Jātaka: storie animate di saggezza antica

Qui le storie delle vite del Bodhisattva sono animate due volte: prendono forma in illustrazioni, graphic novel e colori, e vengono portate a respirare nel cuore di chi le osserva. Un viaggio visivo tra scimmie sagge, elefanti generosi e principi compassionevoli, dove ogni tratto è un ponte tra Oriente e Occidente, tra parola e immagine.

mercoledì 20 maggio 2026

Kuddāla-Jātaka (70): The Spade That Holds Us Captive and the Gesture That Sets Us Free

 

 


 Kuddāla-Jātaka (70): The Spade That Holds Us Captive and the Gesture That Sets Us Free

 

A Buddhist tale, a Jungian reading, and the mystery that remains intact: when resilience becomes inner sovereignty

 

Imagine owning just one thing. A worn-out object, almost worthless. Yet every time you try to let it go, something inside rebels. You hide it, bury it, try to forget it. But you keep coming back. Because that object is no longer outside you: it has become a piece of your identity.

This is the story of the Kuddāla-Jātaka (No. 70), one of the most powerful tales in the Buddhist canon. And it is also, as we shall see, a map of the human psyche.

 

THE COVER: THE MYSTERY IN A SINGLE IMAGE

 

Look at the cover that opens this post. A blunt spade hovers over dark waters that reflect nothing. On the left, a poor hut. On the right, a luminous Himalayan hermitage. In the center, the silhouette of a man with eyes closed, hands releasing something unseen. From his heart, a golden wave of light — a roar without sound.

This is not an illustration: it is a portal. It already contains the whole meaning of the Jātaka, without explaining it. Because the Kuddāla-Jātaka offers no cheap solutions. It guards a mystery. And it does so through a story that has traveled across millennia.

 

THE STORY: SIX FAILED RENUNCIATIONS AND ONE IMPOSSIBLE GESTURE

 

The Bodhisatta is born as a very poor gardener. His nickname is "Spade Sage" (Kuddāla), because his only possession is an old, blunt iron spade. He earns a meager living with it. But one day he decides to renounce the world and become an ascetic.

He hides the spade in a bush and takes his vows. Days pass. The thought of the spade returns, stronger each time. Greed consumes him. He goes back, retrieves it, and resumes worldly life.

This happens six times. Six times the aspiration for freedom, six times the relapse. Six times hiding, six times digging it back up.

Until, on the seventh attempt, the Sage understands something crucial. It is not enough to hide the object: he must sever the bond at its root. And to do that, he must perform a gesture that allows no return. He goes to the river, raises the spade, closes his eyes tightly — so as not to see where it will fall — and hurls it into the current with the strength of an elephant. Then he lets out a lion's roar: "I have conquered! I have conquered!"

A passing king, returning from a victorious battle, hears that cry and questions him. The Sage replies that a thousand victories like his are useless unless one conquers the greed within. The king lays down his sword. The army follows. The entire city of Benares empties and sets out toward the Himalayas.

The gods themselves stir: Sakka has an immense hermitage built, and all, under the guidance of the Spade Sage, attain the highest spiritual realizations.

 

THE JUNGIAN READING: THE SPADE AS AN AUTONOMOUS COMPLEX

 

For Carl Gustav Jung, what holds us captive is almost never a moral weakness, but an autonomous feeling-toned complex. A psychic content that has detached from consciousness and acts on its own, often sabotaging our best intentions.

The Sage's spade is not just a tool. It is the material projection of a complex. Six times the ego tries to repress it, to hide it in the unconscious (the bush). But repression does not dissolve: it makes the complex even more powerful, and it keeps resurfacing.

How often do we do the same in our lives? The manager who throws the company phone into the lake to disconnect, then goes back to retrieve it. The person who ends a toxic relationship, only to reopen the door. The resolution to quit a habit, shattered at the first trigger.

It is not a lack of willpower. It is the very nature of the complex: it has a will of its own, and the ego alone cannot prevail against it. A different gesture is needed.

 

THE TURNING POINT: CLOSING YOUR EYES AND THROWING

 

The turning point of the Jātaka is extraordinary from a psychological perspective. The Sage does not simply throw the spade away: he closes his eyes. He gives up knowing where it will fall. He relinquishes control. It is a leap into the dark of trust.

In Jungian terms, this is a symbolic enactment: a physical gesture that unites conscious and unconscious, bypassing reason. It is not an intellectual insight ("I know I should let go"). It is an action that engages the whole body, the whole emotion. Closing one's eyes means saying: "I do not need to know where it will end up. I trust the river."

And the river, in many traditions, is the flow of the unconscious, impermanence, life itself. Hurling the spade into the river means entrusting one's attachment to something greater, which will carry it away.

The victory roar is not an egotistical cry of triumph. It is the eruption of the psychic totality reunifying. The Self — the deep center of the psyche — reclaims its place. The ego is no longer enslaved by the complex.

 

RESILIENCE AS INNER SOVEREIGNTY

 

This Jātaka belongs to the fourth level of our path: "Resilience and Renunciation as Inner Sovereignty." It is no longer about withstanding external blows or choosing between competing loyalties. It is about building a stability so deep that it no longer depends on what happens outside.

The Spade Sage does not repress desire. He does not fight it. He performs a definitive gesture, and in that gesture becomes sovereign over himself. And his inner sovereignty is contagious: it transforms a king, an army, an entire city.

True resilience is not resisting. It is letting go. And it is no coincidence that, immediately afterwards, the gods build a hermitage: because when you release your grip, the universe meets you with a home you did not know you were waiting for.

 

THE APOPHATIC DIMENSION: THE MYSTERY THAT REMAINS INTACT

 

There is a level the Jātaka does not explain, and deliberately so. Why does the seventh attempt succeed? What clicked in the Sage that had not clicked the first six times? The text simply says he "bethought him." But it is not logical thought: it is an insight that breaks through from a depth that does not belong to the ego.

This is the apophatic dimension of the story. The truth is not spoken: it is guarded. It is present as a luminous absence. We cannot grasp it with concepts. We can only recognize it, suddenly, as something "familiar" that resonates in a silent place of our being.

The Sage's roar is not an explanation. It is the echo of a liberation that has already happened, in the very moment the eyes closed. And we, watching the animated video that accompanies this post, can perhaps feel that echo, without needing to understand it.

 

THE VIDEO: 35 SCENES FOR AN INNER JOURNEY

 

The video you find below is composed of 35 animated scenes, divided into two parts: 17 key narrative scenes with ambient sound, and 17 slides with captions weaving together storytelling, Jungian psychology, and the apophatic dimension. Each scene is a piece of the journey: from the bare room of attachment, to the roar of victory, to the luminous silence of the Himalayan hermitage.

 

Watch it calmly. Perhaps full screen. And as you watch it, ask yourself: what is my spade?

 

 

 

 

CONCLUSION: A STORY THAT CONCERNS US ALL

We all have a spade. An attachment, a fear, a survival identity that no longer serves us but to which we cling. The Kuddāla-Jātaka does not tell us how to do it: it shows us a man who, after six failures, succeeds. And it suggests — without telling us — that the secret is to close one's eyes and throw.

There is no guarantee. There is no control. There is only the river, and the trust that it will carry away what no longer serves us.

Thank you for reading this far. If this story has touched you, share it. Leave a comment and tell me: what is the spade you have thrown — or are still holding onto?

 

 

Kuddāla-Jātaka (70): The Spade That Holds Us Captive and the Gesture That Sets Us Free

     Kuddāla-Jātaka (70): The Spade That Holds Us Captive and the Gesture That Sets Us Free   A Buddhist tale, a Jungian reading, and the ...