Jātaka 65 – Anabhirati: No Private Property in Women. A Buddhist and Jungian Lesson on Resilience
How a betrayed disciple learned to stop suffering from infidelity – and what Carl Jung teaches us about the Anima and possessive attachment.
The opening image shows the Bodhisatta teacher under a banyan tree, one hand pointing to a road full of travelers, the other resting on the young disciple’s shoulder. Above them, floating like transparent icons, appear the five metaphors: the highway, the river, the courtyard, the inn, the tavern. The disciple’s face is caught between anguish and dawning serenity. The style echoes Ajanta cave paintings (earthy colors, dark outlines, gentle spirituality). This cover visually summarizes the heart of Jātaka 65: **possessive attachment is an illusion**, and liberation comes through recognizing that no human being is private property.
Video 1 – The animated narrative of Jātaka 65 (18 scenes, Neo-Soul score)
Analysis of the first video
This video offers a complete visual narration of Jātaka 65, developed through 18 progressive scenes generated from prompts based on the original Pali Canon text. Each scene follows the dramatic arc:
1. The young disciple stops attending lessons.
2. Confession to the teacher: “My wife has betrayed me.”
3. Flashback of the nocturnal discovery.
4. The suffering of possession (disciple head in hands, broken chain).
5. The teacher’s first metaphor: the public highway.
6. The river from which everyone drinks.
7. The common courtyard.
8. The inn open to every traveler.
9. The tavern of shared pleasure.
10. Recitation of the stanza on a palm-leaf manuscript.
11. The disciple’s inner turning point (broken chain, sunrise).
12. Returning home without anger.
13. The wife learning that the teacher knows.
14. The wife burning the veil of deceit.
15. The reconciled couple not based on possession but on peace.
16. The level of universal belonging (circle of people).
17. Resilience (a plant growing through asphalt).
18. Final synthesis: the liberated disciple.
The soundtrack (two Neo-Soul spiritual tracks) follows the emotional arc: tension, pain, teaching, liberation. The instruments (plucked strings, ethereal keyboards, drones) evoke the Ajanta caves and deep meditation.
Key teaching of the first video: suffering does not come from infidelity itself, but from the belief that the other “belongs” to us. When the disciple accepts that women (as well as men) are “common to all” – not in the sense of compulsory promiscuity, but in the sense that **no one owns another** – jealousy dissolves.
Video 2 – The English version with table and Jungian integration (18 slides, LinkedIn format)
Analysis of the second video
This video transforms the same 18 scenes into a vertical LinkedIn carousel (9:16), but adds a second layer of interpretation: for each slide, next to the Jātaka caption, a **direct reference to Carl Jung** appears.
Each slide has a three-part structure:
- Title (e.g., “The Public Highway”)
- Jātaka caption (the story text)
- Jungian caption (psychological concept)
Significant examples:
|
Slide |
Jātaka caption |
Jungian caption |
|
The Discovery |
“Master, I saw her with my own eyes. She betrayed me.” |
The idealized Anima image shatters. The wound is narcissistic. |
|
The Five Metaphors |
Highways, rivers, courtyards, inns, taverns: common to all. |
Libido cannot be imprisoned. Individuation accepts the flow. |
|
The Wife Changes |
Knowing the teacher knew, she stopped her misconduct. |
Shadow awareness brings spontaneous transformation. |
|
Final Synthesis |
From that day, the disciple no longer suffered for what women did. |
Liberation from the possessed Anima – the man autonomous from his own complex. |
The music blends Neo-Soul and Ambient Folk, with plucked strings reminiscent of ancient Indian instruments and ethereal keyboards accompanying the passage from tension to serenity.
Integrated Jungian teaching: pathological jealousy is the collapse of the projected Anima. Every man carries within himself an archetypal image of the feminine. When the real woman does not match that image (for example, by being unfaithful), the man suffers not so much from losing the woman, but from the shattering of his own projection. Healing comes when one learns to distinguish the archetype from the real person – and to recognize that no human being can be owned.
Post conclusion
Jātaka 65 – Anabhirati is not an invitation to cynicism or promiscuity. It is an invitation to cognitive and emotional resilience: stop basing your security on another’s fidelity, and start basing it on your capacity to let go of the illusion of ownership. The dialogue with Carl Jung shows that this Buddhist insight is also a deep psychology of individuation: becoming autonomous from one’s own Anima complex.
📌Watch the videos, reflect, share.
If you have ever suffered from jealousy, these 18 visual and musical steps can be a balm for the mind.
