A well-worn verse from Ecclesiastes 11:6 offers a timeless framework for a life well-lived: “Sow your seed in the morning, and at evening let your hands not be idle, for you do not know which will succeed, whether this or that, or whether both will do equally well.” For Dr. Basil Springer, a veteran corporate governance adviser who just closed out 85 years of life, this verse has been more than words—it has been the blueprint for a rich, varied journey that defies the modern pressure to specialize early and narrow one’s focus.
Looking back across eight and a half decades, Springer says what has shaped him most is not a single, grand career milestone, but the meandering, surprising path that led him to where he stands today. From his teenage secondary school years to the present, he has stepped into dozens of distinct roles: student, competitive cricketer, amateur photographer, scout leader, biometrician, business consultant, active Rotarian, avid traveler, and weekly newspaper columnist. As a young man, his schoolmates jokingly labeled him a “jack of all trades, master of none”—a label that weighed on him for decades, shaping his sense of self-doubt in a world that celebrates narrow expertise. Today, however, Springer wears that old label as a badge of pride, a testament to the choices that made his life resilient and meaningful.
We live in an era that glorifies hyper-specialization, where young people are encouraged to pick a single career track as early as college and commit to it fully. Choosing to pursue a wide range of interests, Springer notes, often feels like swimming upstream against cultural and professional expectations. But through his own experience, he has learned that diversifying one’s pursuits builds a core skill no salary or promotion can buy: unshakable adaptability.
Each new role Springer took on taught him a new way of seeing the world, sharpening skills that translated unexpectedly to other areas of his life. Photography, for example, trained him to spot small details and read timing—an unexpected advantage when he was waiting to make a sharp catch on the cricket pitch or capture a fleeting, emotional moment off the field. Training in statistics taught him to approach data with intentional, critical questions, a discipline that later transformed his work as a columnist, making his writing more rooted in evidence than unsubstantiated opinion.
This pattern repeated across every new interest: breadth and depth are not opposing forces, Springer argues. When curiosity is your guide, one area of expertise deepens another. Pursuing a wide range of passions does not dilute your sense of purpose—more often, it clarifies it. By exploring freely across disciplines, Springer discovered strengths he would never have uncovered if he had stuck to a single, narrow career lane from the start.
Looking back on his life, Springer says the core question he has wrestled with was never “should I specialize or diversify?” It was “how do I channel my energy into work and pursuits that feel genuinely meaningful?” Purpose, he has learned, is not found on a pre-planned map handed to you by family, society, or education systems. It emerges gradually when you show up fully to the things that actually spark your curiosity, and allow those interests to grow and change over time.
Embracing the jack-of-all-trades journey has given Springer a rich, interconnected tapestry of experiences, lessons, and lifelong friendships. It has kept his life engaging, resilient, and deeply rewarding, even as roles and priorities shifted across decades. If there is one core takeaway from his 85 years of life, it is simple: curiosity is not a flaw or a distraction to be fixed. When you honor that curiosity and nurture it, it becomes a lifelong companion and a powerful guide to lasting fulfillment.
In Barbados and across the globe, Springer acknowledges that specialized experts are critical to solving the world’s problems. But we also need people who feel comfortable crossing disciplinary boundaries, connecting ideas across silos, and learning publicly as they go. The world’s biggest challenges are deeply complex, he notes, and the solutions we need will be complex too.
For any young person sitting at a crossroads, wondering whether to commit to one single path or explore many, Springer offers this straightforward advice: try both. Go deep into the areas that demand your focus, and go wide whenever you have the chance to explore a new interest. Trust that the intersections between your different passions will teach you lessons no single subject or career could ever offer.
After eight and a half decades, Springer says he is grateful for every “hat” he has gotten to wear across his journey. The winding, unplanned path was never a detour—it was the whole point.
As he enters his 86th year of life and his 34th consecutive year writing his weekly column, Springer closes by expressing gratitude for the journey and for the readers who have followed along with his work over decades.
