In early Buddhist psychology, particularly in the Abhidharma teachings, the mind is understood as a sequence of moments rather than a single, stable thing. An experience arises, the mind evaluates it almost instantly, and a response follows. What matters is that this evaluation happens before conscious choice. By the time you think you are deciding, momentum is often already in motion. The idea of karma is commonly misunderstood at exactly this point.
Karma was never meant to describe fate, punishment, or a cosmic reward system. It simply describes momentum created through repeated action. What you repeatedly think, attend to, and react from conditions what comes next. Karma is not something that happens to you. It is something you participate in, moment by moment, whether you are aware of it or not. Mental rehearsal, from this perspective, is karmic activity in real time.
When a familiar situation appears and the same internal response arises automatically, the mind is not choosing in that moment. It is following a karmic groove that has already been worn through repetition. Each rehearsal strengthens that groove. Each reaction reinforces it. Gradually, the response feels inevitable, even though it was learned.
The Buddha taught that suffering is not created by events themselves, but by the mental formations that arise in response to those events. These formations are built through habit. When attention is absent, the mind fills the present moment with expectations shaped by the past. The future is decided internally before the present is fully met. That continuity of reaction is your karma in action.
A similar understanding appears in Stoic philosophy. Epictetus taught that people are not disturbed by what happens to them, but by the judgments they make about what happens. These judgments were not seen as isolated thoughts, but as habitual interpretations. A person who consistently interprets uncertainty as danger will feel fear before anything has gone wrong. A person who consistently interprets challenge as threat will brace before action is required.
Both traditions are pointing to the same mechanism. The mind rehearses. The body responds. The pattern continues. What is important here is that karma is not destiny. It is momentum. Momentum can be redirected, but only if it is seen while it is forming. When rehearsal remains unconscious, the body obeys it automatically and the same outcomes repeat. When rehearsal becomes visible, the sequence loosens.
Mindfulness was never taught as passive observation or emotional suppression. It was taught as precise attention applied at the right moment. In Buddhist terms, right mindfulness interrupts karmic momentum before it hardens into reaction. Not by force, but by presence. Each time you notice the rehearsal instead of blindly following it, something subtle but important happens. The nervous system receives new information. The brain learns that imagining an outcome is not the same as living it. The body discovers that uncertainty does not automatically lead to harm.
That is how karma changes. Not through belief, not through willpower, and not through positive thinking, but through awareness arriving earlier in the response sequence. This is ancient knowledge, tested over centuries across cultures, through direct experience. The language changes. The insight does not. What reshapes your life is not learning that karma exists. It is learning to see how it is being created, moment by moment, in the quiet space before you act.