Every Ladder Has a Lesson, Every Snake a Consequence: The Psychology of Karma Through Play
Most of us have played Snakes and Ladders at some point in our lives. It may have been during childhood summer vacations, family gatherings, or rainy afternoons spent indoors. We rolled the dice, climbed ladders with excitement, and groaned in frustration when a snake sent us sliding back down the board. At the time, it seemed like a simple game of luck. Yet few people realize that Snakes and Ladders was originally created in India as much more than a source of entertainment. Known as Moksha Patam , the game was designed to teach moral and spiritual lessons. The ladders represented virtues such as kindness, generosity, honesty, and humility, helping a person move closer to moksha, or liberation. The snakes symbolized vices such as greed, anger, pride, and deceit, pulling a person away from their goals. In many ways, the game was an interactive lesson on karma, the idea that our actions have consequences. While modern life may look very different from the world in which the game was cr...