The Useless Tree – 9th December 2025

Inspired by the parable of the Useless Tree and shared with Poetic Bloomings #571 – Nothing But Trees:
Carpenter Shi was travelling through the countryside with his young apprentice when they came upon a village shrine built around an enormous oak tree. The tree was ancient beyond measure, its trunk so vast that a thousand men holding hands couldn’t encircle it. Its branches spread like a green cathedral, offering shade to the entire village square.

The apprentice stood transfixed. “Master!” he called excitedly. “In all my travels, I’ve never seen timber so magnificent! Why won’t you even look at it?”

Carpenter Shi barely glanced up from his path. “Worthless wood,” he muttered dismissively. “Make boats from it and they’ll sink. Make coffins and they’ll rot before the bodies do. Make tools and they’ll break in your hands. Make houses and they’ll be eaten by worms. It’s completely useless—that’s the only reason it’s lived so long.”

The carpenter continued on his way, but that night the great tree appeared to him in a dream.

“What are you comparing me to?” asked the tree. “Fine trees like cherry and pear? Those trees that bear fruit are attacked the moment they ripen. Their branches are broken, their bark is stripped. Their very usefulness makes their lives miserable, cutting short their natural span. This happens to all things.

“I’ve been working for ages to become perfectly useless. I nearly died several times in the attempt, but I’ve finally succeeded. My uselessness is now my greatest usefulness. If I had been useful, do you think I could have grown this large?

“Besides, you and I are both just things in this world. How can one thing judge another? You’re a dying man who understands nothing—what could you know about a useless tree?”

When Carpenter Shi awoke, he told his apprentice about the dream. The young man was confused: “If the tree wants to be useless, why does it serve as a shrine?”

The master smiled. “Quiet! It’s simply taking shelter there. Those who don’t understand it might harm it otherwise. If it weren’t a shrine tree, wouldn’t it be in danger of being cut down? Its way of preserving itself is different from ordinary trees, so using conventional standards to judge it will lead us far astray.”

On the surface, this story seems to be about different definitions of value—the carpenter sees lumber, the tree sees survival. But dig deeper and you discover something revolutionary: the tree has found freedom through strategic uselessness.

What if our quirks, our imperfections, our refusal to fit standard molds aren’t bugs in our programming but features? What if the very things that make us “unemployable” in one context make us invaluable in another?

Standing as a shrine,
the carpenter carves his maths
into my bark,
deciding I’m worthless
of even a spark.

As a boat, you’d drown,
a coffin would soon rot;
a tool soon broken;
in use, it’s better not.

As they dressed for compliments
all my friends became stripped bare;
miserable lives soon utilised
and no longer standing there.

If I were useful
I’d no longer stand.
We are just things.
What could you know
about me?
I’m a shrine,
just as I planned.

Let The Story Finish Itself – 18th November 2025

The neighbours gasped as the horse bolted.
What terrible luck! It could mean doom!
The farmer was patient as time unfolded.
Sure enough, a pack of horses returned soon.

More bad luck befell the farmer’s son
Who broke his leg falling from the mare.
The farmer felt there was little to be done.
The neighbours wondered why he didn’t care.

When war broke out, the conscriptors came.
The neighbours knew their kids might end up dead.
The farmer’s son was considered too lame.
‘Let the story finish itself’ is all he said.

Shared with Poetic Bloomings #568 – Nuanced Nuisance.
A poetic take on this Taoist fable:
An old farmer lived near the frontier with his son and a single horse. One morning, they woke to find the horse had broken through the fence and run away.
The neighbours gathered, shaking their heads sympathetically. “How terrible!” they said. “You’ve lost your only horse. What bad luck!”
The farmer listened quietly, then shrugged. “Maybe so, maybe not. We’ll see.”
A week later, the horse returned—but not alone. It had joined a herd of wild horses and led them all back to the farm. Suddenly, the farmer owned a dozen magnificent animals.
The same neighbours returned, their eyes bright with admiration. “How wonderful!” they exclaimed. “You’re rich now! What incredible fortune!”
Again, the farmer listened calmly. “Maybe so, maybe not. We’ll see.”
The next month, while trying to tame one of the wild horses, the farmer’s son was thrown violently and broke his leg. He would walk with a limp for the rest of his life.
Back came the neighbours, their faces creased with concern. “How awful!” they cried. “Your poor son! What a terrible thing to happen!”
The farmer tended his son’s wound and replied as before: “Maybe so, maybe not. We’ll see.”
The following spring, war broke out. Military officers swept through the village, conscripting every able-bodied young man for the army. When they came to the farmer’s house and saw his limping son, they passed him by.
The neighbours, whose own sons had been taken to fight in a distant war, returned once more. “How fortunate!” they said, their voices mixed with envy and relief. “Your son gets to stay home because of his injury. What a blessing in disguise!”
The old farmer looked across his fields where his son worked contentedly among the horses, and smiled his familiar smile.
“Maybe so, maybe not. We’ll see.”

Efficiency And Progress – 18th September 2025

Inspired and paraphrased by a Substack article about Taoism. Correctly formatted above, text below.

A quiet sickness, difficult to define,
because it is so often praised:

to constantly act, push ahead,
to endlessly prove oneself;

Call it efficiency,
call it progress.

And disguised as strength,
it exhausts the spirit and dulls the mind,
it robs us of calm.

Those who follow it think value
may be measured by their results.

Still running ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sitting still.

A restless sleep,
a barren quiet,
lost gaze,
always hunting.

But the sky does not rush,
the rain falls,
the seed grows;
the fruit sweetens without urgency;
the wise observe and learn:

time is not a foe to defeat, but a companion.

Chase not endless doing,
too much effort is wasted,
and too many words only confuse;

Choose what counts
act when needed,
then let go;

strive not to earn the right to exist,
no need to prove,
presence is a praise to life.

Those who believe they must always be useful
forget that they were once children;
loving before they can achieve,
treasuring before they may speak;

Forget that dawn also touches idle hands.
and the birds still sing for those who simply are.

This efficiency,  a harsh master,
takes without cease,
gives little back,
and knows nothing of true peace.

Those who bow to it are left weary
and then ask why they feel empty.

But the soul does not live on accomplishment.
it thrives in quiet,
in stillness,
in love that asks nothing.