Sharpen your axe, mend your bucket

The phrase “chop wood, carry water” is familiar to many and, if you consider yourself on a spiritual path, you will have almost certainly heard or read it.

This simple phrase is believed to have its origins in the Zen tradition and has been stated simply as “chop wood, carry water” but also as a kōan:

“Before enlightenment; chop wood, carry water.
After enlightenment; chop wood, carry water.”

This kōan, or riddle designed to provoke reflection, is not stated to be deconstructed with the thinking mind. Involving the mind to “work out” what is happening or to assign meaning can take us only so far.

If we were to be watching someone chopping wood and they became “enlightened” during this activity what would that look like? This kōan implies we may not even notice! The chopping would go on. A mundane, repetitive – some might call tedious – task was chosen here to illustrate that life simply goes on after enlightenment and one continues as before. It is the internal state that reflects a change.

This internal change or shift is best described by your own experience. To experience what is being suggested here, give your complete attention to whatever it is you are doing be it washing dishes or eating a meal. Another Zen saying is “a person who has attained mastery reveals it in their every action.” This does not speak to perfection but to their utter focus and dedication to that activity. When focused in this way we experience our own absence. The person is not there to complain or wish to be somewhere else.

There really is no event called enlightenment. Enlightenment is simply the felt-understanding that events are unfolding as they will and there is no “doer” required to claim ownership. There is no person, beyond the belief that a person exists, who becomes enlightened. Everything is always complete and whole as it is whether one sees it (enlightened) or not (ignorant).

This explanation may not seem very interesting to the mind and therefore is easily overlooked. The mind wants to hear a description about enlightenment that has something to grasp, to get, to hold on to.

My suggestion? Sharpen your axe, mend your bucket, get to work and you might just lose your mind!

Walter Cecchini

By Walter Cecchini

I am currently serving as a Police Officer (COP - Consciously on Patrol). This non-dual understanding allows me to operate "undercover"... Love disguised as Authority! Check out my non-dual poetry at BeingWalter.com Peace!

2 comments

  1. Thank you!
    Focused or undistracted?
    Not to split hairs, foolish words; relaxed openness.

    I struggled a lot with effort…
    not knowing where to rest attention;
    believing “me” needs to get somewhere to survive.
    I didn’t see that “me” is a mental buildup.

    Three legitimate uses of the mind:
    Being practical, celebrating, sharing.

    No resistance, for no reason, unburdened.
    Peace.

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