sn 22.59
SN

The Characteristic of Non-Self Sutta (Anattalakkhaṇa Sutta)

Three Marks
Five Aggregates

First published: February 15, 2026

What you learn

This sutta teaches the doctrine of non-self (anatta) by analyzing the five aggregates of experience—form, feeling, perception, mental formations, and consciousness. You will learn how each aggregate is impermanent, subject to change, and beyond your control, which undermines the illusion of a permanent, unchanging self. Understanding this teaching leads to disenchantment with clinging and ultimately to liberation.

Where it sits

This is the Buddha's second recorded sermon, traditionally delivered five days after the First Sermon, making it a foundational wisdom teaching in the Buddhist canon. It is a cornerstone text that systematically dismantles identification with all aspects of experience.

Suggested use

Study this sutta when investigating questions of identity and selfhood, during insight meditation practice on the aggregates, or when working to release self-view and attachment. It is particularly valuable for deepening understanding of non-self as a path to liberation.

Guidance

Start here. Read the original text in the other tabs.

SN 22.59 — The Characteristic of Non-Self Sutta (Anattalakkhaṇa Sutta)

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Guidance (not part of the sutta)

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What this discourse is really about

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This teaching tackles one of the most challenging insights in Buddhist practice: nothing we experience is truly "ours" in the way we usually think. The Buddha walks through each component of our experience—our body, feelings, perceptions, mental formations, and consciousness itself—showing that none of these can be controlled the way we'd expect if they were truly "self."

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The Buddha demonstrates that we lack actual ownership and control over our experience. We cannot direct our body, feelings, perceptions, mental formations, or consciousness according to our wishes. The Buddha isn't saying there's no experience—he's pointing out that our sense of ownership and control is largely an illusion.

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This isn't meant to be depressing. It's actually liberating. When we stop trying to control what can't be controlled and stop identifying so completely with experiences that are constantly changing, we find a deeper peace. We discover genuine freedom when we cease fighting for control that was never actually ours.

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Key teachings

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  • The control test: If something were truly "self," we should be able to command it—but we cannot make our body never age or ensure we only feel pleasant emotions
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  • Impermanence leads to suffering: Because everything in our experience is constantly changing, trying to hold onto it or control it creates frustration
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  • The five components: Our entire experience breaks down into form (body), feelings, perceptions, mental formations, and consciousness—none of which we truly control
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  • Seeing clearly leads to freedom: When we really see how things are, we naturally become less attached and find liberation through letting go
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  • Disenchantment isn't cynicism: Becoming "disenchanted" means seeing through illusions, which leads to genuine peace rather than bitterness
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Common misunderstandings

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  • "There is no self at all": The teaching isn't denying your experience exists, but showing that what you take to be "self" is actually a collection of changing processes you don't control
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  • "Nothing matters": Seeing non-self doesn't mean becoming passive—it means acting with less ego-driven attachment and more wisdom
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  • "I should eliminate my personality": This isn't about becoming a blank slate, but about holding your personality lightly rather than defending it desperately
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Try this today

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  • Notice what you can't control: When you feel frustrated, ask "Am I trying to control something that's actually beyond my control?" Notice how your body ages, how emotions come and go, how thoughts arise uninvited
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  • Practice the phrases: When experiencing something pleasant or unpleasant, gently remind yourself "This is not mine, I am not this, this is not my self"—not as a denial but as a reality check
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  • Observe without commanding: Spend a few minutes just watching your breath without trying to change it, noticing how it happens by itself—observe how much of your experience unfolds without your management
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If this landed, read next

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  • SN 22.85 for more on how clinging to the aggregates creates suffering
  • MN 2 for practical guidance on which mental patterns to abandon and which to cultivate
  • SN 35.28 for understanding how this insight applies to our sensory experience
  • MN 109 for seeing how non-self understanding develops naturally through meditation
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