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Zhuangzi Chapter 26: External Things
     
 
Translated by Nina Correa

You can't be certain how external things are going to pan out. For example, Long Feng was beheaded, Bi Gan had his heart cut out, Ji Zi pretended to be insane, E Lai was murdered, and Jie and Zhou were vanquished.
All people in positions of authority want their subservients to be loyal, but even if they're loyal that doesn't necessarily mean they'd be trusted. For example, Wu Yuan was thrown into the Yangtze River and Chang Hong was killed in Shu where his blood was hidden away for three years until it turned green.
All parents want their children to show them respect, but even if they're respectful that doesn't necessarily mean they'll be loved. For example, Xiao Ji was depressed and Zeng Shen was disheartened (both were rejected by their parents).
When two pieces of wood are rubbed together they'll burn. When metal is kept close to a fire it'll melt. When Yin and Yang are out of sync the heavens and earth are disrupted causing thunder and lightning which can boil water and set fire to the huge parasol trees. When stuck in depression and anxiety there's a sense that one's falling from one pit into another with no chance of escape. Confused and oblivious, there seems to be no possibility for achieving anything. The heart seems to be hanging upside down, suspended between the heavens and the earth. Ironing out the wrinkles of the heart is hindered by being submerged under what's been accumulated. Benefit and damage chafe against each other, creating a fire that grows until everyone is burning together. Even something as steadfast as the moon couldn't bear that kind of heat. If one becomes complaisant to the burning fire, then any realization of Dao ends.

When Zhuang Zhou's (Zhuangzi's) family was suffering from poverty, he went to borrow some grain from the Marquis of Jian He.
The Marquis of Jian He said:
"Sure. As soon as I get some money from the government, I'll lend you three hundred dollars. Will that do?"
Zhuang Zhou got perturbed and replied in a heated way:
"When I was on my way here yesterday I heard a yell from the middle of the road. As I turned around to see where the sound was coming from, I saw a carp lying in a rut made by a wagon wheel. I asked it: 'What's a carp doing here?' It replied: 'I'm a slave to the waves of the Eastern Ocean. Kind sir, could you give me a bucket of water and save my life?' I said: 'Sure. When I get to the south and gain an audience with the kings of Wu and Yue I'll have them divert the water westward from the Yangtze river to welcome you. Will that do?' The carp got perturbed and replied in a heated way: 'I'm no longer in my element and am without a means to survive. If I could get just a bucket of water I'd be able to go on living. If all you have to offer is words, then after this morning you might as well go looking for me in a dried fish store.' "

The young prince of Ren prepared a large hook on the end of a huge black rope and strung the hook with fifty bulls as bait. He then squatted down on Kuai Ji mountain, casting his line into the Eastern Ocean. Morning after morning he fished for a whole year but didn't catch anything. Then one day a gigantic fish swallowed the bait and dragged the large hook downward into the depths, then it suddenly came crashing upward and broke the surface trailing water behind it like rivulets from its fins. It created a frothy wave as big as a mountain, sending surges extending in all directions of the ocean. It made a sound like the howling of banshees that would strike terror in anyone who heard it for hundreds of miles. The young prince of Ren managed to land the fish and cure it in brine. From the Zhi River to the east and from Cang Wu to the north there was no one who wasn't totally fed with the flesh from that fish.
For a long time afterwards, that story has been told and retold with a sense of mockery as though it could never have really happened, and many people tell the story to their students to astonish them with it. For those who find it's a real effort to lift their fishing poles, walk quickly to an irrigation ditch and wait for a carp or minnow to bite their lines, catching such a gigantic fish on their line would be a great catastrophe. Those who dress themselves up with insignificant words thinking that will impress those in authority and gain them great achievements are actually moving even farther from it. Those who've never really listened to the information contained in the parable of the man from Ren and find a way to use it in their own times move even farther away.

A few students of the Shi Jing (Book of Odes) and the Li Ji (Book of Rites) were in the process of digging up some old graves.
The elder scholar addressed his subordinates saying:
"The sun is about to rise in the east. How's it coming along?"
One of the lessor scholars said:
"We haven't yet removed his clothing, but we can see there's a pearl in his mouth."
"Contained within the Shi Jing is this saying: 'So green is the grass growing atop the mound of a grave. All their life making no contributions, yet in death why should they continue to hold a pearl in their mouth?' One of you grab hold of his hair and his beard then another of you can tap his chin with a mallet. Open his jaw very gently so as not to damage the pearl in his mouth."

A disciple of Lao Lai Zi (Old Weeds) was out gathering firewood when he came upon Zhong Ni (Confucius).
When he returned he told his master:
"There's a man out there who's full-chested and has short legs. His shoulders are stooped and his ears are set way back on his head. He's peering about as though he's seeking the four corners of the earth. I don't recognize him nor can I figure out his nationality."
Lao Lai Zi said:
"It must be Qiu (Confucius). Invite him to come over here."
When Zhong Ni had arrived, Lao Lai Zi said:
"Qiu! Get rid of your pretentious airs along with your all-knowing attitude and you might just become a respectable person."
Zhong Ni bowed from the waist and took a step backward. He got a pensive look on his face and asked:
"How can I best occupy my time in order to promote my ideals?"
Lao Lai Zi said:
"You can't bear the suffering of your own lifetime, but you rush about concerned over the troubles of future generations. You steadfastly struggle to abolish evil influences while overlooking the fact that your own plots and schemes prevent you from taking stock of your own evil influences. Rushing about getting pleasure from acting kind is a disgraceful way to live your life. You're only attracting uncommitted people to follow along with you, drawing each other on with the lure of fame and stifling each other with your own personal plots and schemes. Rather than praising Yao and putting down Jie it would be better to forget both of them and shut off the whole idea of praise. Looking into the past there's no way to avoid being distressed. Trying to affect the future there's no way to avoid influencing others in an evil way. A wise person patiently takes small steps when becoming involved in affairs and thus is able to succeed every time. Why is it that you think you're carrying such a heavy load? Because you act like you already know everything."

At around midnight Lord Yuan of Song (Duke Yuan) dreamed there was a man with flowing hair looking in at him through a side door.
The man said:
"I'm from the deep abyss in Zai Lu. I was serving to purify the Yangtze river on the orders of the river god, but I was caught by the fisherman Yu Qie (Just Me)."
When Duke Yuan woke up he asked his chief fortune-teller about the dream.
The fortune-teller said:
"You were visited by a spiritual tortoise."
The Duke said:
"Is there a fisherman named Yu Qie?"
The fortune teller said:
"Yes, there is."
The Duke said:
"Bring Yu Qie to my assembly hall."
The next morning Yu Qie was in the hall and the Duke said to him:
"Have you caught something recently?"
Yu Qie nodded and said:
"I caught a white tortoise in my net that measures five feet around."
The Duke said:
"Bring that tortoise to me."
When the tortoise arrived the Duke was indecisive about whether to kill it or keep it alive. Since he couldn't make up his mind, he questioned the oracle about it. The oracle said: "Killing the tortoise and using it for divination purposes will be auspicious", so he had the shell removed from the tortoise. The shell was drilled into seventy two times, and not once did the results prove to be faulty.
(Note: One of the methods of divination used by the ancient kings was to ask a question then have a fortune-teller drill holes in the shell of a tortoise and "read" the cracks that resulted.)
Zhong Ni (Confucius) said:
"That spiritual tortoise was able to appear to Duke Yuan in a dream, but it wasn't able to avoid Yu Qie's fishing net. It had enough knowledge to provide seventy-two proper divinations, but it wasn't able to avoid the disaster of having its innards scooped out. This shows us that knowledge has its limits and that spirituality is ineffective. Although one may have perfected his knowledge, thousands of people would still scheme against him. A fish isn't afraid of a net but fears a pelican's beak. Get rid of myopic knowledge and a greater understanding will shine forth. Get rid of acting kind and natural kindness will take over. When an infant is born they can learn to speak even if they don't have a speech coach. That's because they're surrounded by others who are speaking."

Hui Zi said to Zhuangzi:
"What you say is useless."
Zhuangzi said:
"By knowing what's useless you can begin to talk about what's useful. People might disregard the idea that the earth is broad and vast simply because the part of it they find useful is where they place their own two feet. If one was to dig away the rest of the soil around their feet down to the deepest depths, would the place they were standing still be useful?"
Hui Zi said:
"No, it would be useless."
Zhuangzi said:
"In that case what's considered to be useless can become useful when seen from a different perspective."

Zhuangzi said:
"People who have the ability to flit about untethered hold on to the idea they're not getting anywhere, whereas people who don't have the ability to flit about untethered hold onto the idea they're actually getting some place. If their personal ambitions determine what they'll flow with and what they'll reject, they engage in behavior that severely limits them. Forget it! They'll never gain any knowledge nor will they attain virtue no matter how hard they try. If they fail in something they attempt, they don't check it out to see what went wrong, but scurry on like they're running away from a blazing fire that they refuse to look back at. Although they determine who among them is more powerful and who is subservient, things can easily change in an instant and there's no way to determine which of them is more despicable. That's why it's said that a perfected person doesn't hold on to or reject anything.
"To be respectful of what happened in antiquity while condemning what's going on today is the way the philosophical scholars set their minds. Even observing what's going on today from the mindset of the clansman Shi of Wei (King Hui), how could he not be surprised at the turn of events? Yes, only a perfected person could flit about untethered in today's world and not be repulsed by it, and could engage with other people without losing his own sense of self. He doesn't adopt as his own what others are selling, and he doesn't hand over to others the essence of his own heart."

Eyes that are perceptive see clearly. Ears that are perceptive hear sharply. A nose that's perceptive picks up various smells. A mouth that's perceptive tastes flavors. A mind that's perceptive gathers knowledge. Understanding that's perceptive gains virtue. None of those channels choose to be obstructed. If they get obstructed then they choke. If the choking isn't stopped then it causes suffocation. Suffocation causes many injuries in life. Living things have an inborn knowledge to depend on unrestricted beathing. If the breath isn't free flowing, the heavens can't be blamed for it. The heavens permeate them with it day and night without decreasing. People then look for ways to block up their holes.
The womb has a propensity for becoming larger in order to contain a child. The mind has a propensity to flit about untethered in the heavens. If a house doesn't have enough room to move about then one's wife and mother will lash out uncontrollably at each other. If one's mind doesn't flit about untethered in the heavens then the six senses will try to subjugate each other's roles. The great forests in the hills and mountains are appreciated by people because their spirits aren't in contention.
When virtue is used as a means to increase fame, fame is used as a means to increase cruelty, plots and schemes are used as a means to examine the slightest sounds, knowledge is used as a means to promote disagreements, kindling is put on the fire as a means to create conformity, and official positions are used as a means to make everyone act appropriately. When a spring rain lasts all day, vegetation sprouts vigorously. At that point people start collecting and preparing their spades and hoes, but by the time they go to deal with the plants they've already doubled in size and no one understands how that happened.

Resting quietly can help cure an illness. Rubbing one's temples can alleviate the stress of old age. Becoming tranquil can stop agitation. Although these things work for those who get worn out by all the tasks they have to perform, someone who doesn't run around like a mad hare wouldn't be concerned about that. A sage comes up with things to bring the world into line, but a spiritual person wouldn't be concerned about that. A person of worth comes up with things to bring their generation into line, but a sage wouldn't be concerned about that. Government officials come up with things to bring their state into line, but a person of worth wouldn't be concerned about that. A regular person comes up with ways to endure the times, but a government official wouldn't be concerned about that.

When the parents of the gatekeeper of the Yan Gate died, he was so good at performing the ritualistic sacrifices that he was given a promotion to Official Teacher.
(Note: Rituals that were supposed to be followed at the death of a parent included extreme fasting, self-mutilation and outward expressions of one's suffering.)
Other people in his neighborhood decided to practice those rituals as extremely as he did and half of them died. When Yao offered to turn over control of the world to Xu You, Xu You ran away. Likewise, when Tang offered to turn over the world to Wu Guang, Wu Guang got angry at him. When Ji Tuo heard about what happened, he snuck off with his officers and disciples to the Kuan River. The dukes and officials in the government who were his supporters mourned losing him, and after three years Shen Tu Di (one of his supporters) tied a huge rock to his back and drowned himself in the Yellow River.

A fish trap is used in order to catch fish. Once the fish are caught the trap is forgotten. A rabbit trap is used in order to catch rabbits. Once the rabbit is caught the trap is forgotten. Words are used in order to capture thoughts. Once the thoughts are captured the words are forgotten. I'd be so at ease if I could find someone who had forgotten words so I could have a conversation with him!





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