(17) Speculative non-buddhism methodology makes proximate to the practitioner Buddhism's specular oracularity, thereby "unblocking" the "primordial 'sources'" (concepts and practices indexing phenomenality: sunyata, anatta,
anicca, etc.
Dukkha, then, is intimately bound up with the Second Mark of Existence,
anicca, or impermanence, and this is made manifest in the textual allusions to death and decay, and in particular, to the inevitable destruction of the natural world (e.g.
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Craving occurs (a) when one perceives the object of craving to be worth possessing, (b) when one fails to understand the objects' impermanence (
anicca) and, (c) when one fails to recognize that life is a process of constant change.
At the root of life's suffering is the realisation of impermanence (
anicca).
4 MERZBOW,
ANICCA (COLD SPRING, 2008) Featuring Masami Akita's recent analog return to his junk instruments of the 1980s, this record nearly goes full circle, with Live in Khabarovsk, CCCP-era free-drumming filling in every hole left in this musician's web.
Impermanence (Pali:
anicca; Sanskrit: anitya; Tibetan: mi rtag pa; Chinese: wuchang; Japanese: mujo; Thai: anitchang) is the central theme of Buddhism.
With it, if you're sufficiently motivated and tired of being reincarnated, you might achieve such complete realization of the concept of
anicca that you no longer experience clinging or craving or aversion, which can lead to a profound state of acceptance and a peace that is enlightenment.
Since reality is fundamentally impermanent (
anicca), all such desire is frustrated.
All things pass: Sic mundi Gloria transit (All the glory of the world passes), or the Pali sutra:
Anicca bata sankara (All compounded phenomena is impermanent)--more exotic sounding if slightly more obscure in translation.
For Buddhists, the three marks of existence (the trilakshana) are dukkha,
anicca, and anatta.
Another is to count beads while repeating in her mind the words
anicca, dukkha and anatta.
Buddhist texts describe phenomena as "rising up" and "passing away." In Pali this is called
anicca: impermanence.