“Simplify, Simplify”
This is a guest post from the amazing blog Soul Shelter, which focuses on the challenge of integrating inspiration and employment, balancing fortune and fulfillment, and much more. I’d encourage anyone to bookmark the site and return regularly.
In the vocation of writing, poverty is a prerequisite for greatness. At least that’s what I told myself back when I was nineteen or twenty years old. I had only recently committed myself wholeheartedly to “becoming a writer.” I harbored a zealous admiration for literature’s impoverished, ill-fated greats: John Keats, Stephen Crane, Henry David Thoreau—all were paupers, and all died young.
As I saw it, those literary greats were able to remain intensely focused on the eternal verities because they weren’t after fame or fortune—just beauty, just truth. It was their raw existences, lives close to the bone and suffused with awareness of nature’s riches, that made possible their immortal works. I eventually came to realize I’d romanticized their poverty, but even today I believe my naivete served a powerful purpose, and laid a foundation that has helped me for a decade now.
In my twentieth year I packed a large cardboard box with belongings and headed east by train to begin my artistic life in Massachusetts, 3,000 miles from California, where I’d been born and raised. I wanted to live near Walden Pond and commune daily, in nearby Concord, with the wise ghosts of Thoreau and Emerson. The closest I could get was the city of Lowell, birthplace of the American industrial revolution—a ramshackle town cluttered with eerie decommissioned factories and mills. But from Lowell I could get to Concord by train as often as I liked.
I set up my new life in a 300 square-foot studio apartment 14 miles from Walden Pond as the crow flies. My sole furnishings were an inflatable mattress, a plastic patio chair, a small lamp, a pile of books, and a radio/cassette player. In the cardboard box, I had packed the essential kitchen wares: a can opener, a spatula, two plates, two cups, two forks, two knives, two spoons, and a frying pan. More importantly, I had packed a word processor and a ream of paper.
I was determined to begin my writerly life in the spirit of Thoreau’s proclamation in Walden: “Give me that poverty that knows true wealth.” Thoreau, living for two years in his tiny cabin on the shores of Walden Pond in the mid-19th century, had proven conclusively to the industrialized world that simplicity and “mean living” were the highest spiritual ideals, for they refined one’s sense of beauty and truth. “Simplify, simplify,” said Thoreau, and I wanted to heed his advice. The fewer my possessions and the smaller my quarters, the loftier my hopes could be—and the freer I could remain to realize them.
My rent in Lowell was $400 dollars a month. With roughly $1,500 in bank savings, I could conceivably live and write—and do nothing else—for about three months. I set to work. I spent nearly every day clicking away on my word processor, and every evening reading. Intellectually, I’d never been wealthier. It was an education unlike anything provided by my years of schooling.
Practically everything in my life had been cleared away for the sake of writing. And only years later would the true nature of this apprenticeship period become clear to me: more than learning how to be a “starving artist,” I was learning how to be grateful for what little I possessed.
The residence in Massachusetts proved successful. I returned home that autumn unafraid of poverty, able to work for five to six hours at a stretch, and in possession of a 150-page personal manifesto. I’d become a writer.
Maybe it’s needless to say that my “manifesto” never saw the light of day. At the sentence-level it was truly awful, but however far I remained from producing publishable work, I’d committed myself to my craft, and knew that if I nurtured this commitment my words would find their way, sooner or later, into print. Four years later that’s what happened, when my first short story was published in a national literary magazine.
Since that idealistic Massachusetts adventure, I’ve never lost my grasp on the importance of simplicity (though living simply remains a day-to-day challenge). Simplicity frees one to make any range of choices and pursue any range of possibilities. And such freedom is hindered by complexities like financial demands, time constraints, and the baggage of material belongings. By consciously seeking simplicity in life, one places oneself in a condition of gratitude. And gratitude, by instilling an awareness of one’s blessings, clarifies one’s vision and helps one establish goals.
I’m lucky that I had the opportunity, back at age twenty, to romanticize things and be naive. Through the years since, those early ideals have helped me recognize real happiness. I continue striving to be grateful, and to live up to Thoreau’s wise exhortation: “Simplify, simplify!”






This post has 16 comments
October 10th, 2008
Thank you for sharing such an inspiring story.
It’s encouraged me in my quest to be a writer and to stay true to myself.
I’d love to hear more of your story and what happened to you in the last 10 years. I’m going over to check out your blog now.
David
David | beplayfuls last blog post..Aspects of Playfulness: Humble Humour
October 10th, 2008
Simplify is one of my favorite mottos. There is always a time to get down to the basics and live life as you say “close to the bone.” We should never lose this side of us or we’ll end up getting swept away by advertising and big business.
Life at it’s core is not about iPods and TV. It’s about breathing, sharing, and loving. The more we cultivate our own truth the easier it is to enjoy our existence.
Karl - Work Happy Nows last blog post..Your 3 Careers - Are You Ready?
October 10th, 2008
My equivalent of your cardboard box and moving to Massachusetts was living in Italy for a year with few belongings. You truly don’t miss having tons of stuff. Great post
Marelisas last blog post..Five Amazing Stress-Busting Methods on YouTube
October 10th, 2008
David: I’m so glad you’re checking out Soul Shelter! Tim and Mark together have a lot of inspiring things to say, and they get it across in a very enjoyable way.
Karl: What a beautiful comment. I always love being reminded to just breathe. It works wonders for me.
Marelisa: So insanely jealous! I hope your year was wonderful, and you being you, I imagine it was. Was the food as wonderful as I imagine it to be? (And what is wrong with me? Of all the things to fall with in love with and learn in Italy, why is my first thought about food?)
October 10th, 2008
That was beautiful and very inspirational. I loved it and smiled the whole time I read it.
Vals last blog post..Thursday Thirteen
October 10th, 2008
what a great story!
neimanmarxists last blog post..Simplified Cooking
October 10th, 2008
When my husband and I have always lived frugally. By the time he got his Ph.D. and we got married we had each saved up money for adventure. He took a job in France for 13 months, and we traveled around Europe on weekends and vacations. When we arrived we each had one suitcase full of belongings. We bought a few little things there, which we left when we came back…the long way, via the Mideast, East Africa, India, etc.
By the time we got back to the states we each had our one suitcase of stuff. After all these years we have accumulated more, but we also live in a 1000-square-foot apartment, so when new things come in old things have to leave. I wouldn’t have it any other way.
“Our lives are frittered away in details. Simplify, simplify.” That quote is one of my favorites, too. I have not frittered away my life.
Thanks for the great post!
Jean Browman–Cheerful Monks last blog post..What I Learned From Being Tortured By a Dentist
October 10th, 2008
Oops! When I was rewriting I forgot to take out that beginning “When”.
I actually went on a little pilgrimage to Walden Pond once. I hate driving in traffic, but I took my life in my hands and did it in Boston. The pull of Concord and Walden Pond was just too strong.
Again, thanks for this post.
Jean Browman–Cheerful Monks last blog post..What I Learned From Being Tortured By a Dentist
October 10th, 2008
That’s an amazing story. I’m truly jealous. I think I may have moved beyond the point in my life where I could truly let it all go and hunker down for a few months of writing. However, in my own small way, I’d like to think I was simplifying to the point where gratitude was more easily attainable.
October 10th, 2008
Val: I’m so very glad you enjoyed this! I hope you also check out Soul Shelter for more thought-provoking pieces like this.
NeimanMarxist: Ditto!
Jean: I would really love to go to Walden Pond. I can understand that pull…
Oktober Five: I’m in your situation. I don’t think I’d let it all go, but I’m in love with idea of simplifying life on my own terms.
October 10th, 2008
Interesting stuff. It is in a way a gift to all be poor once - particularly in our youth. I’m certainly grateful for those early years when “cheese” seemed a luxury. Yet simplicity can still be maintained in older age…when things like caring for others (both children and aging parents) sets in. “Having” enables more “giving.” It seems with time to be less rooted in what you don’t have as it is rooted in what you are willing to lose. (Does that even make sense?)
Again, I come back to nature time and again…whether that nature is found in Walden or in a high mountain or fierce ocean. It’s a grounding. And in nature we are reminded that we can still really live with very little at a moments notice. Perhaps this financial chaos of today’s world will bring some silver lining of reminding us all of that simple fact. And maybe we as a society will stop our slavery to excess. One can hope.
October 10th, 2008
This rang not only of simplicity, but humility. I enjoy reading accounts such as this one. Thanks!
Davinas last blog post..Thanks, It Means The World To Me
October 11th, 2008
I think that’s the secret of success. Decide. Then do what it takes to make it happen. Keep changing your approach until you succeed. Model the best.
> hey weren’t after fame or fortune—just beauty, just truth
I like that. I’m a truth seeker.
J.D. Meiers last blog post..How To Deal With Hard Bargainers
October 11th, 2008
Louise: I do think that silver lining is reaching quite a few folks. Even if it’s only a temporary attempt at frugality or simplicity, I think it a great help for people to realize that they can live in a different way. It’s an option for them that maybe wasn’t realized before.
Davina: You’re so welcome. This was a post I felt honored to feature.
October 11th, 2008
J.D.: “Decide.” Perhaps one of the top ten verbs ever!
October 30th, 2008
Hi Tim,
I am glad Sara gave you the opportunity to guest write on here. I love your writing style. You truly do understand the art form known as writing. Keep up the great work!
Cheers,
Jeremy
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