David Loy in 'The Great Awakening: A Buddhist Social Theory' explains there are 
three types of dukkha [suffering]:  dukkha-dukkhata, viparinama-dukkhata & 
sankhara-dukkhata.  The first is derived from suffering "all physical, 
emotional, and mental pain and discomfort, including being separated from 
people we like to be with, and being stuck with those we do not."  The second 
is suffering that "arises from impermanence, from knowing that nothing lasts 
forever and most things do not last long."  The third type is suffering from 
the five components of the self, the skandhas [form, apperception or 
sensibility, perception, volition/will and consciousness], "or more precisely, 
those physical and mental processes whose interaction creates a sense of self.  
So this dukkha has something to do with the doctrine of anatta, the strange but 
essential Buddhist claim that our sense of subjectivity does not correspond to 
any real ontological self --- or in the (post) modern terms I have been
  using, the claim that the sense of self is a construct." 
 
By the way, David Loy has a wonderful youtube talk:

          http://m.youtube.com/#/watch?v=Y1e7Zysfkj0
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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