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Glossary›Anicca

Glossary

Anicca

Anicca is the Pali term for impermanence, one of Buddhism's Three Marks of Existence, teaching that all conditioned phenomena are in constant flux.

What is Anicca?

Anicca (Pāli) or anitya (Sanskrit) is the Buddhist doctrine of impermanence—the recognition that all conditioned phenomena, without exception, are transient, unstable, and subject to change. As one of the Tilakkhana (Three Marks of Existence) alongside dukkha (suffering) and anatta (non-self), anicca forms a cornerstone of Buddhist philosophy and contemplative practice. The teaching asserts that every mental state, physical sensation, relationship, object, and even the self is in constant flux, arising and passing away moment by moment. To grasp what is anicca means to understand that clinging to any experience as permanent leads inevitably to dissatisfaction, while direct insight into impermanence opens the door to liberation.

Origins & Lineage

The doctrine of anicca originates in the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama, the historical Buddha, who lived in northern India circa 563–483 BCE. The concept appears throughout the Pali Canon, the earliest complete collection of Buddhist scriptures preserved by the Theravada tradition. In the Anicca Sutta (Samyutta Nikaya 22.45), the Buddha instructs monks to contemplate impermanence in the five aggregates (khandhas): form, feeling, perception, mental formations, and consciousness. The Dhammapada declares, “All conditioned things are impermanent” (sabbe sankhara anicca)—a statement that became foundational to all Buddhist schools.

Anicca teaching spread across Asia through multiple lineages. Theravada monastics preserved rigorous anicca meditation practices in Sri Lanka, Burma, and Thailand. Mahayana schools in China, Japan, and Korea emphasized impermanence through texts like the Heart Sutra and the Platform Sutra of Huineng. Tibetan Buddhism integrated anicca into analytical meditation and the contemplation of death. The 20th-century Burmese master Mahasi Sayadaw (1904–1982) and his student S.N. Goenka (1924–2013) revived systematic anicca practice through Vipassana meditation, bringing the direct observation of arising and passing phenomena to lay practitioners worldwide.

How It’s Practiced

Anicca is not merely a philosophical concept but a lived insight cultivated through meditation. In Vipassana (insight meditation), practitioners sit in silence and direct sustained, non-reactive attention to bodily sensations, observing how each sensation—tingling, pressure, warmth, pain—arises, persists briefly, and dissolves. The instruction is to notice the constant flux without craving pleasant sensations or rejecting unpleasant ones. Over hours and days of practice, meditators report perceiving reality as a field of vibrating, impermanent phenomena rather than solid, enduring objects.

In Zen practice, anicca awareness emerges through koans like Dogen’s teaching on “being-time” (uji), where each moment is understood as wholly unique and unrepeatable. Tibetan practitioners contemplate impermanence analytically, reflecting on the inevitability of death and the transience of all worldly achievements, then rest in the experiential recognition of moment-to-moment change. Theravada monks recite the five daily recollections, including “I am subject to aging, illness, death, and separation from all I hold dear,” grounding the anicca teaching in existential reality.

Anicca Today

Contemporary seekers encounter anicca most commonly through ten-day silent Vipassana retreats in the tradition of S.N. Goenka, offered free of charge at centers worldwide and through organizations like Dhamma.org. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) incorporate impermanence teachings into secular contexts, helping participants observe the transient nature of thoughts and emotions. Insight Meditation Society (IMS) in Massachusetts, Spirit Rock Meditation Center in California, and Gaia House in England offer retreats explicitly focused on the Three Marks of Existence.

Teachers like Joseph Goldstein, Jack Kornfield, and Tara Brach reference anicca frequently in talks available on Dharma Seed and Insight Timer. Books such as Goldstein’s One Dharma (2002) and Kornfield’s A Path with Heart (1993) introduce anicca meaning to Western audiences seeking practical guidance. Insight practice has also influenced contemporary psychology: acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) employs anicca-inspired exercises to help clients observe thoughts and feelings as passing events rather than fixed truths.

Common Misconceptions

Anicca is often misunderstood as nihilism—the idea that because everything is impermanent, nothing matters. Classical Buddhism rejects this interpretation; impermanence does not negate the reality of suffering or the ethical weight of actions (karma), but rather clarifies the conditions under which liberation is possible. Another misconception equates anicca with detachment or emotional numbness. The teaching does not advocate suppressing feelings or withdrawing from life, but rather cultivating equanimity in the face of inevitable change.

Some assume anicca for beginners means intellectually accepting that “everything changes.” Authentic anicca practice, however, requires direct, somatic insight—what the Pali Canon calls paccakkha—seeing impermanence with one’s own awareness, not adopting it as a belief. Finally, anicca is not the same as Western notions of “living in the present moment.” While both emphasize immediacy, anicca specifically reveals the constructed, conditioned, and transient nature of all phenomena, including the sense of a continuous self.

How to Begin

The most accessible entry point to anicca practice is a ten-day Vipassana retreat as taught by S.N. Goenka, which requires no prior experience and is offered by donation at centers globally (find courses at dhamma.org). For those seeking a gradual introduction, Joseph Goldstein’s book Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Awakening (2013) offers clear instructions on observing impermanence in daily life. Dharma Seed (dharmaseed.org) provides thousands of free talks on anicca by respected teachers.

Shorter formats include weekend insight meditation retreats at Spirit Rock or IMS, or drop-in meditation groups at local Theravada or Zen centers. Apps like Insight Timer feature guided anicca meditations. Reading the Anicca Sutta (available in translation through Access to Insight) grounds practice in source material. The key is moving from conceptual understanding to direct observation: sit quietly, feel a sensation fully, and watch it change.

Related terms

dukkhaanattavipassanamindfulness based stress reductionmindfulness based cognitive therapymetta
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