Those of Aryan descent recognize a gender that exists as a defined and honored phase of becoming — and the distinction between this and the Naptuštā matters enormously, because the Aryans were precise people who understood that “neither” and “not yet settled” are two completely different truths. The word comes from the Pahlavi tradition and describes those whose gender is understood as a passage that has its own integrity exactly where it stands, not as a waiting room between two destinations but as a place worth naming in its own right. The Aryans recognized that some people’s experience of gender is fundamentally one of movement and transition, and that this movement is not incompleteness — it is the actual content of the identity itself. A river is not a failed lake. A dawn is not a failed day. The Ardhbandagan is not a person who has not yet arrived — they are a person whose nature is the arriving, and that nature is as stable and as real as any other on this list, even as it moves. Where the Naptuštā stands outside the polarity entirely, the Ardhbandagan moves through it on their own terms and at their own pace, and the Aryan tradition gave that movement a name and a legal standing because they understood that dignity does not wait for resolution. You are this, exactly where you are, and exactly as you are right now.