Understanding that all stress states are temporary and constantly changing, reducing the nervous system's grip on difficulty.
A central Buddhist insight is anicca—impermanence. All phenomena, including stress, anxiety, and tension, arise and pass. This is not mere philosophy but a nervous system reset. When stressed, we unconsciously grip, believing tension is permanent and resistance necessary. Recognizing impermanence allows the nervous system to relax its desperate clenching. Dipa Ma observed that her own physical pain and difficult emotions moved through her when she stopped resisting and simply noted their temporary nature. This perspective shift activates the parasympathetic nervous system because there is nothing to defend against in something temporary. Practicing with impermanence teaches the nervous system that stress is weather, not identity; situation, not truth. This dissolves the meta-stress of resisting stress itself. Over time, this insight fundamentally rewires nervous system reactivity, creating space and freedom within difficulty.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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