Ill-gotten gains cannot be kept
Chu Sanxing, a Buddhist, said to Agudengba:
If you don't repay your debt, you will definitely receive retribution.
Agudengba agrees with Chu Sanxing’s idea,
but he has another way of saying: In real life, you will find that those who do
not repay their debts will become increasingly poor!
Agudenba said:
I know a businessman. When he first started
his business, he worked hard, was honest and trustworthy, never defaulted on
payment, and had an excellent reputation in the industry. Over the past few
years, he accumulated tens of millions of wealth.
But as his wealth grew, his greed became
more and more serious. Although he had money, he would find various reasons to
withhold and delay other people's payments, and his business became worse and
worse. Over the past few years, he has also borrowed millions of dollars from
friends around him.
Later, when his friends wanted to get their
money back, he finally showed his ugly face and tried to delay at first.
"I don't have the money to pay back,
otherwise you can sue me!"
When his friends put pressure on him, he
said: "Don't push me, it won't help if you push me to death!"
If he doesn't repay his debt, will he get
rich?
In the past, his business did well, but in
recent years, he has lost nothing. All kinds of accidents that even the script
wouldn't dare to write like this would happen to him strangely. In just a few
years, he became poor, sick, and impoverished.
Chu Sanxing asked Agudengba: Why is this
happening?
Agudumba said: It is difficult to find the
answer in Buddhism. Even modern science cannot explain it, but the Chinese
ancestors have long told us in "The Book of Rites·University":
"Whatever goes in contrary to what is going in will also come out contrary
to." That is to say, wealth obtained improperly will also come out. will
be lost in improper ways.
Agudengba sang a little song
"Ill-gotten gains cannot be kept":
Where
money comes, it will go;
Money
will go as it comes.
Ill-gotten
gains can never be retained;
When
wealth disappears, it often disappears twice as much.
Unexpected
disasters followed one after another.
The
meaning of life does not lie in the amount of wealth;
The
important thing is to live a healthy and comfortable life.
Taking the legendary wise Agu Demba as the protagonist, I started to create the Chinese-English version of "Snow Land Fable" using the traditional fable creation method that combines poetry and prose. Writing fableskes me feel like a child again. Studying snowy culture is my prescription to prevent Alzheimer’s di masease.
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