Life is not a series of random meetings. The faces we see daily, the families we are born into, even the strangers who cross our paths — all are linked by unseen threads. In the language of Sanātana Dharma, this network is called Ṛṇa–Anubandha, the web of karmic debts.
The word ṛṇa means “debt,” and anubandha means “bond” or “connection.” Together, they reveal a profound truth: every relationship we form is tied to unfinished exchanges of give and take across lifetimes.
Ṛṇa–Anubandha is the principle that souls meet again and again to settle karmic accounts. Just as merchants record debts and credits in a ledger, nature records the subtle exchanges between beings. Love, service, betrayal, or harm — none vanish without trace. They become debts to be paid or received.
Thus, the mother who cares for a child, the friend who betrays trust, or the stranger who helps in crisis — all may be acting under bonds formed in earlier births.
The scriptures describe five primary ṛṇas (debts) every human is born with:
Beyond these, there are personal karmic debts — the bonds of love, enmity, and responsibility that weave individuals together across births.
Every relationship carries an element of ṛṇa.
This is why the Gita says (6.45) that no spiritual effort is ever lost. Unfinished seeds carry forward, drawing souls into renewed bonds until the lesson is learned and the debt cleared.
Karmic debts are not always repaid in the same form. A debt of money may transform into a debt of care; an act of harm may return as illness or sorrow. What matters is the essence of balance.
For example:
The law is precise, though the forms are hidden from ordinary sight.
While Ṛṇa–Anubandha explains why relationships are binding, Sanātana Dharma also offers the path to transcendence. Freedom comes not by running away from bonds, but by fulfilling them with awareness and detachment.
Krishna tells Arjuna:
“स्वधर्मे निधनं श्रेयः परधर्मो भयावहः।। ३.३५।।
Svadharme nidhanaṁ śreyaḥ paradharmo bhayāvahaḥ.
— Bhagavad Gita 3.35
“It is better to die in one’s own dharma; another’s duty brings danger.”
This means that debts must be repaid through one’s rightful duties (svadharma), not by imitating others or avoiding responsibility. But when duties are performed without selfish attachment, karma dissolves instead of multiplying.
In modern life, the awareness of Ṛṇa–Anubandha can change how we see relationships:
The ultimate goal is not just to balance every debt but to transcend the entire ledger. The yogi who realizes the Self no longer identifies as debtor or creditor. For such a soul, actions are performed as offerings to the Divine, leaving no residue.
As the Gita (4.23) declares:
“गतसङ्गस्य मुक्तस्य ज्ञानावस्थितचेतसः।
यज्ञायाचरतः कर्म समग्रं प्रविलीयते।। ४.२३।।”
Gata-saṅgasya muktasya jñānāvasthita-cetasaḥ,
Yajñāyācarataḥ karma samagraṁ pravilīyate.
“For one who is free from attachment, liberated, and established in wisdom,
actions performed as sacrifice are entirely dissolved.”
Ṛṇa–Anubandha reminds us that life is not random. We are bound in a vast web of karmic debts, weaving families, societies, and destinies together. By living with awareness, fulfilling duties with devotion, and offering all actions to the Divine, we can gradually untangle this web.
In the end, the path is not only to settle old accounts but to step beyond the cycle altogether — to live in freedom, where no debt remains, and the soul shines in its eternal light.
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