Bored Panda
“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
CuriositiesAPR 16, 2026

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand

51
9
“You reap what you sow.” “What goes around comes around.” And my favorite one: “You’ll slurp what you crumbled.”
We’ve all grown up hearing little nuggets of moral wisdom — sayings that basically echo the idea of karma.
In a world that doesn’t always feel fair, there’s a certain guilty pleasure (or schadenfreude) in watching people who act badly get a bit of instant payback.
Like a misogynistic man mocking women drivers, only to end up in a fender bender moments later. Or a person steals a cell phone on the street, and their own phone is stolen shortly after.
These moments are even better when you get to witness them firsthand, just like these people who shared the stories online.
Reading them almost makes you believe that cosmic justice, or karma, can show up in the most unexpected ways.

#1

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
I work as a wildlife biologist and used to work on a shorebird project that had us out in a boat 6 days a week, all from the same narrow, steep, curved boat ramp. I’m not amazing at trailering but I could have driven that boat launch with my eyes closed after the first few months.

We got to the launch on a busy Saturday, got our boat prepped and hopped in line for the launch. I was driving the truck, my other female coworker was driving the boat, and our boss was organizing gear in the boat. A guy behind us in line flagged my boss down and told him he was “brave to let the women drive” and said he hopped we didn’t block the ramp and hold everyone up while we tried to launch. My boss was just like “my crew has it handled” and the dude was like “your funeral, man, never seen a woman who could handle this ramp.”

I rolled my eyes but just single shotted the trailer down the ramp like always, my coworker handled the boat, and I went and parked the truck.


I walked back down the ramp to get in the boat and discovered that the guy had dropped one of his wheels off the ramp in the worst spot to and high-centered his trailer on the edge of the ramp.

I smiled sweetly at him and said “oh no! It I’d known you were going to have this much trouble I would have offered drive for you to help you out! Good luck!”

And then I hopped on my boat and my (female!) captain jetted us away down the river.
104points

#2

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
Working in a kids clothes store coming up to Christmas.

I was in the section by myself, trying to tidy the place while also serving the customers who came in.

This one guy came in, he'd been sent to buy clothes for his kids to wear on Christmas day and didn't have a clue, I helped him pick stuff out, piece things together, gave him a few options etc.

He picked out the outfits and came by to pay, by the time he came to the counter there was a queue so he had to wait in line a bit, *then* as he was paying I ran out of receipt paper.

The receipt paper was kept in the managers office and could only be changed by a manager because logic. Manager (who wasn't my favourite person) came out as she was changing the paper she started making chit-chat with this guy and said something like *"I hope she hasn't been too slow and keeping you waiting too long"* he froze for a second and then said;

*"Are you kidding me? This girl is here by herself and has been quickly helping out everyone who comes in, managed to save [me] by picking out outfits for my kids, while also tidying up* **and** *keeping a smile on her face the whole time... I hope you guys are paying her well for the kind of service she's providing."*

I honestly nearly cried on the spot it was just so nice to hear him say such nice things, especially to my manager who was always so rude to me.
89points

Before we begin, let’s give credit where credit is due.

The word ‘karma’ comes from ancient India, dating back to around 1500 BCE, and is rooted in Sanskrit. The original word, karman, simply means action, work, or deed.

While karma might feel like a cosmic referee handing out punishments, it is a deeply complex philosophy about action and consequence across lifetimes.

In its earliest form, in the Rigveda, karma wasn’t even about morality. It was more about rituals, and doing things the right way so the universe stayed in balance.

In later philosophical texts, karma began to take on a moral dimension. Actions carried consequences, good deeds could lead to positive outcomes, and bad deeds to negative ones. But, again, this wasn’t about instant results.

In belief systems like Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, karma is tied to the ongoing cycle of birth and rebirth. They believe that life isn’t a one-time deal, but more like a loop, and your actions keep that loop going.

#3

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
Best karma I've witnessed happened today when I won full legal and physical custody of my 2 daughters and walked past my [toxic] ex with my head held high who once told me "you won't divorce me you're too scared".
79points

#4

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
In my early 20's at a dive bar, near closing time. I just put money into the jukebox and was making my selections when a very large man pushed me away and fished into his pockets for money to make a selection. He realized that the machine had credits available and used them! I didn't fuss because if he was capable of shoving me for a few songs, what else was he capable of?
Anyway, after he walked away I looked at the floor and saw that he had dropped a folded up $100 bill! I casually stepped on it, hiding it under my shoe and picked it up without suspicion... Instant payback!!!
75points

Traditionally, karma has been a tool for self-reflection and ethical living. It encouraged people to be mindful of their actions and their intentions. Not because punishment was imminent, but because these actions shaped their future.

The ultimate goal wasn’t to get even or see wrongdoers punished. Instead, it was to break out of the cycle of suffering altogether, a concept described as moksha in Hinduism and nirvana in Buddhism.

#5

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
Watching some teenagers teasing and annoying a llama at a petting zoo.

I warned them "hey, they're usually nice but they *will* spit to defend themselves if you push them too far, and I promise you don't want that."

They ignored me and kept pestering them, so I watched.

Sure enough, the llama gave a "warning" spit and sprayed saliva all over the guy's face. He grimaced and wiped it off, and kept going at it...

...and then the llama gave him the real deal (when llamas really mean it, they can pull their "spit" from down in their rumen, the real fermented green gunk with some stuff in there to make sure it sticks).

I watched him fall to his knees and throw up, trying to wipe it off like the warning spit but no such luck this time, it smeared everywhere and was stuck fast. The girl he was with tried to help me but threw up and had to run a good 12 paces away to get some fresh air.

He begged to use the restroom indoors (we were a bit past closing time and started to lock up) and I said absolutely not. Not going to stink up the entire store indoors because you didn't want to listen.

So I just got to see him start to amble back to his car being miserable as the stuff started to harden and set in.
71points

#6

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
I was driving on the freeway and a guy in a hot rod was tailgating me despite the fact that I was in the far right lane. He got mad, whipped around me, got in front of me and brake checked me. I had my two kids (one still a baby) in the car so I just slowed way down and let him get ahead of me. When I got to the off ramp, he was on the shoulder, pulled over by the state patrol. You best believe I rolled my window down and said “na na na na na!”.
64points

#7

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
When I was 13 there was this beaver in the park behind my house. It had gotten pushed upstream by a massive storm that had hit earlier that day. Some guy my age was throwing rocks at it, and I was shouting at him to stop it as a group accumulated.

Before he could hit one (thankfully), the beaver got reasonably pissed, turned around and slapped its tail against the water. It *soaked* him, and only him. Everyone laughed and he finally left the poor little guy alone. It was awesome.
60points

At the center of karma is a long-standing debate about free will, though.

If karma suggests that your present is shaped by past actions, possibly even from past lives, then it raises an obvious question. Are we really making choices, and do we really have free will?

Some interpretations of karma can sound as if everything is pre-written.

But, in many schools of thought, karma exists alongside free will. While you may not control the circumstances you’re born into, you do have control over how you respond to them now.

For example, you might be stuck in a job or dealing with a difficult boss. This situation could be seen as something shaped by past actions. But how you handle it, whether you stay or push back, is still up to you and can further affect your future.

#8

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
I saw a video of a woman stealing someone’s package from their front door, when she turned around to go back to her car she slipped and broke her ankle so bad !! Karma at its finest.
56points

#9

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
I went to a Rolling Stones concert with a tour bus and my parents brought me to the pick up place and when I stepped in the bus, I sat behind an old woman and her daughter and then she started making fun of my mom and telling her daughter how weird she looked and gave me nasty looks when she found out I was that woman’s daughter she was making fun of.

After the concert I noticed she and her daughter did not came back and then the bus driver said they didn’t came back because they’ve ordered their tickets from marktplaats.nl (which is a Dutch version of eBay) and the tickets were not valid at the entrance so they never got in at the concert and went home by themselves crying.

I’ve never laughed so hard at something I shouldn’t laugh about..
52points

#10

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
My then-husband (we were separated) had been pocketing my half of the car insurance and not paying the bill. I found out when I got a letter saying our insurance was suspended for non-payment. Horrified, I chewed him out and lectured him on why you have to carry insurance. As the estrangement and divorce proceeded, I eventually got my own insurance.

Two years later, 1 year post-divorce, he got arrested. The arrest had stemmed from driving without insurance.

I sent in a FOIA request for his mugshot and to this day that's his picture on my phone.
46points

Even though a complex philosophical concept has been turned into a more accessible, everyday idea… it still upholds a basic belief in fairness.

Today, it’s become increasingly embedded in pop culture. Artists like Taylor Swift, Chappell Roan, JoJo Siwa, and Miley Cyrus all reference karma in their recent music.

So, is karma really real? Science doesn’t really deal with it as a cosmic system that tracks good and bad behavior. There’s no evidence of a hidden force in the universe stepping in to balance moral scores.

But what science does look at, though, is cause and effect, and actions and consequences.

Studies show that actions do have consequences, but they usually play out through social systems and relationships over time. Not in immediate dramatic moments.

Basically, your actions affect how people treat you and the kind of opportunities you get.

For example, if someone is consistently rude or untrustworthy, people around them may stop trusting them or avoid working with them.

#11

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
I grew up spending my summers in a small beach town. Another kid in my town was a bit of a bully. He spent an entire summer throwing jellyfish at people and rubbing them on seats so that people that sat down would get stung on their butts. After a whole summer of terrorizing others, he jumped off a raft in the water and a jellyfish made its way into his swim trunks. It was such sweet karma!
42points

#12

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
My awful ex was yelling at me for no good reason. He stormed off and fell down the stairs.

The one and only time I’ve laughed at someone who could have been hurt.
41points

#13

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
Person road-raging me for a solid 1km; tailgating, horn, screaming out the window, moving into the overtaking lane when there was one, and swerving nearer me. Whole nine yards.

Last time there was a overtaking lane, he was so determined to intimidate me, he wasn’t paying attention to the lane ending, and slammed into the front corner of a police highway patrol van coming the other way.

Somehow he was able to walk away… just far enough to the back of said van in cuffs.
40points

There’s a ton of research that shows that people who believe in karma are more likely to behave cooperatively or generously in some situations, because they feel their actions are being constantly judged.

One major study found that thinking about karma can increase prosocial behavior, reduce revenge tendencies, and encourage people to act more fairly toward strangers.

“It’s a fairly common belief — at least the general idea that there’s a bigger force outside of human beings, like a cosmic force that ensures that in the long run, good things happen to good people, and bad things happen to bad people,” says Cindel White, an assistant professor of social and personality psychology at York University in Toronto.

She adds, “Karma and other supernatural beliefs make you think there are higher powers making sure that in the long run, you're going to get what you deserve. It can make you feel optimistic and reassured that, eventually, things will turn out for the best.”

#14

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
I was trying to order a drink at a bar and some guy was getting... too friendly. I told him to back off. His friend was there too. I said "Dude, if you keep this up, i'm going to headbutt you". His friend said "Dude, i think she's serious". He kept on. So I headbutted him.

So... this doesn't read so much like karma but more like me starting a fight. However, the dude had just said "yeah right" and he flinched back, snapping his mouth closed and thus CHIPPING HIS TOOTH.

His friend started cracking up. Apparently it was the end of a very very [bad] day, but he deserved everything he got. parking ticket, ran out of gas after he didn't pitch in on a road trip, a couple other things, then the chipped tooth after he kept ragging on a lady at a bar.
35points

#15

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
One day in high school I was walking behind this kid and he tripped on the raised edge of the wheelchair ramp. I was terrible and laughed pretty hard to myself. Literally the next day I did the exact same thing in the exact same spot but I did it in front of a group of guys. Yeah they all laughed pretty hard :( I deserved it though.
34points

#16

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
A man was an absolute [jerk] to some kid outside a local grocery store asking for a safety-related favor that would've taken ten seconds. He had a big interview to get to, no time to help some stupid *explitives* kid. He was too important. Went in, put on the charm... and was promptly banned from the premises. Didn't know the owner had mic'ed surveillance. I was part of the screening process. Lord was his face red.
34points

At the same time, this belief can also influence how people judge others. It can sometimes make them assume that bad outcomes must be deserved.

For instance, if a person who believes in karma sees someone suffering, they tend to look for an internal reason and this can lead to victim-blaming. What they don’t realize is that there are so many other factors at play — privilege, inequality, luck, environment, and the society itself.

The ‘Just World’ hypothesis explains this quite well by saying that there’s a universal human desire to view the world as fair, that the mind is biased to make sense of events by assuming that good things happen to good people and bad things happen to bad people.

This view of the world can sometimes be very problematic, as people may think that the poor or vulnerable are responsible for their outcomes.

#17

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
I found out my supervisor of 4 years was sleeping with my husband (we all worked together for 3-4 years basically, in different departments). I kicked him out of the house and wouldn’t speak to her at work with my manager’s blessing of course, and a few months later she quit, dumped my ex husband who called me crying on the phone.

Then about a year later I found out she was caught doing the same [thing], was fired from her new job since they were caught in the act at work and the new married man’s wife had beat the [hell] out of her.

Both of them got their karma.

I found a new beautiful partner who I’ve been with for 2 1/2 years who treats me with respect and all the love I deserve from a partner. I love him so much and he’s honestly my favorite person in the world. If I had to go through that again to find him I’d do it 10x over.
31points

#18

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
My coworker who is from Eastern Europe is a misogynist and always makes fun of female drivers. Says women can't drive, etc.

Well, a few months ago he got into a fender bender with the company truck and it's hilarious to me.
30points

In a set of experiments, experts asked people to describe real-life events they saw as karma, either in their own lives or in others’.

About 86% of people wrote about themselves, and nearly 60% of them described positive outcomes they linked to good karma. In contrast, those who wrote about others were far more likely to focus on negative outcomes, with about 92% describing “bad karma.”

The results showed that people tend to see karma as more positive when it applies to their own lives, but more negative when it involves other people.

“People are generally pretty motivated to view themselves positively and think about all sorts of things in their life in ways that put themselves in a positive light. You can feel good about yourself by thinking you're in control of the good things that are happening to you, and you can feel confident in your future if you think you can do good things now to create good for your future self,” study author Cindel White said.

#19

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
When my son's cousin (who he adores) didn't want him to attend her birthday party, and then all her friends couldn't make it and the whole party was canceled. I didn't feel bad at all.
30points

#20

“That Felt Good”: 61 People Share The Most Satisfying Moments Of Karma They’ve Witnessed Firsthand
Several years ago, I saw a text thread I wasn't supposed to see that exposed an affair my MIL was having with a long-time family friend. She and my FIL had been unhappily married for a long time, but she was sticking around for her part of his rather large inheritance he would receive as soon as his parents kicked the bucket. I told my husband about what I saw, and he said she would never do that and that I must have misunderstood the messages.

3 years to the day after I saw the text thread, my husband's brother called him to tell him that their mother came clean about the affair. After a few weeks of trying to peacefully cohabit and figure out their future, she physically [attacked] my FIL, then called the cops and said he hit her. She verbally attacked all of her kids and blamed them for ruining her life.

FIL filed for divorce, all of her kids cut her off, she lost her claim to the house and had to use the part of inheritance she stole to pay off marital debts she ran up so the divorce could be finalized. She had to move out of state to her boyfriend's, who said he would never marry her because he knows she just wants his money, and that's for his kids.
29points

In a way, karma is just a method for us to feel like we have some control over what happens in life. It helps us make sense of all the randomness and uncertainty, and gives structure to things that otherwise don’t always add up.

And who doesn’t like a good old story where people doing bad deeds get their comeuppance, especially when it’s instant.

Even though karma is not always real, our need for it may be.

51
9