What is Your Dharma?

Aug 21
17:23

2008

Ken Donaldson

Ken Donaldson

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Living your life on purpose allows your personal compass to direct you toward fulfilling your life purpose. When you’re on your intended path, you’re in dharma, which is an old Sanskrit word which Webster’s Dictionary defines as: an individual's duty fulfilled by observance of custom or law; the basic principles of cosmic or individual existence; conformity to one's duty and nature.

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Your Dharma is what you were born to be.

It’s what your DNA makeup has programmed you to be; and it’s the path of life on which you’ll achieve the greatest degree of happiness,What is Your Dharma? Articles success, and fulfillment, AND where you’ll also have the most impact on humankind. Dharma is like wearing a pair of comfortable shoes. You feel good in them because they fit you so well. When you’re out of dharma, and you find yourself off your intended path, it’s like wearing a pair of shoes which are too tight, too restricting and uncomfortable; you feel miserable wearing them.

When you’re in dharma, all of your talents and energy emerge and converge to produce positive effects for you and all of those around you. You can’t help but exude qualities of passion, peace, happiness, and fulfillment. As a result, you’ll naturally practice patience, honesty, compassion, self-control, forgiveness and reason.

Likewise, living in your Dharma will also help you let go of unnecessary anger, resentment, judgment, envy, greed and jealousy. You and everyone around you benefits from your dharma.  There may be times when it seems as if you’re going against what others want you to do, but by being in and true to your dharma...

You’re actually creating what’s best for everyone—yourself and others.

Many people live their entire lives without being in dharma or on their intended path. There’s absolutely no joy in this. To live the greatest life you’re capable of living you need to know who you are and where you’re going, As a result, the choices of what to do become much clearer.

So take a moment to think about your dharma shoes – are they comfortable and fit just right or are they too tight or too loose? 

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