Equanimity: The Calm That Survives Bad News
The Quick Version
Mono no aware (âthe pathos of thingsâ) is a Japanese concept describing the bittersweet awareness that everything beautiful is also temporary. Buddhist anicca (impermanence) makes a sharper claim: nothing is permanent â not your possessions, not your relationships, not your plans, not your self. Together, these ideas suggest that beauty doesnât exist despite endings. It exists because of them. And the modern habit of clinging to things (relationships, achievements, comfort, certainty) isnât just futile. Itâs the main source of the anxiety itâs trying to prevent.
Thereâs a park near my apartment with a row of cherry trees. Two weeks ago they were bare. Last week they were ridiculous. Clouds of pale pink against a sky that didnât deserve to be that blue. I walked past them every morning, thought I should really stop and sit with this, and kept walking to my desk.
Yesterday half the petals were on the ground.
Thatâs the whole lesson, really. I just needed 2,500 years of Japanese aesthetics, mono no aware and Buddhist impermanence, to understand what the trees were already saying.
Mono no aware (ç©ăźćă) translates roughly as âthe pathos of thingsâ or âa sensitivity to ephemera.â It was coined by the 18th-century Japanese literary scholar Motoori Norinaga to describe something he noticed running through classical Japanese literature: a gentle sadness at the passing of things, mixed with gratitude that they existed at all.
Not grief. Not despair. Something quieter. The feeling you get at the end of a perfect day when the light is going gold and you know itâs almost over and that knowing makes the gold more gold.
| Tradition | Core concept | Relationship to endings | Practical upshot |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mono no aware | Bittersweet awareness of impermanence | Beauty and transience are inseparable | Feel it fully, donât cling |
| Buddhist anicca | All conditioned phenomena are impermanent | Clinging to what changes causes suffering | Practice letting go as a skill |
| Stoic memento mori | Remember you will die | Death awareness sharpens priorities | Act on what matters now |
| Existentialism | Life has no inherent meaning | Finitude creates urgency | Choose deliberately |
| Wabi-sabi | Beauty in imperfection and decay | The crack in the bowl is what makes it yours | Stop demanding perfection |
The Stoic version â which I wrote about in the memento mori piece â is useful but more⊠muscular. Itâs a tool for discipline. Remember death, so you donât waste time. Mono no aware is doing something different. Itâs not motivating you to be productive. Itâs asking you to feel the ache of passing time and let that ache make you more present, more tender, more awake.
Hereâs the thing about sakura season. It lasts roughly two weeks. The Japanese cultural obsession with cherry blossoms (the hanami picnics, the blossom forecasts on the evening news, the way entire cities rearrange their schedules around peak bloom) isnât in spite of how briefly the flowers last. Itâs because they last so briefly.
If cherry blossoms bloomed year-round, nobody would sit under them drinking sake on a Tuesday afternoon. Theyâd be background. Wallpaper. Itâs the ending that makes the looking feel urgent.
I keep testing this against my own experience. The meals I remember best? Not the fanciest ones. The ones I knew, at the time, wouldnât happen again in quite the same way. A dinner with friends the night before someone moved across the country. The last morning of a vacation when the coffee tasted better because the flight was in four hours. My daughterâs first day of kindergarten, which was already her last first day of kindergarten while it was happening.
The moments that stick have endings built into them. Not because endings are romantic. Because endings are what make you pay attention.
Where mono no aware gives you bittersweet beauty, Buddhism gives you something more direct.
Anicca (impermanence) is one of the three marks of existence in Buddhist philosophy, alongside dukkha (suffering) and anatta (non-self). Itâs not a suggestion. Itâs an observation about the nature of reality: all conditioned phenomena are impermanent. Your body. Your thoughts. Your relationships. Your career. Your mood right now, reading this sentence.
The Buddhist argument isnât that impermanence is sad. Itâs that fighting impermanence is where the suffering lives. You donât suffer because things end. You suffer because you grip.
Iâve felt this. The anxious scanning of a good relationship for signs of trouble. The panic when a project is going well (when will this fall apart?) The way I sometimes canât enjoy a vacation because Iâm already pre-grieving the return to routine. Thatâs not life being hard. Thatâs me refusing to let life be temporary, which it insists on being regardless.
The piece on Buddhist suffering and modern life covers dukkha in more depth. But anicca is specifically about this: the gap between how things are (changing) and how we want them to be (stable). That gap is where anxiety lives.
Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) draws explicitly from Buddhist impermanence concepts, and its clinical results â including Steven C. Hayesâs foundational research on experiential avoidance â line up uncomfortably well with what Buddhism has been saying for 2,500 years. Experiential avoidance (the habit of trying to suppress, control, or escape from unwanted inner experiences) is one of the strongest predictors of anxiety disorders. And clinging to pleasant experiences is avoidanceâs mirror twin. Both are attempts to freeze whatâs moving.
What ACT keeps confirming: practicing impermanence, actually letting thoughts and feelings arise and pass without grabbing onto them or shoving them away, reduces anxiety more effectively than thought-suppression strategies. You donât beat anxiety by holding on tighter. You beat it by loosening your grip.
That was counterintuitive to me for years. My anxiety strategy was always: find the thing that feels stable and hold on. A routine. A plan. Some certainty about what comes next. But certainty is a fiction, routines break, and plans change. Every time they did, the anxiety doubled because Iâd staked my calm on something that was never going to stay put.
The philosophy of anxiety piece covering Kierkegaard, Heidegger, and the Stoics explores this from the Western side. But the Buddhist framing is simpler: youâre not anxious because things change. Youâre anxious because youâre pretending they wonât.
Wabi-sabi deserves its own post (and probably its own lifetime). But it belongs here because it grows from the same root as mono no aware and Buddhist impermanence.
Wabi-sabi is the Japanese aesthetic philosophy of beauty in imperfection, incompleteness, and impermanence. The cracked pottery repaired with gold (kintsugi). The weathered wood. The asymmetrical bowl that a machine would have made âbetterâ but a hand made right.
Where mono no aware is about feeling transience, wabi-sabi is about seeing it, training your eye to find beauty in the worn, the aging, the not-quite. Itâs an argument against the exhausting modern demand that everything be optimized, polished, and permanent.
I notice this in myself. The impulse to photograph the cherry blossoms at peak bloom and skip the days when the petals are browning on the sidewalk. The preference for new over used, clean over weathered, beginning over middle. Wabi-sabi says: youâre editing out the interesting part. The patina is where the story is.
The biggest misunderstanding of impermanence philosophy: if nothing lasts, nothing matters. Thatâs nihilism, and itâs the opposite of what these traditions are saying. The whole point is that impermanence makes things matter more. The cherry blossom matters because itâs Tuesday and by Friday itâll be gone.
Once a day (I do this during my morning walk, but timing doesnât matter), stop and notice something thatâs in the process of changing. A shadow moving. Steam from coffee dissipating. Your breath. The light shifting through a window.
Donât photograph it. Donât capture it. Just watch it change. Thatâs the practice. Youâre training yourself to see impermanence as a feature rather than a threat.
Iâve been doing this since early March and the effect is subtle but real. Iâm less surprised when things shift. Less jarred by endings. Not because Iâve become detached â because Iâve stopped expecting permanence, which is the thing that made the changing feel violent.
Pick one thing youâre currently clinging to. Not a person â a state. The way a project is going. A mood you wish would stay. A phase your kid is in. The comfortable rhythm of a friendship before someone moved.
Name it. Acknowledge that itâs already changing. Then ask: what would it look like to appreciate this without needing it to stay?
I did this last week with a particularly good stretch of work. Things were flowing â the kind of creative ease I wrote about in the wu wei piece. My instinct was to figure out what I was doing right so I could keep doing it. Lock it in. Reproduce the conditions. But thatâs clinging. And the effort to preserve the flow was already disrupting the flow. I let it be a good week without demanding it become a good method.
This one is harder. The next time something ends â a conversation, a visit, a season, a TV show you loved â resist the impulse to immediately replace it. Donât queue up the next thing. Donât fill the space. Sit in the gap between what just ended and what hasnât started yet.
That gap is where mono no aware lives. The bittersweet space. Itâs uncomfortable because weâre trained to optimize our way past discomfort. But the discomfort isnât a problem to solve. Itâs the correct response to being alive in a world where things pass.
Impermanence philosophy is for the everyday grip, the background anxiety of a mind that canât stop trying to control whatâs coming next. Itâs for the clinging that makes ordinary life harder than it needs to be.
Itâs not for acute grief. If youâve lost someone and a philosophy blog tells you âall things are impermanent,â you have every right to throw your phone across the room. The grief and philosophy piece covers approaches that are gentler with real loss. Impermanence practice is preparation, not medicine. Itâs easier to navigate grief when youâve been practicing awareness of change â but telling a grieving person to practice awareness is tone-deaf.
Itâs also not a substitute for addressing clinical anxiety. If your clinging isnât a philosophical habit but a symptom â if itâs accompanied by panic attacks, insomnia, intrusive thoughts, difficulty functioning. Thatâs not a worldview problem. Thatâs a mental health situation that deserves professional support.
And thereâs a real risk of spiritual bypassing here. âEverything is impermanentâ can become a way to avoid caring. If you find yourself using Buddhist philosophy to justify emotional numbness or avoid commitment, youâve overshot the target. The point isnât to stop caring. Itâs to care without strangling.
I walked past the cherry trees again this morning. The ground was pink. Most of the branches were bare, with a few stubborn clusters holding on for another day or two.
A man was sitting on a bench under the largest tree, just looking up. Not reading. Not on his phone. Just watching the last blossoms hold, and probably â if he was paying attention â watching a few more let go while he sat there.
Thatâs the whole practice. You donât have to understand mono no aware intellectually. You donât have to memorize Pali terms or read Motoori Norinaga. You just have to be willing to sit under a tree thatâs losing its flowers and feel something other than disappointment that you didnât get there sooner.
The petals fall. They were always going to fall. That was never the sad part.
The sad part would have been not looking up.
Philosophy reframes how we think about change and loss â it doesnât replace professional support. If youâre experiencing persistent anxiety, grief, or emotional difficulties that interfere with daily life, a therapist or counselor is the right first step.