My ex-wife told me that she was leaving me for a bigger house. She does the world news report and was stressed that a paramedic who earns almost $13 an hour could not provide her with a home that she would feel comfortable bringing her "news" friends over to.
My aquatics business is going down faster then a presidential intern, my house is about to be foreclosed on and I haven't had a decent dating prospect in three years.
Can anything clean up my bad karma? Is there any way to stop me from spreading this around or should I try to make some extra cash by being a "karma hit man"?
-Smell It Coming
It's a good thing bad karma is not contagious — otherwise all doctors, firemen and IRS auditors would live cursed and joyless lives. Your troubles instead stem from poor choices. Your first mistake: a thankless occupation. Second: marrying a journalist (trust us, it's not worth the drama). And finally, expecting the Karma Cleanser to plug your sinking scuba safety business. We suggest you stop trying to save everyone else's lives and instead focus on saving your own.
Dear Karma Cleanser: My flight to LA was late and full of pushy passengers eager to leave. Everyone was angry at the lack of overhead storage space. An elderly man in front of me was trying to shove his attaché case into an already full compartment, and was holding up the aisle. I decided to help him by moving another suitcase to the side, but once I grabbed it he shoved his case in harder and jammed my fingertip in the gap. Now I have a blue (and possibly broken) finger, and the flight didn't take off any earlier.
How's that for karma? I guess no good deed goes unpunished.
-Checking My Luggage
You did right by trying to help the old guy, but you're wrong for pointing the proverbial finger at karma. Playing Good Samaritan usually comes at a greater personal price than we'd like. Your battered digit will earn you double bonus miles down the road. Let's just hope the fingernail doesn't come off, because that's really gross.
Been bad? karmacleanser@gmail.com.