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Duane Elgin

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Thriving in a Post-Consumerist Society

Posted: 06/12/11 12:38 PM ET

What does a thriving way of life look like in a post consumerist society? Many aspects of a thriving future can be found by stepping into a contemporary co-housing community or eco-village.

To illustrate, my wife and I lived in a co-housing community in Northern California for nearly two years. Our motivation was to explore an alternative to the alienation and isolation of a single-family dwelling and lifestyle and to see if there was a healthier and happier way of living in community with others. We did not move into a "commune" with shared income, personal lives and possessions. Instead, this was a setting that valued the privacy and integrity of people's individual lives while offering diverse ways of coming together in meaningful activities ranging from cooking and gardening to sharing common meals. Overall, we discovered a sense of kinship based, not on material status and consumption, but on neighborliness, shared values, and mutual regard. We also found a community that cared for all of its children, as well as for those aging and dying. Not to be left out was a generous sense of celebration for life with music and dance.

The three core organizing principles for the community are simplicity, family, and ecology. With 70 people (50 adults and 20 children), this was a scale of living small enough to create a genuine feeling of community and large enough to use our size to advantage. This co-housing community consists of 30 units in two-story flats and townhouses clustered in rows to establish a common green area on the interior and parking on the exterior. The common house is used as a dining area but is regularly transformed into a dance floor, meeting room, playroom and more. The common house also includes two guest rooms, an informal lending library and a playroom for kids on rainy or cold days.

As a community, we would typically eat together three evenings each week and often have a brunch on weekends. Each person participates in a three-person cooking crew roughly once a month, preparing food and cleaning-up for roughly 50 persons. People are also expected to participate in work crews such as landscaping, conflict resolution or kitchen maintenance. Every other week there are meetings to run the workings of the community. Happily, these are run efficiently and expertly, attendance is high and much is accomplished. This eco-village has a half-dozen commercial spaces connected with it, so it combines a residential community with commercial enterprises.

Beyond the formal activities of operating a co-housing community are the informal ones that brought us together in meaningful relationships. We easily and quickly organized diverse activities ranging from fundraisers (such as a brunch for tsunami disaster relief), to arranging classes (such as yoga and Cajun dancing) and creating community celebrations and events. Again and again, we saw diverse gatherings and initiatives emerge from the combined strengths and diverse talents of the community.

Envisioning a future of sustainable prosperity, diverse families will live in an "eco-home" that is nested within an "eco-village," that, in turn, is nested within an "eco-city," and so on up to the scale of the bio-region, nation, and world. Each eco-village of 100 -200 persons could have a distinct character, architecture, and local economy. Common to many of these new villages could be a child-care facility and play area, an organic garden, a common house for community meetings, celebrations, and regular meals together, a recycling and composting area, an open space, and a crafts and shop area. As well, each could offer a variety of types of work to the local economy such as child care, aging care, organic gardening, green building, conflict resolution and other skills that provide fulfilling employment for many. These micro-communities represent unique expressions of thriving sustainability as they provide meaningful work, raise healthy children, celebrate life in community with others and live in a way that honors the Earth and future generations.

A new village movement could transform urban life around the world. Drawing inspiration from co-housing and eco-villages, a flowering of diverse, neighborhood-scale communities could replace the alienating landscape of today's massive cities and homogeneous suburbs. Eco-villages could provide a practical scale and foundation for a sustainable future and become important islands of security, camaraderie, learning and innovation in a world of sweeping change. These human-sized living environments encourage diverse experiments in cooperative living that touch the Earth lightly and are uniquely adapted each locale.

Although eco-villages are designed for sustainable living, there is not the time to retrofit and rebuild our existing urban infrastructure around this approach to living before we encounter a world in systems crisis. Climate disruption, energy shortages, financial breakdowns, and other critical trends will overtake us long before we can make a sweeping overhaul in the design and functioning of cities and towns that have been a century or more in the making. We can regard eco-villages and co-housing communities as greenhouses of human invention, learn from their experiments, and adapt their designs and principles for successful living.

Without the time to retrofit cities into well-designed "green villages," we must make the most of the urban infrastructure that already exists. Creatively adapting ourselves to this new world will produce a wave of innovations for local living -- technical, social, architectural and more. An experimental and daring new village movement will emerge as the existing urban architecture is transformed into human-scale designs for sustainable and thriving forms of living. Overall, in creating healthier ways of living, a new village movement based upon the sanity of simplicity, a strong ecological consciousness and respect for children and family, will play a vital role in building a future of sustainable prosperity.

An important resource for exploring this further is the "Global Ecovillage Network" or GEN. For the United States, see the Cohousing Association.

 
 
 

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What does a thriving way of life look like in a post consumerist society? Many aspects of a thriving future can be found by stepping into a contemporary co-housing community or eco-village. To ill...
What does a thriving way of life look like in a post consumerist society? Many aspects of a thriving future can be found by stepping into a contemporary co-housing community or eco-village. To ill...
 
 
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07:12 PM on 06/14/2011
I fully agree with you, Duane. Some years ago we spent 6 months studying ecovillages and cohousing in Australia, USA and Europe. We then lived for 12 years in the Findhorn ecovillage community in Scotland, first in a fairly communal setting and then in our own house. I am convinced that learning from such experiments and adapting our cities is the way to go. For further information on my ideas see http://www.humansolutionsnow.com/sustainable-communities/avision-of-a-sustainable-society/ and other pages on our website.
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Duane Elgin
Speaker, author, trans-partisan media activist
12:41 AM on 06/15/2011
Malcolm, thanks for posting this valuable resource/website.
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StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
11:09 AM on 06/13/2011
When the system collapses, and it will, we will need to come together and really understand what it means to be a community. Apparently, people are trying to get ahead of the curve on that. It's a good thing.
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Duane Elgin
Speaker, author, trans-partisan media activist
11:39 PM on 06/13/2011
As the world moves into a whole systems crisis in the coming decade or so (economic, ecological, psychological, spiritual, and more), we will increasingly turn to our friends, neighbors, and local community as the basis for security. Although still relatively few, experiments in new forms of community (such as co-housing and eco-villages) will provide visible and viable alternatives to a survivalist ethic and pulling apart in conflict. These experiments in living have importance far beyond what is currently recognized by the mainstream culture.
06:22 PM on 06/12/2011
Once you no longer make things your God, obtaining false idols is no longer a drive and failing to obtain these idols no longer causes such distress. One need not go to the extreme of dropping out of society and living in a commune. One just need put oneself at the center of one's life instead of inanimate objects.
05:29 PM on 06/12/2011
Talis and I are in, Duane. Having lived in dorms and with roommates for much of my life, I feel that eco-village situations like this would support a more beneficial flow of community activity, something that is disjointed and hard to achieve in isolated dwellings and neighborhoods that share only geography. Everybody wants local community to re-emerge from the homogeneity of the suburbs - solutions like this seem like an inevitable next step.
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Duane Elgin
Speaker, author, trans-partisan media activist
01:43 AM on 06/16/2011
Yes, so many people want a sense of community and neighborliness. It seems like a new or modern "tribalism" is emerging where we want to live with the support of a larger community of like-minded and like hearted-persons. What an amazing transition this will be to see these "eco-communities" emerge in diverse and unique ways.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
02:37 PM on 06/12/2011
sustianable is such a loaded word -- things are more sustainable but there is no way to be completely sustainable unless you stop working and go pick berries for the rest of your life, and then you would still have to stop in at ikea from time to time for a new basket.
of course we could be more sustainable if we learned how to bbq suburbanites, it probably tastes really bad so you would need some really good sauce. on second thought maybe use it to make pet food -- that stuff has to taste bad anyway. never met a dog that would only eat filets.
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Duane Elgin
Speaker, author, trans-partisan media activist
03:34 PM on 06/12/2011
"Sustainable" by itself is a word that does not convey the full meaning of the future I want. What I seek is a future of sustainable prosperity where we are thriving and not just surviving! I recommend that you read another recent blog of mine, "Simplicity is Not Sacrifice!"

You are falling for the outworn stereotypes of Madison avenue advertisers who want people to imagine that a sustainable future is one of regress and a return to a more primitive ways of living, whereas I view a sustainable and thriving future as one of creative progress and elegant simplicity.
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OneVoiceRising
I am Wishadoo.org :)
11:57 AM on 06/12/2011
Thank you for sharing your experience and insights about this, Duane. :)

I've been a lifelong advocate of more cooperative approaches to EVERYTHING, and am now trying to gather those to brainstorm how we can incorporate many of the things you've written about here into our daily lives now, creating rewarding jobs and a more sustainable lifestyle in general.

As you said, there is no time for a complete rehaul (and the legislation and other efforts it would require to get there) of our current systems, but I do wonder very specifically what steps can be taken to work on converting existing unused space (empty strip malls, for example) and retrofitting for housing, community garden areas (even indoor), and other things a healthy community needs.

Green retrofitting of all existing structures seems like one obvious, viable way of creating necessary, productive jobs for people. If we can't wait on the government to do so, perhaps there is a bottom-up model that can be launched?

You touched upon things that are on my mind nonstop these days, and I wonder if others think in this direction as well. Thinking in terms of grassroots models that can be replicated around the country so each community doesn't have to reinvent the wheel, though with flexibility to take advantage of individual communities' strengths and weaknesses. For those who want to brainstorm and share information about such things, I'd love to connect.

Dena
Founder, www.wishadoo.org
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Duane Elgin
Speaker, author, trans-partisan media activist
03:56 PM on 06/12/2011
Thanks for your encouraging comments and creative work Dena. I do see governments as fairly slow to act as they focus on trying to maintain the status quo. So, I agree that a "bottom-up model" of change is the most promising approach and is being launched in countless small experiments in the U.S. and around the world. Diverse experiments in living are inspiring innovations by others, who then adapt them to the unique circumstances of their lives and communities. As I mentioned in my blog, two important resources for exploring this are the "Global Ecovillage Network" or GEN and, in the United States, the "Cohousing Association." I look forward to exploring your website, www.wishadoo.org