Anicca anicca anicca!*

Recently I’ve completed a ten days Vipassana retreat. I’ve been hearing about the concept of impermanence (anicca) since I started yoga; that everything is changing, that everything is arising and passing away… It made sense and this concept has become part of my teaching yoga and my life. Nevertheless with this Vipassana experience, now through this experience I actually know what this concept really means. So the law of impermanence is not something I read in books and hear from my yoga teachers any more – I actually experienced “anicca” (law of impermanence) through observing my body and the changing sensations in my body.

I believe Vipassana meditation technic to be very efficient about letting one learn by experience. First of all, shutting off all interaction and staying in silence for ten days is already a very hard step in such an age where we are exposed to information everywhere. Second of all meditating for twelve hours a day, sleeping less and eating less totally starts to deconstruct the mind, emotions and the body. I believe Gautama Buddha might have been the first neuroscientist of the world. I`m totally amazed by his work on himself and his technic of understanding “the self”. Deconstructing, digging and digging, going deeper and deeper and facing all the self drama… Facing the strong ego…

Everybody would experience it differently due to different backgrounds, but here I`m only speaking about my own experience and my own journey into myself. In the center I did Vipassana in Triebel, there were so many people who have never meditated before, so for some people especially physically it was quiet challenging. It was challenging for me too, but I was glad that I have been doing yoga and meditating for years therefore I could somehow handle the physical difficulty. But still if you sit for 12 hours it’s inevitable to face different types of physical pain. Especially since you have so many hours to observe your body, you might discover habits or states of your body and mind, which are already scientifically proven like electrical current, chemical reactions, vibrations and so on. It’s really amazing to learn this by experience…

Anyway, if I put my experience in a nutshell, I had two amazing breath taking self realisations. The first one was the moment I realised that all problems in my life and all my unhappiness is happening because of me me me me me my my my my my mine mine mine mine mine me me me me me my my my my my… It was such a slap in my face to realize that, because I always try not to be a selfish egoistic person. But I realised that I have a very strong ego like everybody else. Just because of that strong ego I’ve been suffering. For sure my ego was not happy with that finding, it reacted with fear and it was terrified, but than again anicca anicca anicca… Don’t get attached to your feelings! I’m now learning not to get attached to my feelings… It’s not as easy as I’m writing here, but for sure this is the beginning of a new path…

The second slap was the moment I realised that “my person” or “my self” consists of my reactions to things, events and people… What!!! The self I developed is not me! I’m not me! I’m not the person I thought I was! Really! At that moment my whole life was passing through as a story board and I was remembering some random memories, where I reacted to for example my mother or my brother or so on… It was really a shocking experience because it was touching my ego again. The ego I’ve developed strongly is actually not independent from the dynamics around me, so getting attached to who I am is one big reason for suffering in life. Everything arises and passes away, so why we do get attached and suffer for these attachments. Anicca anicca anicca!

If you’re also a seeker of self I strongly recommend Vipassana as a very intense experience. But of course doing one Vipassana would’t change our lives miraculously. So we need to keep doing yoga and keep meditating everyday. Of course this is not the only way to get closer to the self, for me yoga and meditation work very well, ultimately one can try and see what is best for him/herself. But one thing is crucial: that is meditation and body awareness I believe. So what ever practice you’re doing you need to focus on body awareness and silencing or slowing down the mind to get closer to the truth of the self…

Patanjali Yoga Sutra 1.2. “Yogah Chitta Vritti Nirodhah”

Yoga is the restraint of mental modifications…

All my best!

* You can find more information about “anicca” here.

For the ones who haven’t heard anicca before, “cc” in Pali language is pronounced according to IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet) with tʃ, like “ch” in “church”.

 

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