Thursday, July 9, 2026

Chapter 16 - Impermanence :The Gift We Keep Refusing

Tibetan Buddhism & Culture  ·  Chapter XVI

Impermanence —
The Gift We Keep Refusing

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Nothing stays.
Not the season, not the face in the mirror,
not the person sitting beside you,
not even the grief that feels permanent tonight.
Everything is passing through.

What Impermanence Actually Means

The Tibetan word for impermanence is mi rtag pa — literally "not staying." And yet, despite this being one of the most observable facts of existence — something every living being confirms with every breath, every season, every loss — it remains one of the teachings we most consistently refuse to take seriously.

We know intellectually that things change. We have watched people age, relationships shift, plans dissolve, certainties quietly become uncertainties. And yet something in the mind keeps insisting — not yet, not this, not me.

This is not stupidity. It is one of the most deeply human patterns there is. The Tibetan teachings call it zhen pa — grasping — the instinct to hold what we love in place, to freeze what is moving, to make permanent what was never designed to stay.

But impermanence, understood correctly, is not the enemy of happiness. It is its very condition.

If the difficult moment were permanent, there would be no hope.
If the painful feeling were fixed forever, there would be no healing.
If the closed door never changed, there would be no new opening.
Impermanence is not what takes things away from us.
It is what makes change — and therefore liberation — possible at all.

This is the teaching the Buddha offered not as a reason for despair, but as a reason for genuine hope. Nothing is fixed. Nothing is final. Everything — including suffering itself — is passing through.


Why We Resist It — and What That Costs Us

If impermanence is so clearly observable, and potentially so liberating, why do we resist it so consistently? The honest answer is that accepting impermanence requires us to release something the ego holds very dear: the illusion of control.

To accept that things change — people leave, health shifts, circumstances transform without our permission — is to accept that we are not the authors of stability we wish we were. And that is genuinely uncomfortable. It asks us to trust something larger than our own management of events.

The cost of refusing this acceptance is significant:

We spend enormous energy maintaining what cannot be maintained — relationships that have naturally completed, identities that no longer fit, versions of ourselves that belong to a previous chapter.
We suffer twice — once when something changes, and again in the ongoing resistance to having changed at all.
We miss the present moment entirely — so busy preserving yesterday or securing tomorrow that today passes unwitnessed.
We live as though we have unlimited time — and then discover, often too late, that we did not.

The Tibetan masters were remarkably direct about this last point. Milarepa — perhaps Tibet's most beloved yogi — said simply: "Fearing death, I went to the mountains. Now I have realised the nature of mind and have no fear of dying." He did not arrive at fearlessness by avoiding the fact of death. He arrived there by looking at it honestly, directly, and without flinching — until it lost its power to terrorise him.

This is what impermanence, genuinely accepted, ultimately offers: not resignation, but freedom.

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Green Tara and the Nature of Change

Among all the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, Green Tara holds a particular relationship with impermanence — because she herself is the embodiment of swift, responsive action within a constantly changing world. She does not stand apart from the flow of change. She moves within it, as its most compassionate expression.

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How Green Tara Teaches Us to Hold Change

Her Swiftness Is a Teaching on Impermanence

Tara is famous for responding before the prayer is even completed. This swiftness is not separate from the impermanence teaching — it is its living expression. She acts now, in this moment, because she knows that this moment is the only one that actually exists. The past is gone. The future has not arrived. Tara's swiftness is the wisdom of complete presence in the only moment that is real.

Her Green Colour Is the Colour of Living Things

Green in the Tibetan tradition is the colour of wind, of movement, of the living quality of things that grow and change. Tara's green is not the green of something static — it is the green of a forest in motion, of leaves turning, of seasons moving through their natural arc. She does not resist the flow of change. She embodies its most awake and compassionate form.

She Protects Us Through Transitions

Every significant change in life — loss, endings, new beginnings, the transitions we did not choose — is a moment of vulnerability. The Tara practice has always been understood as protection precisely in these in-between moments, these thresholds where the old has ended and the new has not yet fully arrived. She is the guardian of transitions — which is another way of saying she is the guardian of impermanence itself.

Her Compassion Does Not Grasp

Perhaps the most subtle teaching Tara offers on impermanence is this: her compassion is complete and unconditional — and yet she does not cling to outcomes. She responds fully to whatever arises, and then releases it fully as it passes. This is the model of a heart that loves without grasping — present to what is here, unafraid of what is leaving, open to what has not yet arrived.

To practice with Green Tara regularly is to slowly absorb her relationship with change — not intellectually, but in the body, in the breath, in the gradually loosening grip of the heart on what was never truly ours to keep.



Living Fully Because of Impermanence

Here is the paradox the teachings arrive at, eventually: impermanence is not the reason to despair. It is the reason to be fully alive — right now, in this moment, with this person, in this body, during this unrepeatable season of existence.

The flower is beautiful precisely because it does not last. The conversation is precious precisely because it will end. The person beside you is irreplaceable precisely because they, too, are passing through.

Three simple ways to work with impermanence in daily practice:

1. The Morning Awareness
Upon waking, before reaching for the phone or the day's agenda, take three breaths and simply notice: this day has never existed before and will never exist again. Not as a morbid thought, but as an invitation to genuine presence. What would you do differently today if you truly believed that? 

2. The Gratitude of Endings
When something ends — a relationship, a phase of life, a season — rather than moving immediately into grief or relief, pause briefly and ask: what did this bring that would not have been possible without it? This is not bypassing loss. It is honouring what was real while releasing what is complete.

3. Tara Practice as Anchor in Change
When life feels particularly unstable — when change is arriving faster than you can process — return to the simple recitation of Om Tare Tuttare Ture Soha. Not to stop the change, but to find a steady point of refuge within it. Tara herself does not stop the river. She teaches us to swim without drowning.

Impermanence is not the thief that takes what we love.
It is the teacher that keeps returning us
to the only moment we actually have —
this one, right here, still breathing,
still capable of love.

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A Closing Reflection

Somewhere in the fifteen years of Dharma work you have offered freely — in every chapter written, every teaching shared, every quiet act of giving without recognition — impermanence has been your constant companion. Posts that took hours to write, read once and forgotten. Readers who came and went without a word. Seasons of effort that seemed to produce nothing visible at all.

And yet here you are — still writing, still offering, still showing up for the practice. Not because the results were permanent. But because the intention was genuine. And genuine intention, the teachings tell us, leaves seeds that outlast any single season.

Nothing we do with a pure heart is wasted. Even what appears to dissolve without trace is planting something we cannot yet see.

The flower does not mourn its own falling.
It gives its fragrance completely
while it is here —
and trusts the wind
to carry what it offered
further than it could ever see.


In Chapter 17, we turn to Bodhichitta —
the awakened heart that makes every act of giving,
however small and unwitnessed,
a cause for the liberation of all beings.

A Note on Practice Boundaries The reflections on impermanence offered here draw on general Buddhist teachings accessible to all practitioners. Deeper contemplative practices on impermanence and death — including specific meditations from the Tibetan tradition — are best undertaken with the guidance of a qualified teacher within an authentic lineage. If you feel drawn to these practices, please seek proper guidance. 🙏

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Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise.
May it never diminish, but grow and increase, further and further.

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Dedication of Merits

By this merit, may we swiftly attain the omniscient state.
Having overcome all wrongdoing,
may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence —
with its turbulent waves of birth, aging, sickness, and death.


If these reflections have brought some clarity or gentle peace to your path, you are warmly welcome to support this work. Every offering, however small, helps keep the lamp burning.



Thank you for reading. May you find peace, clarity, and great bliss along the path. 🙏

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