma

She Creates Conditions for Positive Karma to Ripen

When we invoke Green Tara with sincere devotion, the act of devotion itself is a powerful karmic cause. It plants seeds of connection, openness, and receptivity — conditions under which positive karmic seeds already present can ripen more swiftly and more fully.

She Helps Purify Negative Karmic Seeds

The Tara mantras — particularly Om Tare Tuttare Ture Soha — are understood in the Vajrayana tradition as purification practices. They do not erase karma through magic. They transform the intention and awareness of the practitioner — which directly affects how and whether negative karmic seeds ripen into experience.

She Embodies the Karma of Boundless Compassion

Green Tara is herself the fruit of inconceivable accumulated merit — lifetimes upon lifetimes of compassionate action ripened into enlightened form. When we connect with her, we are connecting with the living proof that karma, followed to its most luminous conclusion, produces nothing less than a fully awakened Buddha.

Her Swift Response Is Itself Karmic

Tara's famous swiftness — her ability to respond to suffering before the prayer is even completed — is not a suspension of karma. It is the expression of karma operating at its most refined: the karma of a being whose entire existence is the compassionate response to suffering, meeting the karma of a being who sincerely calls out for help. Two karmic streams meeting — and in their meeting, something is transformed.

To practice with Green Tara, then, is not to bypass the karmic law. It is to enter into conscious, devoted relationship with the most compassionate expression of that law — and to allow that relationship to purify, ripen, and ultimately liberate the karmic patterns we carry.


Working with Karma in Daily Practice

The karmic teaching is most useful not as a philosophical system to be understood intellectually — but as a living practice to be worked with moment by moment. Here are three ways to bring this understanding into daily life.

1. The Practice of Pure Intention
Before any significant action — a difficult conversation, an important decision, an act of generosity — pause for a moment and examine the intention beneath it. Ask: Am I acting from fear, or from clarity? From grasping, or from genuine care? Karma is shaped more by intention than by action. A small act from pure intention plants deeper seeds than a large act from hidden self-interest.

2. The Practice of Karmic Gratitude
When something difficult arises — rather than immediately asking "why is this happening to me?" — try sitting for a moment with: "What seed is ripening here? What is this returning me to?" This is not spiritual bypassing. It is the beginning of genuine inquiry — the kind that, over time, reveals the hidden intelligence woven through even the most painful experiences. 

3. Tara Mantra as Karmic Purification
The daily recitation of Om Tare Tuttare Ture Soha — even twenty-one repetitions with sincere intention — is understood as a direct act of karmic purification. Each repetition plants a seed of liberation. Each seed, in time, will ripen. This is not superstition. It is karma, working precisely as it always has — responding to the quality of what we bring to it.

We are not victims of our karma.
We are its authors — and with practice, its editors.
Green Tara holds the pen alongside us,
guiding each stroke toward liberation. 


A Closing Reflection

Karma is not the wall that imprisons us. It is the ground beneath our feet — solid, reliable, and responsive to every step we take. When we understand it clearly, it transforms from something fearful into something deeply reassuring: the recognition that our experience has meaning, our actions have weight, and the seeds we plant today are already reaching toward tomorrow.

Green Tara walks this ground with us. Her compassion does not lift us above the karmic law — it illuminates the path through it, step by patient step, until the ground itself becomes the path of liberation.

We do not need to carry our karma alone. We never did.

Every seed of genuine compassion you have planted —
in fifteen years of quiet, unwitnessed giving —
is already reaching toward its flowering.
Karma keeps its accounts with perfect honesty.
And it has been watching all along.

In Chapter 15, we turn inward —
to discover the teacher who has been present
through every chapter of this journey.

A Note on Practice Boundaries The karma teachings presented here are offered as contemplative reflection and general Dharma education. Detailed Vajrayana karma purification practices — including specific ngöndro preliminaries and Vajrasattva purification — require formal transmission and guidance from a qualified lineage holder. If you feel drawn to these deeper practices, please seek an authentic teacher. 🙏

🌸

Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise.
May it never diminish, but grow and increase, further and further.

🙏

Dedication of Merits

By this merit, may we swiftly attain the omniscient state.
Having overcome all wrongdoing,
may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence —
with its turbulent waves of birth, aging, sickness, and death.


If these reflections have brought clarity, comfort, or a deeper sense of meaning to your path, you are warmly welcome to support this work.



Thank you for reading. May you find peace, clarity, and great bliss along the path. 🙏

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Images are used for illustrative and editorial purposes only.





Chapter 13 - The Practice of Letting Go

Tibetan Buddhism & Culture  ·  Chapter XIII

The Practice of
Letting Go

❧ ❧ ❧

The hand that holds too tightly
cannot receive what is being offered.
Green Tara's open palm
has always known this.

Why We Hold On

There is something in the human mind that believes holding on is the same as being safe. We grip our plans, our relationships, our identities, our versions of how things should unfold — as though releasing even one of them would cause everything to collapse.

This is not weakness. It is one of the deepest conditioning patterns in samsaric existence — what the Buddha called upadana, the clinging that sits at the very root of suffering. We hold on because we are afraid. And we are afraid because, somewhere beneath the surface, we do not yet fully trust that something will catch us when we open our hands.

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We hold on to outcomes — afraid that releasing them means giving up.
We hold on to pain — because it has become familiar, almost comforting.
We hold on to people — long after the relationship has naturally completed itself.
We hold on to our own self-image — terrified of who we might be without it.
We hold on to our suffering — because letting it go feels like betraying it.

Chapter 12 invited us to trust the unseen path. But trust, for most of us, requires something more than willingness — it requires practice. And the practice begins with understanding precisely what we are holding, and why releasing it is not loss but liberation.


What Letting Go Is Not

Before we can understand the practice, we must gently clear away the most common misconceptions — because many practitioners resist letting go not because they are unwilling, but because they have misunderstood what it actually means.

Letting go is not indifference.
It is not giving up, going numb, or pretending that what happened did not matter.
It is something far more courageous than any of these.

Letting go is not:

Suppression — pushing feelings down and pretending they are not there. That is not release — that is postponement.
Resignation — the bitter acceptance that nothing matters. That is despair wearing the mask of wisdom.
Detachment from love — the Dharma never asks us to stop caring. It asks us to care without clutching.
A single moment — letting go is rarely dramatic. It is almost always a gentle, repeated practice — like returning to the breath in meditation. 
True letting go is an opening — of the heart, of the hands, of the fixed narrative we have built around our experience. It is the willingness to allow what is present to be fully present, and then to allow it to move through — without forcing it to stay and without forcing it to leave.

Green Tara and the Open Hand

Of all the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas in the Vajrayana tradition, none embodies the teaching of letting go more perfectly — or more beautifully — than Green Tara herself.

Look carefully at her image. She does not sit in sealed, withdrawn meditation. She is actively turned toward the world — one leg drawn inward in stillness, one leg extended outward in readiness. She is simultaneously at rest and in motion. Neither grasping nor retreating.

But it is her hands that teach us most directly: 


🌿 The Two Mudras of Green Tara

Right Hand — Varada Mudra

The gesture of supreme giving and release. Her right hand extends downward, palm open and facing outward — the gesture of offering freely, holding nothing back, giving without condition or expectation of return. Every time you see her right hand, it is teaching you: open. Release. Offer.

Left Hand — Vitarka Mudra

Her left hand is raised, holding the stem of a blue utpala lotus between her fingers — lightly, precisely, without crushing it. She holds the lotus just enough. Not so loosely it falls. Not so tightly the petals are destroyed. This is what letting go actually looks like — not white-knuckled gripping, not careless abandonment, but conscious, compassionate, perfectly calibrated holding.

Green Tara does not let go because she does not care. She lets go precisely because she cares so completely — she knows that true compassion never imprisons what it loves.


The Practice Itself

Understanding the teaching is one thing. Embodying it is another. Here are three simple practices rooted in the Tara tradition for ordinary daily life.

1. The Breath as Teacher
Every single exhale is a letting go. When you notice yourself gripping — a thought, a worry, a resentment — return to the exhale. Let the breath model what the mind is being asked to learn. Breathe out fully. Notice what remains.

2. The Tara Visualisation
Bring Green Tara's image gently to mind. See her right hand extended — varada mudra — palm open, facing you. Bring to mind the specific thing you are holding onto. Place it into her open palm. You are not destroying it — you are releasing it from your grip and allowing her boundless compassion to hold it instead.

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3. The Single Question
When clinging arises, pause and ask quietly: "What am I afraid will happen if I open my hand?" Do not answer immediately. Simply hold the question with the same lightness that Tara holds the lotus. Often the fear, once named, begins to loosen on its own.

We do not let go all at once.
We let go the way the lotus opens —
one petal at a time,
in its own perfect season.

A Closing Reflection

Green Tara's open hand has been extended toward us since before we knew we needed it. She has been waiting — not impatiently, not with judgment — simply waiting for the moment we are ready to release what we have been carrying alone for so long.

Letting go is not the end of caring. It is the beginning of a deeper, freer, more honest form of love — one that does not need the outcome to match the plan, does not need the path to look the way we imagined it would.

It is the love that Tara has always modelled — vast, responsive, and completely unafraid of the open hand.

Whatever you have been holding —
perhaps it is time to breathe out.
Her palm is open.
It has always been open.
And what she holds, she holds with infinite care.

The open hand is not emptiness —
it is the beginning of everything new.


The practice continues — and in Chapter 14, we turn to the invisible architecture beneath it all.

A Note on Practice Boundaries The reflections offered here are contemplative supports for daily life — not a substitute for formal Tara practice or transmission from a qualified lineage holder. If you feel drawn to deepen your Green Tara practice, please seek guidance from an authentic teacher within an authentic lineage. 🙏

🌸

Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise.
May it never diminish, but grow and increase, further and further.

🙏

Dedication of Merits

By this merit, may we swiftly attain the omniscient state.
Having overcome all wrongdoing,
may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence —
with its turbulent waves of birth, aging, sickness, and death.


If these reflections have brought some peace or gentle release to your path, you are warmly welcome to support this work at :


Thank you for reading. May you find peace, clarity, and great bliss along the path. 🙏

← Return to Tibetan Buddhism & Culture

Images are used for illustrative and editorial purposes only.