In Buddhist phenomenology and soteriology, the skandhas (Sanskrit) or khandhas (Pāḷi) are the five functions or aspects that constitute the sentient being. In English, these five aspects are known as the five aggregates. The five aggregates are: material form, feelings, perception, volition (sometimes translated as mental formations), and sensory consciousness. Considering that the five aggregates continuously arise and cease within our moment-to-moment experience, the Buddha teaches that nothing among them is really "I" or "mine."
In the Theravada tradition, suffering arises when one identifies with or clings to an aggregate. Suffering is extinguished by relinquishing attachments to aggregates.
The Mahayana tradition further puts forth that ultimate freedom is realized by deeply penetrating the nature of all aggregates as intrinsically empty of independent existence.
Outside of Buddhist didactic contexts, "skandha" can mean mass, heap, pile, gathering, bundle or tree trunk.
Two Is All It Needs To Be
One Catastrophe
When Everything's Inside And Out
You Make No Sense To Me
Does Your Philosophy
Keep You Running Down
Pull Your Head From The Sand
Two Is What You Lay To Claim
How Everything Runs The Same
Rubbing Dirt On Your Wounds
You've Got No Time For Pain
It's One More Day Too Late
I've Got A Room For The View
I Can't Tear Up Your Plan
Pull Your Head From The Sand
Take Back What You Deserve
But I'll Give You My Word
Caught Up In The Movie
But I Don't Know Where I Stand
Hold (On) When You Float High Above Me
'cause I'll Be Here When You Land
Two Is All It Needs To Be
One Catastrophe
When Everything's Inside And Out