![]() |
| The Dream as a Mandala of the Invisible |
77. Mahāsupina-jātaka – Beyond the Name, the Dream and the Door
Sixteen dreams, a terrified king, and a truth the Buddha does not explain but guards: a journey through Jungian psychology and apophatic silence.
Look at the cover. A king lies asleep, enveloped by a vortex of symbols – black bulls, tiny flowering trees, a golden bowl, frogs swallowing snakes, wolves fleeing from goats. Each dream fragment floats as in a liquid mandala, suspended between the bedchamber and a timeless elsewhere. Above, the Buddha sits beneath the Bodhi tree, radiating a calm, ordering light. In the deepest background, a door stands open onto luminous emptiness: the apophatic dimension, the mystery one does not cross with thought but only with silence.
This image is not mere illustration: it is a map of the psyche. The king is the Ego, shaken by the irruption of the numinous. The dreams are archetypal contents emerging from the collective unconscious, charged with a meaning consciousness cannot immediately grasp. The Buddha is the Self, the instance that reorders and integrates without reducing. The empty door is the ineffable: what remains after every interpretation has exhausted its task.
The Video: 32 Slides to Cross the Dream
The animated video accompanying this post – 32 slides with original audio – follows a LinkedIn carousel structure and develops the Jātaka in five fundamental steps. Each slide weaves the Buddhist narrative together with Carl Jung’s depth psychology and the apophatic dimension, that «knowledge without concept» which forms the beating heart of the tale.
1. The King’s Terror: The Irruption of the Numinous
King Pasenadi wakes up paralyzed. He has dreamed sixteen visions so powerful they leave him breathless. Jung called such experiences «big dreams»: not personal dreams, but eruptions of the collective unconscious that overwhelm the Ego with their numinous charge. The king does not yet know what they mean, but he knows they concern him absolutely.
2. The Merchants of Fear: The Shadow Complex
The court brahmins interpret the dreams as omens of ruin for the king and propose mass sacrifices. Here the shadow complex lurking within institutions emerges: sacred knowledge is used to manipulate, to project fear onto a scapegoat, and to profit. It is the perennial temptation to possess the mystery by reducing it to merchandise.
3. Mallikā’s Intuition: The Anima Function
Queen Mallikā, a figure of the Anima, offers no answers but points a direction: «Go to the Buddha.» Her intuition does not explain the dreams but knows where the truth does not dwell. It is the mediating function guiding the paralyzed Ego toward the Self, without seizing the mystery, only pointing to the door.
4. Transpersonal Deciphering: The Dream as World History
The Buddha listens to the sixteen dreams and interprets them one by one. But his reading is astonishing: those symbols do not concern the king’s personal fate, but the future decline of the Dhamma, the universal law. The bulls that refuse to fight are the clouds that will bring no rain in an age of injustice; the empty pumpkins that sink are the unworthy men who will prevail over the wise. The dream is not a private nightmare: it is a window into the Anima Mundi. The king’s fear dissolves not because he has understood everything, but because he has stopped feeling himself the center of the mystery.
5. Liberation: Beyond the Sacrifice
The sacrifice is halted, the animals set free. The king returns to his kingdom with a light heart. The transcendent function has worked: the synthesis between unconscious anguish and the false sacrificial solution has generated an act of compassion instead of destruction. In the background, the apophatic silence: the door has been crossed, but no one can say what lies beyond. Only that the fear is gone.
Two Anecdotes for Daily Life
Anecdote 1: The Manager and the Dream of the Collective
The manager who dreams the company: the collective unconscious of the social body.
A manager dreams for sixteen nights of machines running empty, employees turned into automatons, balance sheets in disarray. A fashionable consultant suggests drastic cuts and layoffs – the contemporary sacrifice. But the manager, recalling the Mahāsupina-jātaka, seeks a deeper guide. He understands that his dream is not a personal symptom but an intuitive perception of the «corporate disease»: loss of meaning, broken communication, exploitation. Instead of sacrificing employees, he sacrifices the old predatory models. The dream, read on the transpersonal level, saves the community. Jung would say he stopped taking the dream «on the subjective level» and recognized it as a great archetypal dream, a mirror of an entire collective psyche.
Anecdote 2: The Person and the Already-Full Vessel

The
full vessel: the insatiability of desire and the silence that liberates
A person is haunted by a recurring dream: a vessel already full being filled still further (the king’s eighth dream). A literal interpretation would push her to «sacrifice» more time to fill it even more. Guided by the apophatic dimension, she instead stops. She understands that the dream is not asking for a solution but guarding an enigma: the insatiable nature of desire. There is no vessel to fill out there. The fullness she seeks is not the result of addition, but the discovery of a completeness already present, empty of objects. The interpretation does not become a new concept to possess, but an inner silence that dissolves the compulsion to pour. It is the moment when something falls silent and simultaneously resonates within: a knowledge without concept that simply says, «stop pouring. You are already the vessel.»
Conclusion: Guarding the Mystery
The Mahāsupina-jātaka offers no theory of dreams. It does not explain the mechanism of vision, nor does it reduce the phenomenon to psychology or elevate it to metaphysics. It guards it. The sixteen dreams happened: that is all. The Buddha speaks, interprets, reveals the future. But what remains after his word is not a definition, but a silence. The apophatic dimension is this silence that remains after speech. Something falls silent within and simultaneously resonates as familiar – not because it has been understood, but because it has been recognized beyond all concepts. Great dreams do not ask to be deciphered but to be listened to all the way, until they return us to the silence from which they arose. There, in that silence, the name falls silent, the dream dissolves, and the door appears – not as a concept, but as a passage already present, already open, already ours.

