by
Buddhist Publication Society
Kandy • Sri Lanka
Copyright © 2000 by Sumano Tong Tuck Sung
First published by the BPS in 2000
This digital edition © BPS 2008
Digital Transcription Source: BPS Transcription Project
For free distribution. This work may be republished, reformatted, reprinted and redistributed in any medium. However, any such republication and redistribution is to be made available to the public on a free and unrestricted basis, and translations and other derivative works are to be clearly marked as such.
The author, Sumano Tong, is a Buddhist of Chinese descent born and living in Singapore. He learned Buddhism from the late Mr. T.A. Simon and the late Ven. Nārada Mahāthera.
Dedicated to my precious teachers, who taught me the sublime Dhamma:
the late Mr. T.A. Simon
the late Ven. Nārada Mahāthera
The Buddha taught that all conditioned things—ourselves included—have three characteristics: impermanence (anicca), unsatisfactoriness (dukkha), and selflessness or non-substantiality (anattā). When we fail to recognize these three characteristics of existence, we regard that which is impermanent as permanent, that which is unsatisfactory as pleasure, and the selfless as possessing an unchanging self.
The Buddha summed up these tendencies in the Pali word avijjā, ignorance. Being ignorant of our own true nature, and of the true nature of the things around us, we engage in actions based on these delusions, and thereby we accumulate kamma which keeps us in bondage to the cycle of birth and death.
It is through understanding these characteristics that wisdom arises. Only then can one free oneself from the bonds of rebirth and attain Nibbāna, the permanent end of suffering.
The following article is a humble attempt to analyse the three characteristics of existence based on day-to-day observations. It makes no pretence at erudition or mastery of the scriptures. By reflecting on my own daily experience, and on the experiences of others, I have jotted down various pointers to the three characteristics in facts and events lying just beneath our noses. I hope these reflections will help you, too, to see the truth of the Dhamma more clearly in your own everyday life.
The Pali word “anicca” means impermanent.
One is oneself impermanent, both physically and mentally, and all conditioned things around one are impermanent.
One’s posture is constantly being changed from one of the following to another: sitting, standing, walking, and lying down.
One’s health is ever fluctuating depending on many factors. Some days one feels well, other days one feels ill; some days one feels energetic, other days one feels weak.
Immediately after the body is cleaned, it gradually becomes soiled again due to the secretion of skin grease and sweat and due to contact with pollutants in the environment.
The hair of one’s head and one’s nails are constantly increasing in length; body hairs are constantly falling off and being replaced; the skin of the whole body is constantly being shed and worn away; the body cells are always being replaced; one’s body mass (weight) is ever fluctuating; the whole body is gradually ageing and one day it will die.
The air that one breathes in is being converted to carbon dioxide. The water one drinks is converted to sweat and urine. Within a day the food one eats turns into faeces.
One’s bodily sensations alternate between pleasure and pain, hunger and fullness, thirst and satiation.
One’s mental feelings vary between pleasure, displeasure, and indifference, depending on many factors, such as the sense object one experiences.
One’s state of mind is ever changing from one to another: joyful, angry, sad, happy, bored, worried, greedy, faithful, etc.
One’s interests change as one grows older.
One’s perceptions of the things around oneself also change with time or with one’s age, e.g., one’s choice of colours, one’s preference for type of material or design, or one’s opinion about an issue.
All human artefacts (houses, buildings, bridges, roads, cars, etc.)
gradually get soiled by the dirt in the environment, wither due to exposure to ultra-violet rays from the sun, and get eroded by chemical laden rain. Due to wear and tear, some day the mechanism of such objects will cease to function.
Due to the advancement in science and technology, their designs, materials, and methods of use change with time. These changes apply to all human artifacts.
bloom, wither, and decay.
ripen, fall off the tree, and decay.
constantly shed their bark and seasonally shed their leaves.
is constantly being replaced by younger blades of grass.
All sentient life forms
are gradually ageing and being replaced by their offspring. Daily a large number of species are becoming extinct.
are ever rising and sinking, usually imperceptibly, due to geological processes such as faulting, folding, large scale uplift, and volcanic activity.
are always flowing and their waters are ever changing. They either widen, become narrower, dry up during a drought, or overflow during a flood. Their shapes and directions change with the passage of time.
Their water is gradually converted into clouds and the clouds send down rain, which again enters the seas. The tide is alternating between high and low tides. The sea bed is ever rising or sinking, though very slowly.
is constantly changing its colour morning, noon, afternoon, evening, and night. Its appearance is constantly changing depending on the weather, and is different on sunny, clear, cloudy, and rainy days. The positions of the sun, moon, all other planets, clouds, and stars are ever changing.
is always changing its composition, and scientists are convinced that some day it will burn out, just as millions of other stars have expired or are expiring this very moment.
constantly alternates between its waxing and waning phases.
constantly change from spring to summer, summer to autumn, autumn to winter, and winter to spring again.
immediately after being prepared gradually starts to decay or to grow stale.
The Pali word “dukkha” is often translated as suffering, unsatisfactoriness, pain, or sorrow. It encompasses all unpleasantness, from the slightest uneasiness to unbearable torment.
Suffering can be physical, mental, or a combination of both.
Birth leads to old age, sickness, and death as well as to all other kinds of suffering.
One’s liability to sickness is itself a cause of suffering, for we often worry about falling ill.
When we do fall ill, the illness may be short-termed, chronic, or life-threatening.
We suffer physically when experiencing any of the following: fever, chill, ache, pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, constipation, giddiness, weakness of the limbs, cough, running nose, itchiness, sore throat, sprain, fracture, insomnia, loss of appetite, cuts and abrasions, piles and fissures.
We suffer mentally when our wish, “May this sickness quickly pass” is not fulfilled.
We suffer physically when we contract such diseases as diabetes, kidney failure, heart condition, bronchitis, arthritis, Parkinson’s disease, Lupus, hepatitis, etc.
We suffer mentally worrying that the sickness might worsen, or when the wish, “May I be permanently cured of this illness” is not fulfilled.
The physical suffering we undergo is dependent on the type of illness—such as cancer, AIDS, etc.—but illness always brings bodily suffering.
We suffer mentally knowing that there is little hope of recovery and that our days are numbered. We suffer even more when anticipating permanent separation from our loved ones.
We are extra careful in selecting the food we eat and prefer food low in salt, sugar, and cholesterol content, free from artificial colouring and preservatives, but high in fibre and enriched with minerals.
We make regular visits to the health-food shop to purchase vitamins, bee pollen, calcium supplements, garlic pills, cod liver oil, bird’s nests, Ganoderma (Ling Zhi), ginseng root and ginseng extracts, all sorts of herbs and herbal extracts, and other nutritional supplements.
We install drinking water filters and air purifiers in our homes.
We visit the oxygen bar to breathe in 95 percent concentrated oxygen.
We buy health enhancing equipment such as massaging chairs and devices, exercise bicycles, tread mills, rowing machines and various instruments for measuring blood pressure, blood glucose, pulse rate, cholesterol level, etc.
We go to the doctor for regular medical checkups and health screening.
We seek physical treatments such as massage therapy and foot reflexology, healing by crystals and stones, etc.
We attend health promoting meditation sessions.
We subscribe to medical services.
Our hair thins and turns grey, our hairline recedes, our skin dries and wrinkles, pigmented spots appear on our skin, our shoulders start to droop and our spine bends, our muscles turn flabby, bags appear under our eyes, our cheeks and eyelids sag, our teeth turn yellow or become chipped and we start to lose our teeth, our face loses its youthful lustre, our eyes and hair become dull, our nails are discoloured, when we smile wrinkles form on our face.
We are unable to see distant objects or fine details of nearby objects. We must make use of eyeglasses.
We are unable to hear soft sounds, and become sensitive to loud noises. We become dependent on a hearing aid.
Our sensitivity to odours is reduced.
We lose our appreciation of tastes.
Our teeth become weak and brittle; our bones become porous and brittle, increasing our vulnerability to fractures; our joints loosen, increasing our vulnerability to sprains. Weaker bones and muscles mean clumsiness in our movements, pains in our joints, and other frailties.
We have to undergo reduced endurance in physical activities such as prolonged walking due to lack of stamina; reduced general flexibility and agility resulting in slower responses and reflexes; reduced capability in weight-bearing tasks such as carrying heavy objects; lowered resistance to microbes and viruses; longer recovery period after sickness or injury; difficulty in falling asleep and shorter span of sleep.
The unfortunate contract illnesses such as senile dementia, incontinence, and Parkinson’s disease.
Men need a longer time to urinate due to the gradual enlargement of the prostrate gland as a result of ageing.
Women stop menstruating while men need a longer time to achieve erection.
Memory fades more quickly and concentration becomes weaker. Studies show that the ageing brain may to some extent lose its depth perception and have more difficulty in locating objects in space or in quickly identifying geometric shapes.
They blacken their hair with dyes; undergo plastic surgery to remove wrinkles and bags under their eyes; use various skin moisturizers to hide the signs of ageing; use spectacles with bifocal lenses (but without parting lines); seek regular youth enhancement injections; whiten their teeth with polish or by chemical or laser treatment; get dentures to replace missing teeth; apply facial cosmetics to emulate the lost lustre of youth.
Some take new anti-ageing compounds aimed at the symptoms of ageing, such as: anti-impotence treatment (Viagra), bone density regulators, baldness remedies, Ginkyo Bilboa for the brain, African tree bark to pump up the libido, Saw Palmetto for the prostrate, chelated minerals and amino acids for energy, youth hormones (dehydroepi-and sterone or DHEA), etc.
Death is suffering due to:
The suffering of death is more intense when one dies in the prime of youth, or when one is enjoying success in one’s education or career; or when one is rich, powerful and famous; or when one is enjoying a happy family with a caring spouse and lovely children.
From the Buddhist standpoint, death is suffering because it leads to rebirth, which entails a renewal of the whole mass of suffering.
It is painful to work with inconsiderate or uncooperative colleagues; to be subordinate to an excessively demanding or unreasonable superior; to have an apathetic or dishonest business partner; to live next to inconsiderate neighbours; to be married to an unsuitable spouse; to witness strained relations between one’s spouse and one’s parents and family members.
It is unpleasant to be born in a place where the basic requisites of food, clothing, medicine, and shelter are scarce or not easily available.
It is unpleasant to dwell in an uncomfortable environment, one which is eerie, hazardous, badly coloured, poorly ventilated; too bright or too dark; too quiet or too noisy; too dry or too humid; too warm or too cold; stinking and polluted; or when the contacting surfaces are filthy, sticky, slippery, too hard, too rough, irregular; or when there are obstacles to movement and physical constraints, etc.
It is unpleasant to dwell in a place infested with pests such as cockroaches, lizards, and rats.
It is unpleasant to live in proximity to harmful and ferocious animals such as lions, tigers, snakes, scorpions, and crocodiles.
It is unpleasant to live in a politically unstable country where one’s life is constantly at risk.
It is unpleasant to have to live in a place where one’s livelihood is dependent on unreliable conditions or where destructive natural forces may unexpectedly strike; for example, in the form of drought, famine, floods, locusts, rodents, or any other pests.
It is unpleasant to live in a place affected by climatic phenomena such as El Niño, La Niña, the greenhouse effect, the ozone hole.
It is unpleasant to live in a place frequently struck by floods, mudslides, hailstorms, droughts, forest fires, heat waves, hurricanes, cyclones, tornados, tidal waves, and volcano eruptions.
It is unpleasant to live in a place affected by dense electronic radiation, smog, or polluted air.
It is stressful to be awaiting the outcome of an attempt to rescue a loved one involved in a disaster; to sit for an examination; to attend a job interview; to give an important presentation before a group of superiors; to have to meet important people; to await the results of a medical test for a critical diagnosis; to lose one’s job; to undergo a marital separation or divorce.
It is stressful to work long hours to meet deadlines, with no alternative. It is also stressful to take on more than one job in order to make ends meet.
Stressful moments particularly for the young include: their first date with a member of the opposite sex; their first meeting with their future parents-in-law; awaiting the arrival of a baby, etc.
Temporary separation such as having to leave one’s loved ones for another country to pursue further studies or career.
Permanent separation due to the death of a loved one.
Being abandoned by one’s siblings.
Having to leave the place of work which one considered pleasant due to the expiry of one’s contract; leaving a country which one considered pleasant due to immigration laws.
The death of a pet, or the breakage or loss of a favourite object.
Most men would like to be handsome, tall, with a muscular body; most women would like to be beautiful, tall, with an attractive figure. Yet only a very small minority obtain such qualities.
Everyone would like to be free from physical defects, yet some are born with a disfigured face, limbs, and body. Some are hairless, hare-lipped, or with defective sexual organs. Some have unsightly birthmarks, skin discolouration, foul body odour, bad breath, sweaty palms, a rough voice, pimples, freckles, rough skin, unsightly body hairs, etc.
Attend grooming courses; seek facial treatments; use cosmetics and perfumes; take up body building or aerobic exercises; whiten their teeth and replace unsightly teeth with dentures; fill dental cavities with porcelain (instead of metal); use contact lenses; dye their hair; wear abdominal bands; undergo surgery for jaw-line correction; wear wigs or resort to hair transplants or herbal massages for baldness.
Participate in slimming programmes; perm their hair; take treatment for wrinkles, freckles, or pigment problems; undergo surgery such as double eyelids creation; insert artificial body implants such as nose bridges and silicon breasts; liposuction; wear push-up brassiere; tattoo their eyebrows; body and limb wraps; mud or herbal baths; manicures; re-align teeth with braces; wear high-heeled shoes; wear clothes with shoulder pads; stick on artificial fingernails and eye lashes.
Everyone hopes to be healthy throughout their lives, but not all are blessed with health. Various illnesses to which one is subject have been enumerated above. Besides one’s own infirmity, one also experiences intense suffering when a loved one becomes critically ill and can only survive by receiving a bone-marrow transplant, or a platelets transfusion, or a blood transfusion of a rare blood group. If a suitable donor is unavailable, one experiences indescribable anxiety and agony.
Most fail to fulfil this wish despite their untiring efforts. One feels unhappy when one makes a bad investment, when interest rates decline, when the stock market takes a dive, and when one does not win the lottery. Some attempt to “peep” into the future to identify “opportunities for wealth and luck” through astrology, palmistry, crystal ball gazing, and geomancy.
Everyone tries to find happiness in accordance with their individual conceptions of happiness. Most people identify happiness with the gratification of sensual desire, but sensual desire is insatiable and hence in the end the pursuit of sensual pleasures only brings suffering.
Others view as the source of happiness the acquisition of wealth and property, or personal success in their professional careers, or the achievement of fame and repute. Such aims, however, cannot always be realized. When we fail to achieve them we feel frustrated and upset. But even when we succeed, such attainments cannot last forever, and thus when they slip away from us we are left feeling dejected and depressed.
One cannot find the ideal life-partner despite one’s efforts; married couples who wish to have children cannot do so; or when they have children, the children are not of their preferred sex.
One’s love for another is unrequited.
One’s children are not filial.
Many are insecure regarding their basic needs such as food, clothing, shelter, and medicine.
Others feel insecure regarding their job, especially in a job-scarce environment, or on account of such financial conditions as inflation or recession.
Still others, who live in societies plagued by war, riots, and looting, must worry about their physical safety.
The blind wish to see, the deaf to hear, the dumb to speak, the lame to walk, the bedridden paralytic to move around again. Yet because they cannot fulfil these wishes, they experience disappointment and suffering.
It is a cause of suffering because one constantly and continually must protect it from hunger, thirst, and changing climatic conditions; keep it healthy by regular exercise; keep it clean by washing, bathing, and excretion; keep it neat and tidy by trimming one’s nails and cutting one’s hair.
It is also a cause of suffering because in the end, despite all our efforts, it succumbs to old age, illness, and death.
The Pali word “anattā” is often translated as non-self, non-ego, egolessness, impersonality, and substancelessness.
One is oneself substanceless, and all conditioned things around one are substanceless.
The human being is actually a combination of material and mental phenomena classified into five categories or “aggregates.” These are:
Of these, form is material, and the other four are mental phenomena.
When we think, “I sit,” “I walk,” “I stand,” “I lie down,” we take the whole body, by way of its posture, to be “I.”
When we think, “My height is 1.8 metres,” we take the whole body, by way of its dimensions, to be “mine.”
Ironically, without a mirror, we cannot even see our whole head, neck, or back, yet we claim that our body is our self. Even what we see in the mirror is just a reflection of the body, not the real thing.
Some examples:
“My hair is shiny”: an attached body part (the hair on the head) is taken to be “mine.”
“I like to touch silk”: an attached body part (the skin on the palm and fingers) is taken to be “I.”
“Oops! A strand of my hair has fallen into the soup!”: a detached body part (a strand of hair) is taken to be “mine.”
“I am sending my urine sample to the laboratory for analysis”: a detached body part (urine) is taken to be “mine.”
Contact between sense base and sense object being regarded as “I”
Example: eyes + visible form: “I saw a rainbow.”
Implication: sense base (eyes) = “I”
This example is applicable to the other sense bases: ear, nose, tongue, and body.
Feeling that arises through such contact being regarded as “I”
Example: (skin of) whole body + tactile object (cold air): “I feel cold in here.”
Implication: unpleasant bodily feeling = “I”
Example: eyes + visible form, combined with ears + sound: “I like this movie.”
Implication: pleasant feeling = “I”
States of mind being regarded as “I”
Example: “I felt very restless this morning.”
Implication: mental state (restlessness) = “I”
Example: “I feel guilty about visiting her so seldom.”
Implication: mental state (guilty conscience) = “I”
Example: “I was worried that you wouldn’t come back.”
Implication: mental state (worry) = “I”
Tangible objects
Example: “My dentures are getting loose.”
Implication: tangible object attached to body (dentures) = “mine”
Example: “This is my car.”
Implication: tangible object not attached to body (car) = “mine”
Intangible objects
Example: “After the race, my energy is drained.”
Implication: intangible object pertaining to body (i.e., energy) = “mine”
Example: “I’ve achieved only half of what I’d hoped to do.”
Implication: intangible object not pertaining to body (achievement) = “mine”
Example: “His words hurt my pride.”
Implication: intangible object not pertaining to body (self- respect) = “mine”
Example: “I’m reputed to be a responsible person.”
Implication: intangible object not pertaining to body (reputation) = “mine”
One’s attributes being regarded as “I“, “me” and “mine”
Example: “I was so embarrassed.”
Implication: attribute (self-esteem) = “I”
Example: “I’m afraid of snakes.”
Implication: attribute (fear) = “I”
Example: “I can sing English songs.”
Implication: attribute (ability) = “I”
Example: “I’m a teacher.”
Implication: attribute (occupation) = “I”
Example: “I’m twenty years old.”
Implication: attribute (age) = “I”
Example: “I’m a man,” “I’m a woman.”
Implication: attribute (gender) = “I”
Example: “That’s me in the photograph!”
Implication: attribute (printed image of body) = “me”
Example: “That’s me in the mirror.”
Implication: attribute (reflected image of one’s body) = “me”
Example: “I left my body warmth on that seat.”
Implication: attribute (conducted warmth) = “mine”
Example: “That’s an insult to my intelligence.”
Implication: attribute (intelligence) = “mine”
Example: “My memory is not as good as yours.”
Implication: attribute (memory) = “mine”
Example: “My name is Paul.”
Implication: attribute (name) = “mine”
Regarding one’s associates as “mine”
Example: “This is my father.”
Implication: father = “mine”
Example: “This is my wife/husband; those are my children.”
Implication: wife/husband and children = “mine”
1. All conditioned things that we perceive through our senses are in reality not what they appear to be for the following reasons:
We come into contact with things around us through the five physical sense bases, namely the eyes, ears, nose, tongue and the body. We conceive all phenomena through the mind base.
However, what we see with our eyes represents only a small segment of the spectrum of electromagnetic rays, for the optic nerves of humans are sensitive only to waves with lengths ranging from around 400 to 700 mu. Those waves that are present but outside this range—such as infrared rays, ultraviolet rays, and X-rays—are invisible to us.
Likewise we can hear only sound waves that are within the sound spectrum of humans. Such limitations apply to the nose, tongue and the mind as well.
It is generally acceptable to say, “The sun rises in the east and sets in the west.” In actuality, however, the sun neither rises nor sets. The earth merely revolves on its axis relative to the sun. The so-called “sunrise” of one continent is the “sunset” of another. In this context is it possible to locate the exact position of the horizon? Can one touch a rainbow?
When the component parts of a thing are separated, the thing loses its identity and assumes another. For example, when a car is dismantled the concept “car” disappears and its identity is replaced by “bumper,” “windscreen,” “steering wheel,” “tyre,” and so forth.
A chopped-up pig is known as “pork.”
A flattened carton is called cardboard.
There are also cases where the identity of a thing changes even without the apparent separation of its constituent parts. For example, when a person dies the concept “man” is replaced by that of “corpse.”
It is not possible to step into the “same” river twice since its waters are ever changing.
From moment to moment the flame of a candle is neither the same nor totally different.
A film show appears real enough to invoke passions, but in reality it is merely a display of images produced by light and accompanied by sound.
An event recorded on a video-camera appears to be real, but what happens if one replays it in reverse order? One will see a recorded event that has never taken place!
By using photo-imaging software to modify a photograph taken with a digital camera, one can portray oneself standing on the peak of Mount Everest—clad only in swimwear!
One can produce a show depicting oneself dancing with a cartoon figure like Mickey Mouse or appear to act alongside film stars who have long been dead.
The virtual infant “Cha-Cha,” who displays lifelike bodily movements, is actually a 3-D animation package created by a computer artist by applying realistic human movement to a digitally created character.
In the virtual reality system MIRAGE (Modelling and Immersion in Realtime Advanced Graphics Environment), one simply needs to put on a pair of 3-D goggles to “walk through” a building, decide on its interior decor and colour schemes, even how the furniture is positioned, before the building is built.
Likewise, without leaving one’s study, one can “explore” the tombs of the pharaoh of Egypt with convincingly true-to-life sights and sounds.
The voice of someone who does not even exist can be generated by means of a voice synthesizer.
By animatronics one can produce a thrilling show of computer graphics.
In the Virtual Aquarium, video images are used to re-create swimming fish with special filming technology and lighting.
2. Conditioned things do not possess a fixed substantial nature due to their dual aspects.
The moment the door is opened on to a pitch-dark room, darkness instantly disappears and is replaced by light. This leaves an interesting question: Where does the darkness go, and where does the brightness come from?
These characteristics are relative. An object considered “light” in comparison with something heavier than itself may be “heavy” when compared with something else lighter than itself.
These characteristics are also subject-dependent. An object considered “light” by a young adult is experienced as heavy by children and the elderly.
A day when the temperature is 55° F will be experienced as cool in early autumn, but as warm in early spring. A beverage of the same temperature will be experienced as cool if it is tea but as warm if it is lemonade.
Upon comparison, what is deemed clean by us will be dirty to a surgeon about to perform a critical operation. One’s body is considered clean immediately after a shower. After a period of time, it is deemed dirty again. One may ask: At precisely which point in time does cleanliness turn into dirtiness?
We can apply the same consideration to: youth and old age; the blooming and withering of flowers; the freshness and staleness of food; hunger and satiation; slow motion and fast motion; the present, past and future.
Things undergo changes, not only with the passage of time, but also in relation to space. Some space-dependent relative characteristics are:
near and far;
low and high;
long and short.
Examples can be multiplied ad infinitum. Work out the implications for yourselves.
You may ask: How do the three characteristics relate to one another?
Before we answer this question, it is timely to analyse what we regard as happiness.
Generally, happiness can be classified under the following headings:
1. Gratification of sensual desires
That is, the happiness that comes from seeing pleasant objects, hearing pleasant sounds, smelling pleasant odours, tasting pleasant flavours, touching pleasant surfaces, and entertaining pleasant thoughts.
2. Being healthy and vigorous
It is only when one is healthy and strong that one can enjoy sensual pleasures and embark on any activity that one finds pleasurable.
3. Being youthful (or attractive)
This enables one to enjoy feeling superior to others and to enjoy their admiration (and sometimes their envy).
4. Having pleasant relationships
This includes having a happy family life, true friends, and pleasant colleagues. One feels happy when the love or concern one showers on others is requitted.
5. Having high social status
For some this is relative to the quality and quantity of their possessions.
Others regard high education as a status symbol.
The happiness is derived from feeling superior to others or from winning their admiration (and sometimes their envy).
6. Being famous or renowned
One enjoys being known, recognized, and admired by others.
7. Being powerful
One enjoys having others at one’s disposal.
8. Being safe and secure
One feels happy when one is not in debt; has no worry about food, clothing, shelter, and medicine; has a stable job and lives in a peaceful country.
Most of the above goods can be acquired by wealth. Thus wealth seems to be the main basis of happiness.
———
Now let us return to the question: How do the three characteristics relate to one another?
Impermanence leads to suffering
Impermanence leads to suffering because that which we regard as a source of happiness does not last forever. Whatever in the world we turn to as a source of happiness will inevitably be overrun by aging, decay, death, and destruction.
Why are we often moved to tears when we flip through old photo albums, listen to songs from the “good old days,” watch a show one had seen long ago, touch objects of sentimental value, or visit places pertaining to one’s childhood or youth? The reason is that we are still attached to the sentiments (happiness included) we experienced at that time, which we are not able to bring back! We have aged, and so have the people at that time. Some may have died, while children have grown into adults. Places and objects have changed or no longer exist. Those events cannot be repeated.
As soon as they pass, events that bring happiness lead to suffering. That explains the “down” feeling which some experience when their holiday comes to an end. Those “encore cries” at the end of an emotionally-charged concert can be attributed to this too.
We are conditioned from the time of birth to regard things that are really substanceless as possessing a self or substantial nature.
By positing a real self, we draw a line to demarcate that which is self from that which is not self but surrounds the self. Being ignorant of the fact that all things around the self are also substanceless, we categorize them into the pleasant, the unpleasant, and the neutral.
By clinging to the notion that there is a self which “feels,” “enjoys,” and “suffers,” we desire the pleasant and detest the unpleasant. When the pleasant changes, we suffer. By not understanding that the unpleasant is also ever-changing, we suffer too when we are exposed to unpleasant conditions.
Our belief in the self is reinforced when others shower praise on us or when we achieve recognition. These tendencies condition our perceptions and influence our thoughts, words, and deeds.
In reality, the “enjoyment” and “suffering” are merely our responses to the feelings that arise when our senses contact their respective sense objects. The self that “feels” is merely the arisen feeling.
By responding to a pleasurable feeling (caused by a pleasant sense object) with desire, kamma is accumulated.
Likewise, by responding to an unpleasant feeling (caused by an unpleasant sense object) with repulsion, kamma is also accumulated.
Kamma is rooted in our ignorance about the three characteristics. As long as ignorance about the three characteristics remains, when the present life comes to an end, one must undergo rebirth. Rebirth entails the whole mass of suffering (dukkha).
Certain schools of thought argue that “suffering makes us mature,” that we should “learn to appreciate love,” that “tough times build character,” that “turmoil can toughen people,” that “pain warns us of danger,” and so on.
It is not my intention here to discuss the necessity or purpose of suffering in human life; nor do I wish to paint a seemingly “pessimistic” picture of life. My aim is only to review life’s stark realities, which many people take for granted.
To understand this point, one need only answer this question honestly and without prejudice: “Do I suffer?”
At this juncture of understanding the three characteristics of existence intellectually, what can we do to improve on the situation? We should strive ardently to realize their existence in all our day-to-day activities.
The following are some suggestions:
Be more sensitive towards the changes that occur to and within one’s body.
Always be aware of the changes that occur in one’s thoughts, feelings, and opinions.
Maintain keen observation of the changing nature of all the things and events around oneself.
Identify the type of suffering one is experiencing whenever some type of suffering arises.
Contemplate one’s body and see clearly that the body, being an object of cognition, cannot properly be considered one’s self.
Be aware of one’s mental reactions when any of the senses contacts its respective sense object. See that because these mental phenomena are conditioned by a sense faculty and objects, they cannot be a substantial self.
See that the things around one are devoid of any “substance” or “entity.” Reflect on their impermanence, and see that because they are impermanent they cannot be taken as substantial, self-subsistent realities.
See that these things are dependent for their existence and sustenance on their own proper conditions, and thus lack the independence of conditions essential to the concept of substance.
The Buddha has given a detailed exposition on this practical aspect of training in the Discourse on the Foundations of Mindfulness (Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta). By ardently establishing these four foundations of mindfulness, one will eventually realize that all phenomena are merely physical and mental processes.
They arise due to other supportive conditions. Those supportive conditions also arise due to some other supportive conditions. They are ever-changing and do not possess any unchanging entity of their own.
This wisdom will transform our thoughts, words, and deeds. Eventually it will free us from the cycle of birth and death, bringing us to the ultimate end of suffering: that which is permanent, ever blissful, and beyond causes and conditions—Nibbāna.