Pratikraman: Freedom Through Apology & Repentance (Abr.) (In English) Pratikraman: Freedom Through Apology & Repentence | Page 20

Pratikraman 7 and exactly the way it happened, to your guru or to a Gnani. The amount of pratikraman one needs to do depends on the amount of atikraman one does. Atikraman includes deeds that are not acceptable in society, deeds that are condemned, and deeds that inflict pain on others. If any of this applies, pratikraman is necessary. You have to understand who binds the karmas. What is your name? Questioner: My name is Chandulal. Dadashri: Then the one who says, “I am Chandulal,” is the entity that binds karma. Karmas are bound even during sleep, throughout the night. What is the reason behind this? It is because of the misconception of your true identity, (You are really pure Self, but you say you are Chandulal) that karmas are being charged. In reality you are not Chandulal, and yet you claim that you are. “I am Chandulal,” is a false accusation and with this belief you are continuously charging karmas. With your conviction of, “I am Chandulal,” comes a series of other wrong beliefs, such as, “I am her husband; his uncle; her father; their boss, etc.” Even in your sleep you bind karma, which cannot be avoided. But if you purify your ego of its conviction of, “I am Chandulal,” you will not bind as many karmas. Even after the ego becomes somewhat pure, you will still have to perform some rituals. If your daughter-in-law breaks something expensive and you shout at her, you will have to do pratikraman for hurting her feelings. The hurt you cause is atikraman and if you do pratikraman immediately, the karma will be erased or become lighter. Whenever you do atikraman, you must erase it with pratikraman. It should be a shoot-on- sight, instantaneous pratikraman, and not the kind that is done only once a year. Only then will it lighten this burden of suffering.