Thirty four years ago, MVRHS principal Gregory Scotten addressed my incoming freshman class. During the convocation he cited the Shaker hymn Simple Gifts and its familiar lyric: “It’s a gift to be simple, It’s a gift to be free.”
Thirty four years ago, MVRHS principal Gregory Scotten addressed my incoming freshman class. During the convocation he cited the Shaker hymn Simple Gifts and its familiar lyric: “It’s a gift to be simple, It’s a gift to be free.”
Oh, how my cynical friends and I savaged these words. This was the 1980s, after all. We were on the runway of life and acceleration alone would lift us into our neon-lit futures. Simple? To hell with that. The word evoked simple-mindedness and drab piety. It was time to rock out, not settle.
It was 1985 and I harbored dreams of becoming the screenwriter who would pen the next sci-fi epic on the scale of Star Wars or Star Trek. It would be glorious; visions born in my imagination would be fleshed out into box office gold. Riches and ego-stoking fame would be mine.
Life happened, decades passed, and I’m privileged to acknowledge I was wrong. Those lyrics, once so casually dismissed, have proven prophetic.
Simplicity is not dullness — it’s the absence of unnecessary parts in the machinery of life. When your happiness is contingent on complexity, the opportunities for frustration multiply. In the case of screenwriting the headwinds are diabolical. One joins the pack of 50,000 writers vying for 600 annual production slots. If one passes this gauntlet they’ll likely witness their concept rewritten by studio hacks. Next, they’ll pray that poor directing and marketing won’t ruin the film, as one box office flop can wreck a career.
My contentment today is blissfully free from such convolutions. Sitting by the wood stove with my cat Gilbert or tending my flock of parakeets provides a measure of joy such that, were I to die today, I could do so with a smile on my face and the thought: “Well, it was a good ride.”
I can leave old dreams behind without suffering pangs of regret. And new ones arise. Last year I launched a publishing imprint; the first book is slated for a summer release.
Occasionally, scenes from unwritten screenplays flash across my mind. One, the story of an underdog field hockey team, still holds emotional charge, as does the story of a bullied teen coached in boxing. Maybe they’ll see the light of day some day — or not. Either way is fine.
This awareness is priceless. It spares me the cruel fate of the embittered soul. Instead, I can watch my daughter grow up, tend my pets, and toss another log on the fire with a peaceful heart.
The Shakers weren’t always brilliant; their leaders advocated communal celibacy and within several generations they’d snuffed themselves out. Still, when it came to lyrics, they were spot on. Who’d have thought?
Julian Wise owns Island Images Gallery. He lives in West Tisbury.

Comments
Yes. Yes. Yes.
Robin Bugbee Charleston South CarolinaYes. Yes. Yes.
As I have gotten older and my living style has changed as my wife passed and I responded to the needs to confront my new economic realities...I found that reducing the size (and cost) of how lived and what I owned was freeing more than limiting. Having only the things that I really need rather than those I would merely want has helped me to simplify my life which has given me the ability to focus my time on the things that are really important to me: racial reconciliation and love as the reason for our existence. Not being responsible for a huge home or a storage locker has been a way of living with immediacy and purpose which for me is a simple and wonderful gift to myself and the people I love. It is a gift to be simple.
Great piece, Julian. You
Thomas Dresser Oak BluffsGreat piece, Julian. You capture the essence of life: recognizing your role in our simple, beautiful existence. Thanks for sharing.
Beautiful essay, Julian! You
Mack West TisburyBeautiful essay, Julian! You've given me something to think about.
Julian, I hope you will send
Daniel Sharkovitz West TisburyJulian, I hope you will send this eloquent and thoughtful essay to Dr. Scotten. He would, I’m sure, be quite moved to read about how the meaning of the short quotation from the Shaker hymn that he read to you and the other students so, so long ago has evolved into wisdom.
In high school English class, I always enjoyed reading your essays. Whether you were opining about the depth of Hamlet’s existential predicament or penning a riveting college essay, your gifts as a wordsmith were evident. Still are.
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