Saturday, July 09, 2016

The Buddhist doctrine of Impermanence or Anicca from Impermanence wiki--

From Impermanence (Annica) wiki--
Impermanence, also called Anicca or Anitya,[1] is one of the essential doctrines and a part of three marks of existence in Buddhism.[2][3][4] The doctrine asserts that all of conditioned existence, without exception, is "transient, evanescent, inconstant".[2] All temporal things, whether material or mental, are compounded objects in a continuous change of condition, subject to decline and destruction.[2][5]

Anicca or impermanence is understood in Buddhism as the first of three marks of existence, the other two being dukkha (suffering, pain, unsatisfactoriness) and anatta (non-self, non-soul, no essence).[4][3][6]

All physical and mental events, states Buddhism, come into being and dissolve.[7] Human life embodies this flux in the aging process, the cycle of repeated birth and death (Samsara), nothing lasts, and everything decays. This is applicable to all beings and their environs, including beings who have reincarnated in deva (god) and naraka (hell) realms.[8][9] This is in contrast to nirvana, the reality that is Nicca, or knows no change, decay or death.[2]

Impermanence is intimately associated with the doctrine of anatta, according to which things have no essence, permanent self, or unchanging soul.[10][11] The Buddha taught that because no physical or mental object is permanent, desires for or attachments to either causes suffering (dukkha). Understanding Anicca and Anatta are steps in the Buddhist’s spiritual progress toward enlightenment.[12][13][14]

Moving Poems--Kyi May Kaung and Lisa DiLillo--Tongue Don't have Bones--c 1998

https://www.movingpoems.com/2009/08/tongues-have-no-bones/