R/karmarx | LATEST · 2025 |
“Be careful. r/karmarx isn’t just about good. I saw a guy brag about scamming old people. Next week his car was stripped to the frame. No cameras. No witnesses.”
Lena had been lurking on r/karmarx for months. It wasn’t a typical subreddit — no memes, no arguments, no cat photos. Instead, every post was a personal account of something strange: a kindness returned tenfold, a cruelty repaid in ruin, an anonymous act that circled back years later. r/karmarx
“My late husband’s photo,” Mrs. Abel whispered. “Thank you.” “Be careful
“The machine is real. I gave my last sandwich to a homeless kid. Three days later, a recruiter called with a job I hadn’t applied for.” Next week his car was stripped to the frame
Shaken, Lena posted on r/karmarx: “I returned a lost wallet. Now my rent is paid. Is this… the machine working?” The replies came fast.
Lena shrugged it off. “It’s nothing.”
I notice “r/karmarx” isn’t a familiar subreddit reference (perhaps a typo for something like r/KarmaRX or a user name?), but I can write a short fictional story inspired by the idea of a subreddit or online space called . Title: The Balance of r/karmarx