either, broadly speakingWhat is a karma swap exactly, in this context? That you are being punished for their sins? Or rewarded for their good deeds?
that sounds like 90s thriller single white female.one true story i can use to illustrate the phenomenon. i know an experimental musician from Burnley. Burnley is not the sort of place which typically breeds experimental musicians, but here he is, in London, and he's doing well. he's released various records on labels he admires, he's playing gigs all over the world, he's networking furiously, he's attending shows and clubs and bars and meeting hundreds of like-minded people. then one day another boy from Burnley shows up in London. and he meets **** and they realise they are not just from the same town but from the same cul-de-sac. and they end up taking 5 tabs of acid together and since that day my friend has never released another album. and moreover the other boy has subsequently released albums on all the same labels that my friend did. taken over his entire friendship group and stolen his life. karma swap (of the hostile variant)
Plutarch's scientific explanation stated that the eyes were the chief, if not sole, source of the deadly rays that were supposed to spring up like poisoned darts from the inner recesses of a person possessing the evil eye. Plutarch treated the phenomenon of the evil eye as something seemingly inexplicable that is a source of wonder and cause of incredulity.[a] Pliny the Elder described the ability of certain African enchanters to have the "power of fascination with the eyes and can even kill those on whom they fix their gaze".https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evil_eye#cite_note-13
The idea of the evil eye appears in the poetry of Virgil in a conversation between the shepherds Menalcas and Damoetas.[c] In the passage, Menalcas is lamenting the poor health of his stock: "What eye is it that has fascinated my tender lambs?".