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Book Review: Fushigina Kiroku Volume 6

The volume 6 book covers bad karma, how to deal with it, good karma, God, and so on. The author unveils the invisible force, or karma, through real cases, which also explains the existence of God. 

About Karma

Karma is explained as a consequence of a person’s thoughts and actions. The various unfortunate real cases in this volume provide insight into karma.

One example is a cursed wedding kimono. It is a true story of a wedding kimono made by a girl who was deceived by her fiancé. When she made the wedding kimono, she had thoughts of rage and sadness that became attached to the kimono as negative karma or a curse. The curse killed everyone who wore the kimono. The story indicates that objects can hold an invisible force that can influence people’s fates.

Another story is about a family who kicked their daughter-in-law, or wife, out of the home after she became sick. She passed away in sadness. That family faced various kinds of bad events, including illness, financial difficulties, and the bankruptcy of the family business. Destroying someone’s life had a bad impact on their family’s fate. The author clearly shows that such cases are caused by human thoughts and actions, not by bad spirits or ghosts.

How to Deal with Karma

The author provides a real story as a great example of how to deal with karma. A person was taught the cause of his injury, understood, apologized for his previous thoughts and actions, and then his fate changed. It teaches that the best method to deal with karma is to analyze the circumstances of what is happening, understand the cause, apologize, and improve our thoughts and actions, even if we can’t remember the initial cause of the karma.

This volume also explains how to cleanse karma from items. Even if a person changes their thoughts and actions, the karma attached to the object remains, as described in the story of the wedding kimono. Humans cannot clean up this invisible power. According to the author, we must ask God to cleanse the object’s karma.

Good Karma – Vow to Help Others

This book also includes a story about good karma, which was generated by sincere actions. One of the sincere actions is a vow, a promise to God, to help others. The author vowed to construct a Shinto-practice training facility. He invested his money and time. The facility he built with his good intentions carries good karma. It is a great example of how we can generate good karma.

True God

The story of karma teaches us that there is an invisible power, which helps readers understand the invisible God. In the final volume, the author explains the true God and God’s name. Then readers can pray to God.

He also warns us to be aware of spiritualists and religious persons who make money dealing with evil spirits and guardian spirits, who worship humans as gods, and who provoke war and violence. When we understand the actual God, we recognize that such individuals’ corrupt actions and leadership are incorrect.

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