Anitya 
              
            
             
              
                by Ven. Dr. 
                Karuna Dharma 
              
            
            Anicca, 
              impermanence, underlies all Buddhist thought and practice and is 
              the foundation of Buddhist understanding of reality.
            For many centuries 
              most Western people had thought that the universe was a permanent 
              thing, put into place by a Creator God, with the earth at its center. 
              They reasoned that such a complex system could not come into existence 
              except through the creation of a superior intelligence. They named 
              that superior intelligence God and declared his permanence. They 
              believed that humankind reflected the image of God and contained 
              also an immortal essence, which they termed soul. So, while things 
              around them might change, they reasoned, at least they were assured 
              of permanence, an eternal existence after death if they lived in 
              accordance with God's will.
            In India twenty-five 
              centuries ago, Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, proclaimed that there 
              is no permanence anywhere. In his enlightenment experience he witnessed 
              the arising and disappearing of entire universe systems. He saw 
              very clearly that all things are impermanent, that they arise, mature 
              and pass away. He recognized that all things are comprised of conditioned 
              states and that there is no permanent essence to anything. He also 
              realized that the arising and disappearing of states of existence 
              occurred because of various conditions. Should any condition change, 
              the object changed or disappeared.
            Even those things 
              which appear to be permanent and unchanging also are in a constant 
              state of change. The mountains appear to be permanent and unchanging, 
              but their very existence is the result of tectonic forces within 
              the crust and mantle of the earth. Volcanoes, inactive for many 
              centuries come alive and new ones pop into existence. Earthquakes 
              build mountain ranges. Ocean becomes land and land becomes ocean. 
              These changes never cease. All matter itself is alive with constant 
              change. Its very nature is a mass of constantly moving energy. Rocks 
              may appear to be inert objects, but in actuality, their very structure 
              is one of constant movement.
            The Buddha taught 
              that all conditioned things are impermanent and constantly changing 
              and that they have no permanent essence. He explained that while 
              we may think of ourselves as single objects of existence, in fact 
              humans are made up of a collection of five conditioned, impermanent 
              states: body (rupa), sense contacts and sensations (vedana), 
              perceptions and conceptions (samjna), volitional actions 
              and karmic tendencies (samskaras) and basic consciousness 
              (vijÒana). These collections (skandhas) of 
              things are the true nature of the person and they are constantly 
              changing. The body grows old, becomes ill and dies. Sense contacts 
              lead to perception and conception and these are constantly changing. 
              Our karmic activities never cease and underlying all these is the 
              basal consciousness, which at death also disappears with all of 
              the other samskaras.
            The Buddha explained 
              that we should not become too attached to our bodies and their sensual 
              experiences and thoughts that arise from them, because the attachment 
              to our bodies and to life causes us great dukkha, suffering 
              and misery. Sense contact brings us sense experiences which we then 
              term as desirable or undesirable. From this judgment arises the 
              desire to re-experience similar sensual experiences, which lead 
              directly to attachment. This attachment then leads to a great thirst 
              or craving for the experience. Soon we are entrapped in the need 
              to continue such experiences, for we feel we need or want them. 
              But all experience is very momentary. Hardly have we grasped onto 
              one, when it disappears and a new attraction grabs our minds. Soon 
              we are enmeshed in a great, complex web of desire, all of which 
              is very transitory, and thus unsatisfactory.
            The Buddha stated 
              that for us to become free from the constant round of rebirth and 
              suffering, we would need to realize the changing nature of things 
              in its true perspective, so that we could free ourselves from the 
              need for certain experiences, attachment to self and to the illusion 
              of permanence.
            One of the major 
              causes of dukkha is our puny attempts to make impermanent 
              things permanent. We want to amass and hold on to things which please 
              our ego concepts. We strive to hold on to youth, to wealth, to fame, 
              to romance. All of these experiences are fleeting. They arise, mature 
              and disintegrate. It is not change itself which causes the greatest 
              pain, it is our resistance to this change that causes the real dukkha. 
              The Buddha again and again explained: "Impermanent indeed are all 
              conditioned things; they are of the nature of arising and passing 
              away. Having come into being, they cease to exist. Hence their pacification 
              is tranquillity."
            He urged his 
              disciples to truly understand the ultimate nature of all things, 
              that is their impermanence. He had his disciples meditate upon the 
              disintegration of things, including their own bodies, in order to 
              try to break their inordinate clinging to objects of all kinds: 
              physical, vocal or mental.
            Once the individual 
              truly sees that things cannot be grasped for more than a few moments, 
              then these unhealthy attachments and aversions can be given up and 
              the practitioner can be freed from the enslavement he has produced 
              for himself.