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When
the Chinese began to use chopsticks as an eating instrument
is anybody's guess. They were first mentioned in writing
in Liji (The Book of rites), a work compiled some 2,000
years ago, but certainly they had their initial form
in the twigs which the primitive Chinese must have used
to pick up a roast after they began to use fire. The
twigs then evolved into the wooden, tapering sticks
as we know them today.
Chopsticks
may be made of any of several materials: bamboo, wood,
gold, siler, ivory, pewter, and plastics. In cross-section,
they may be either round or square. Some of them are
engraved with coloured pictures or calligraphy for decoration.
Ordinary chopsticks used in Chinese homes are of wood
or bamboo, those for banquets are often ivory, whereas
gold ones belonged only to the royalty and aristocracy.
 The
correct way to use chopsticks is to hold the pair in
the hollow between the thumb and forefinger of your
fork hand. The one closest to your body should rest
on the first joint of the ring finger and stay relatively
immobile. Hold the other one with the forefinger and
middle finger, which manipulate it like pincers to pick
up the food. The strength applied by the fingers should
vary with the things to be taken hold of. The skill
to pick up, with speed and dexterity, small things like
beans and peanuts and slippery things like slices of
preserved eggs can only come from practice and coordinated
action of the fingers.
Incidentally, using chopsticks has a great deal in
common with wielding a brush to write Chinese characters.
Those who write a good hand, some scholars have observed,
are invariably those who handle the chopsticks correctly.
One holds the writing brush basically in the same way
as one would the moving chopsticks and, while writing,
one must achieve a coordination in the movement of the
shoulder, arm, wrist and fingers in order to write well.
Westerners
are often impressed with the cleverness of the Chinese
hand that makes embroideries and clay sculptures with
such consummate skill. Could not this also be attributed,
at least partly, to the constant use of chopsticks?
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