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  • Dharma In Popular Music: Bobby Blue Bland

    The Samyutta Nikaya states:

    “According to the seed that’s sown,
    So is the fruit you reap there from,
    Doer of good will gather good,
    Doer of evil, evil reaps,
    Down is the seed and thou shalt taste
    The fruit thereof.”

    Further On Up the Road

    http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2380/2331817330_99f139c7bc.jpg

    Further on up the road, someone’s gonna hurt you like you
    hurt me
    Further on up the road, someone’s gonna hurt you like
    you hurt me
    Further on up the road, baby you just wait and see
    You got to reap just what you sow, that old saying is

    true
    You got to reap just what you sow, that old saying is
    true
    Like you mistreat someone, someone’s gonna mistreat

    you
    Now you’re laughing pretty baby, someday you’re gonna
    be crying
    Now you’re laughing pretty baby, some, someday you’re

    gonna be crying
    Further on up the road, you’ll find out I wasn’t
    lying
    Yeah, baby, further on up the road, baby, hmmm, you’ll

    find out I wasn’t lying
    Further on up the road, when you’re all alone and
    blue
    Further on up the road, when you’re all alone and

    blue
    You’re gonna ask me to take you back baby, but I’ll
    have somebody new
    Hmmm, baby, further on up the road
    Hmmm, baby, further on up the road

    Hmmm, you’ll get yours

    http://images.jamsbio.com/images/poverty/bland.jpg

    “Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.”    -Galations 6.7

    “You gotta reap just what you sow; that old saying is true.  Just like you mistreat someone, someone’s gonna mistreat you.” -Bobby “Blue” Bland

    A perspicacious Mr. Bland chides the listener into more circumspect behavior by extolling the aptness and inevitability of karma in “Further on up the Road.”  Listen HERE. This song was written by Joe Medwich Veasey and Don D. Robey.

    http://i164.photobucket.com/albums/u25/musesick72/karma-1.jpgKarma demands that every act, no matter how insignificant, will eventually return to the doer with equal impact. Good will be returned with good; evil with evil.  The idea of reaping what you sow expresses the principle action of karma.  Karma may also be loosely thought of as the ethical law of cause and effect, poetic justice, what goes around comes around, the law of causality, or the chickens coming home to roost.

     July 5th, 2010  Buddhist Learning Center   No comments

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