“The Dexterous Butcher”
by Chuang Tzu:
From the Inner Chapters
Ting the cook was cutting meat free from the bones of an ox for Lord Wen-hui. His hands danced as his shoulders turned with the step of his foot and bending of his knee. With a shush and a hush, the blade sang following his lead, never missing a note. Ting and his blade moved as though dancing to “The Mulberry Grove,” or as if conducting the “Ching-shou” with a full orchestra.
Lord Wen-hui exclaimed,
“What a joy! It’s good, is it not, that such a simple craft can be so
elevated?”
Ting laid aside his
knife. “All I care about is the Way. If find it in my craft, that’s all. When I
first butchered an ox, I saw nothing but ox meat. It took three years for me to
see the whole ox. Now I go out to meet it with my whole spirit and don’t think
only about what meets the eye. Sensing and knowing stop. The spirit goes where
it will, following the natural contours, revealing large cavities, leading the
blade through openings, moving onward according to actual form — yet not
touching the central arteries or tendons and ligaments, much less touching
bone.
“A good cook need
sharpen his blade but once a year. He cuts cleanly. An awkward cook sharpens
his knife every month. He chops. I’ve used this knife for nineteen years,
carving thousands of oxen. Still the blade is as sharp as the first time it was
lifted from the whetstone. At the joints there are spaces, and the blade has no
thickness. Entering with no thickness where there is space, the blade may move
freely where it will: there’s plenty of room to move. Thus, after nineteen
years, my knife remains as sharp as it was that first day.
“Even so, there are
always difficult places, and when I see rough going ahead, my heart offers
proper respect as I pause to look deeply into it. Then I work slowly, moving my
blade with increasing subtlety until — kerplop! — meat falls apart like a
crumbling clod of earth. I then raise my knife and assess my work until I’m
fully satisfied. Then I give my knife a good cleaning and put it carefully
away.”
Lord Wen-hui said,
“That’s good, indeed! Ting the cook has shown me how to find the Way to nurture
life.”
Translated by Sam Hamill and J.P. Seaton
(The Essential Chuang Tzu, 1998)
(The Essential Chuang Tzu, 1998)
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