Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Impermanence Reading in Scan Comparisons

Understanding sequential medical images as evidence of impermanence and change, applying Buddhist teaching to recognize healing and transformation possibilities.

Dipa
Why It Matters

Dipa Ma grounded her teachings in the Buddhist principle of anicca—impermanence. All phenomena continuously arise and pass away; nothing remains static. This profound understanding transforms how we interpret medical imaging, particularly when comparing scans over time. A concerning finding in one scan is not a permanent verdict; subsequent imaging may show healing, stability, or change. This concept liberates both patients and practitioners from a fatalistic reading of any single image. Where fear sees a fixed pathology, impermanence reveals possibility. Dipa Ma's students discovered through meditation that truly seeing change—in breath, sensation, thought—fundamentally shifts perception and reduces attachment to fixed identity. Applied to medical imaging, this means understanding disease and healing as dynamic processes rather than permanent states. A positive finding can reverse; a negative trend can stabilize with intervention. Sequential imaging becomes a teaching in anicca itself, demonstrating that the body's condition continuously evolves. This framework combats the psychological trap of receiving a diagnosis and feeling permanently damaged. Instead, imaging becomes evidence of the body's constant potential for change, aligning modern medical practice with timeless Buddhist wisdom about transformation.

Helpful guides
Dipa
Health & Body
Peri
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