You can suffer without pain. Even on days free of distress, something keeps repeating—and the very wish to stop becomes part of the loop. This book examines the structure behind that repetition. Drawing on the early Buddhist discourses (Nikāyas), it reframes *dukkha* not as a feeling but as a structure. It traces how the five aggregates generate their own momentum, how comfort can become a prison, and how control persists without a controller. Then it asks: if you already understand the pattern, why can't you stop? This book offers no prescriptions. Instead, it examines the conditions under which mindful awareness does not become another cover, the path becomes an arrangement rather than a checklist, and a relationship becomes a mirror rather than a blade. It is not a book that gives answers. It is a book that leaves questions. Written for anyone who has already experienced a repetition they wanted to stop but could not. No background in Buddhism is required. The experience of repetition is enough.
Won Heo Seok (Mon,) studied this question.