Three types of suffering

From Rigpa Wiki
(Redirected from Three kinds of suffering)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The three types of suffering (Skt. triduḥkhatā; Tib. སྡུག་བསྔལ་གསུམ་, dukngal sum, Wyl. sdug bsngal gsum) —

  1. suffering of suffering (Skt. duḥkha duḥkhatā; Tib. སྡུག་བསྔལ་གྱི་སྡུག་བསྔལ་, Wyl. sdug bsngal gyi sdug bsngal)
  2. suffering of change (Skt. vipariṇāma duḥkhatā; Tib. གྱུར་བའི་སྡུག་བསྔལ་, Wyl. 'gyur ba'i sdug bsngal)
  3. all-pervasive suffering of conditioning (Skt. saṃskāra duḥkhatā; Tib. ཁྱབ་པ་འདུ་བྱེད་ཀྱི་སྡུག་བསྔལ་, Wyl. khyab pa 'du byed kyi sdug bsngal)

Suffering of Suffering

Depiction of the hell realms from a thangka of the Wheel of Life

The suffering of suffering or blatant suffering includes all the miseries of the lower realms, as well as the sufferings of birth, old age, sickness and death in the higher realms, and also separation from what we hold dear, having to encounter what is undesirable, and not achieving what we want even after pursuing it.

All these types of suffering, big or small, are undesirable from the very first moment they appear, and are therefore understood to be painful.

A sutra says:

“What is the suffering upon suffering? It is that which is painful when arising, painful when remaining, and pleasant when changing.”

There are countless different categories of suffering, as we can appreciate if we consider even just the hot and cold hells.

Note: According to the Abhidharma-samuccaya, separation from what we hold dear, having to encounter what is undesirable and not getting what we want are all included under the ‘suffering of change.’ There is no contradiction however, since in that text they are explained as if they had not yet occurred, but are bound to be experienced at some time in future; whereas here we are speaking about what it is like when we actually experience separation from what we hold dear, encountering something undesirable and not getting what we want.

Suffering of Change

The suffering of change means that no matter where we find ourselves, whether in this world system or any other, even if we are in the higher realms, and no matter how seemingly pleasurable and attractive our dwelling place, physical body or sensory enjoyments, our situation can not possibly remain as it is, but is bound to change, because of not being beyond the laws of impermanence.

When it does change, what was previously a pleasurable experience becomes a source of suffering. It is just like the sorrow caused by the death of a child: it is because we were so happy when the child was alive that their death is so painful.

About this a sutra says:

“The suffering of change is that which is pleasant when arising, pleasant when remaining, but painful when ceasing.”

All-Pervasive Suffering of Conditioning

The suffering of being conditioned refers to all experience that is bound up with the ordinary psycho-physical aggregates, or skandhas. No matter whether we are experiencing temporary pleasure or suffering, or even a neutral state, we are always setting ourselves up for future suffering. Why? Because our present skandhas are direct causes for our future skandhas, which will be the supports for suffering in the future.

That means all our present experiences are in some way the causes for sufferings that will come to us later on. It is as if all our meals have been laced with poison, and as we eat and drink we are unaware of the suffering and pain that is to come.

About this, the Buddha said:

“The suffering of being conditioned is not apparent when it arises, remains or ceases, but it is still the cause of suffering.”

Every aspect of our conditioned existence brings with it the potential for future suffering, so it is also known as the ‘all-pervasive suffering of conditioned existence.’

This is why we hear statements like: “On the needlepoint of samsara there is never any happiness,” or why we say that noble beings perceive the whole of samsara as something to be renounced, like “a pit of fire” or “an island of cannibals”. [1]

Notes

  1. Based on Mipham Rinpoche’s Khenjuk

Further Reading

External Links