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December 5, 2025

A Contemplation on Impermanence
 
I am of the nature to grow old. I cannot escape old age.
I am of the nature to grow ill. I cannot escape sickness.
I am of the nature to die. I cannot escape death.
I will be separated from everything and everyone I hold dear.
My only true possession is my actions.


Known as the five remembrances, these verses comprise a contemplation practice found in the Upajjhatthana Sutta of Anguttara Nikaya, discourses of the Buddha from the Pali canon often referred to as the “Book of Numbers.” Bleak as the reflections sound, the Buddha suggested we recite them often to cultivate gratitude for the fleeting moment—for all that we have for the short and precious time that we have it.

We don’t have to run from or try to outsmart the inevitable, these verses tell us. Instead of shunning our unavoidable decline into old age, sickness, and death, we can welcome these transitions and live more fully in the process. Instead of grieving that we’ll lose everything we have and everyone we love, we can celebrate them fully just as they are. If we face head on the impermanence that defines us and all we know, we will hold it all more dearly. If we stop denying or resisting, we can open to what is with greater ease.

This week’s Three Teachings show us how three practitioners use this contemplation in everyday life to deepen appreciation, joy, and acceptance.
Forward today's teachings to a friend »
Working with the Five Remembrances
By Tina Lear

Writer and teacher Tina Lear explains how she thinks through every verse of the five remembrances, a practice she does every morning to set the tone for the rest of her day.
Read more »
Meditating on Suffering
By Sister Diamond Mountain

A Buddhist nun shares insights from her past—including her alcoholism and once-held fear of aging and death—and shares how the five remembrances can jolt us out of age-old attachments to things like youth, beauty, and longevity.
Read more »
All of the Nature to Change
By Barbara Gates

Writer Barbara Gates weaves the five remembrances, which started reciting themselves back to her when she started reflecting on them in a regular practice, into a story about a hike through the woods with her husband.
Read more »
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