Jātaka 67 – Ucchaṅga: the choice of the brother, between Buddhist ethics and Jungian psychology
A visual and narrative journey into Level 3: identity paradox, hierarchies of loyalty, and resilience
Cover: The woman before the king, hand on her brother’s shoulder. Split background between replaceable (husband and son) and irreplaceable (brother). Ajanta style.
🎬 The narrated and analyzed video
This video was created using progressive prompts that generated animated images in Ajanta style (9:16 vertical). Each scene corresponds to a key scene in the narrative, following the order of the story. A 5-second animated image with audio commentary precedes each slide and an audio commentary in Italian (visual description and narrative anecdote) is inserted in each slide. Side captions complete the visual experience. Perfect for a narrated carousel on LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and Blogger.
📖 Synopsis
In Jātaka 67 – Ucchaṅga-Jātaka, a woman appears at the king’s court asking for “something to cover her”. After refusing precious garments, she explains that a woman’s true covering is a husband. The king, impressed, discovers that three prisoners are her husband, son, and brother. He offers to free only one. She chooses her brother. Her reasoning: a husband and a son are replaceable (she can find another husband, have another son), but her brother – with both parents dead – is unique and irreplaceable. The king, delighted, frees all three.
This story belongs to Level 3 of the ethical Jātaka path: the subject is no longer a victim or observer of deceit, but a moral agent who must decide in situations of conflicting loyalties. Unexpected hierarchies emerge (brother before son and husband) along with ontological paradoxes: who am I before being a wife and mother?
🧠 Explicit teaching
The woman openly declares:
“A son is easy to find; of husbands too there is ample choice; but a brother – where will my pains find another?”
The original blood bond (brother) prevails over the acquired bond (husband) and the generative bond (son), when choice is forced.
🔍 Implicit teaching (from the plot)
- Paradox of female identity: the woman is defined as “covered” only by a husband, yet it is she who chooses – demonstrating ethical autonomy.
- The king’s trap is reversed: the king demands a tragic choice, but the woman’s answer leads him to an act of grace (freeing all). Loyalty ethics is not sacrifice but a strategy of collective salvation.
- Replaceability as resilience: the woman accepts she might lose husband and son; this acceptance generates everyone’s liberation.
🔄 Resilience axis and belonging level
Resilience here is active: not enduring the choice, but transforming it into reasoning that saves all. Primary belonging is original (brother, deceased parents, shared blood). Secondary belonging (spouse, offspring) is negotiable. In Level 3, identity is built precisely through these paradoxical hierarchies.
📚 Jungian integration – archetypes and shadow
Each scene is paired with a reference to Carl Jung:
- The brother as archetype of the positive Shadow – what cannot be lost without losing oneself.
- The animus as an inner “covering” – the woman seeks psychic wholeness, not a man.
- Jungian resilience: letting go of masks (personae) to preserve the authentic core.
- Synchronicity of destiny: the king (the Self) rewards the authentic choice by freeing everyone.
Each slide in the video features a “Jātaka” caption (narrative anecdote) and a “Jung” caption (psychological anecdote).
🎞️ How it was made
The video was generated using progressive prompts in Ajanta style (Indian cave paintings), vertical 9:16 format. Each scene corresponds to a key moment in the narrative, following the story order. A 5‑second English audio commentary precedes every slide, narrating the Jātaka anecdote and the Jungian insight. Side captions complete the experience.
🔖 Hashtags for sharing
#Jātaka67 #UcchaṅgaJātaka #Buddhism #JungianPsychology #CarlJung #Resilience #Ethics #ConsciousLeadership #VisualStorytelling #Ajanta
📢 Want to go deeper?
Share the video, leave a comment, or contact me for the next Jātaka (68 and 69) of Level 3.


