The Lotus Flower is the primary flower representing karma, symbolizing the cause-and-effect principle because it simultaneously carries seeds while blooming, showing how present actions create future outcomes, and its growth from mud to beautiful blossom signifies spiritual purity and rising above life's struggles, embodying the essence of karma in Asian traditions.
The lotus flower is a common representation of karma, but why? Learn more about the elements of the lotus that underscore the importance of good karma.
Karma Flowers, also known as Wheel Flowers, are rare, yellow objects which can be found growing at specific locations throughout most of the game's regions. They can be eaten to prevent Karma loss.
The 🌸 emoji typically represents a Cherry Blossom (Sakura), symbolizing spring, beauty, and renewal, but it can broadly refer to many pink or general flowers like Roses, Peonies, Hibiscus, or Azaleas, with specific names depending on context (e.g., Japanese culture often uses Sakura for its seasonal significance).
Karma symbols such as the endless knot (above) are common cultural motifs in Asia. Endless knots symbolize interlinking of cause and effect, a karmic cycle that continues eternally. The endless knot is visible in the center of the prayer wheel.
The design is an endless knot, a Buddhist symbol that represents the eternalness of our souls and the never-ending cycle of karma.
Karma of Four Types
A flower that has blossomed. Depicted as a flower with white or yellow petals, as a daisy, with a golden center. Commonly used for Valentine's Day, Mother's Day, and other special occasions. May be more generally used to convey such ideas as love, appreciation, and happiness.
The emoji 🌺 typically represents a Hibiscus flower, known for its large, showy blooms in tropical regions, but it can also symbolize general beauty, tropical settings, or even Hawaiian culture, with popular flower names including Rose, Lily, Daisy, Sunflower, Tulip, and Jasmine, among many others like Lotus, Peony, and Orchid.
🌷 Tulip emoji
As one of the first flowers of spring, they are also a symbol of rebirth – ideal for celebrating a new adventure.
The It's Karma Color Scheme has 4 colors, which are Earth Yellow (#E4BC64), Flavescent (#F9E692), Fire Opal (#E75D42) and Golden Gate Bridge Orange (#BA2F23).
Bird's-Foot Trefoil: Revenge
In the floral language of late 19th-century England, bird's-foot trefoil symbolized revenge—the "revenge" in this case presumably being the recipient's need to go out and buy a suitable vase.
Lord Shiva's 7 Laws of Karma offer a path to self-realization and harmony. These principles, rooted in cause and effect, emphasize balance, action and reaction, transformation, detachment, self-awareness, compassionate destruction, and universal oneness.
Begonia: Beware, Deformity, Warning
Rather, they caution the receiver to stay vigilant and look out for signs of hidden danger. On the other hand, begonias can also symbolize peace and individuality.
The lotus flower symbolizes purity, spiritual enlightenment, rebirth, and resilience, rising clean from muddy waters to bloom beautifully, representing the soul's journey from darkness to light, unaffected by worldly struggles. It's sacred in Eastern religions like Buddhism (purity, Buddha's awakening) and Hinduism (beauty, divinity, chakras), signifying spiritual growth, prosperity, and divine creation across cultures, including ancient Egypt where it linked to the sun and rebirth.
Black Roses
Dark roses signify all things dreary and, well, dark. This is likely because these deep purple roses look almost black in colour, and come with negative connotations of death and mourning.
A Gumamela symbolizes a perfect wife or woman. Sometimes, it means beauty of fame or personal glory. Gumamela flower is one of the native flowers in the Philippines.
Use with caution if you have low or high blood pressure. Interactions. Hibiscus tea may interfere with the effectiveness of some anti-malaria drugs. It can also interact with many other drugs including some for diabetes and high blood pressure.
Hibiscus come in a wide array of colors but here are just a few, along with what those colors mean! Yellow hibiscus is often associated with happiness, sunshine, and good luck! Red hibiscus is a symbol of love and passion. Pink hibiscus stands for friendship and all different kinds of love – not just romantic!
💮 White Flower
An emoji symbol of a white flower, often a cherry blossom.
The dead rose (🥀), also known as the wilted rose or wilted flower, is an emoji commonly used to signify heartbreak, or romantic loss. It has often been used as a replacement for the broken heart emoji (💔), which was seen as overused.
With its shifty eyes and thin lips, a 🌚 says “mhmm.” If someone doesn't agree with something, they may send this emoji alone or at the end of a sentence. The black moon can also be used ironically to show disapproval in this context.
Deluding karma (Mohanīya karma) – These karmas are an instrumental cause of destruction the soul's right belief and right conduct. Of all karmas, deluding karma is the most difficult to overcome.
Shani: God of Karma. Shani, also known as Shani Dev, is a deity representing the planet Saturn in Hindu mythology, believed to govern karma and the results of one's actions.
Hinduism identifies karma as the relationship between a person's mental or physical action and the consequences following that action. It also signifies the consequences of all the actions of a person in their current and previous lives, as well as the chain of cause and effect in morality.