Thursday, April 07, 2011

Community Works... Life in Cohousing

The other day we were at a birthday party for a young friend and one of the parents asked me, "So how's life on the ...kibbutz? Do you guys have to do all sorts of work all the time?"

Kibbutz, commune, cohousing, community... they all equal work, right? Or at least more work. Right?

Maybe.

It's true that the work here happens differently, and that it's all named and organized (something that we never did as homeowners). But to be honest, living in a 100-year-old house with sloped front and back yards and two side yards with two adults and two kids felt like a lot more work than we are responsible for now!

While I try to write posts that simply show our lives at any given moment, many of you have asked for details about how it all works...

So, without further ado, I bring you... Life on the Commune!

Just kidding! You all know we live in cohousing, right?


What work looks like around here


fallen leavesOkay, first... I have to say that things sound so official when written out, but the general atmosphere here is one of trust, encouragement, and self-regulation. There are responsibilities, suggestions and guidelines but no bureaucracy and no policing.

People here value communication, connection, and clarity — and have the skills to elicit those characteristics from each other — so practices and problem-solving in general are sensible and supportive. Which rocks!

And second... to say a bit more about cohousing. In cohousing communities, each household owns (or rents) their own private home. Our community is comprised of 23 town homes, situated in groups around three courtyards (upper, central, and lower). Homes are built with sustainability in mind and are smaller than the average American home. Each home faces inward, to encourage a sense of shared space, and are strategically placed so no one is staring into each other windows. Parking is off-site, to create a walkable neighborhood feel and to increase the opportunity to run into neighbors.

In the middle of all this is the common house: a 4,000 square-foot building that contains a living room (where we have our meetings, parties, talent show, movies, etc.), a dining room and big, industrial-size kitchen (where we cook and eat our community meals), two bathrooms, a mail-room, a game room, a kids' playroom, a laundry room, a guest room, and a shop. Phew!

This is the heart of the community and, in addition to the common outdoor areas, where we share our lives together. This shared "third" space makes community make sense.

Okay, on to our responsibilities:

Community Meetings
The idea is that you come to meetings and participate in the consensus process. Meetings happen once a month and are three hours long (or shorter) on either Sunday or Saturday mornings. Childcare is provided, often by the older teens in our community. During the budget process, we sometimes meet twice a month.

Meetings include time to share joys and concerns from our personal lives, items from committees or individuals, short reflections on the meeting, and a closing circle. Example agenda items include developing our new work program, evaluating whether to have wood-fired oven on-site, approving our annual budget, receiving a CPR demonstration, and more.

Our community is run by consensus, so, for example, deciding to have a wood-fired oven on-site is something we will decide as a community. Not every meeting has a consensus item, but things are discussed at multiple meetings before being put up for consensus (that is, in fact, how consensus is reached), so coming to meetings is part of making an informed decision.

Does everybody come to every meeting? No. Do people make an effort to come? Yes. If they don't come, most people catch up by reading the very thorough minutes or talking to others.

Committees
We are also expected to join a committee. There are many options — from landscaping to community life to computer network to finance. Committee work could be zero to three hours a week, it just depends on the committee but mostly the projects that are happening at that time.

I am on the community life committee, and we meet for 1-2 hours twice a month. We plan community events (talent shows, camping trips, etc.), do outreach and community building (right now we are actively trying to connect with another nearby cohousing community), organize childcare for community work parties and meetings, and are in charge of compiling the agenda for community meetings (though members/committees are responsible for sending in agenda items).

Work Parties
We are also expected to come to the work parties. There are three full-day and three half-day work parties a year and you can sign up for the stuff you want to do, even creating jobs for yourself as needed. After checking in with the common house committee, one woman culled and organized of all the toys in the play room.

You can pass on one work party a year. If you can't make it to more than that, you can talk to the people on the maintenance and management committee and come up with a solution (most likely doing some work project on your own).

Our family missed one work party while we were on vacation, and we've attended one. At the one we attended, I spent the day deep-cleaning the common house furniture and rug with two other folks. Rom spent the day raking with an outdoor team.

Our kids spent the day being cared for by folks in the community — childcare was a job you could sign up for and so was cooking lunch.

Community Work (no one wants to call it chores :)
The last thing that we do is community work outside of work parties.

We used to have chore teams (people were assigned to a team and then to a week to clean the common house) but as a community we've recently changed things around and now have a way that you can sign up for two two-hour shifts every four months.

Tasks include mopping the common house floor, cleaning the common house kitchen, cleaning the other rooms of the common house, doing landscaping tasks, mowing the lawn, etc. Accommodations are made for anyone who has limited physical abilities.

I completed my work for January through April by mid-February. I spent two hours on a beautifully crisp winter morning spreading wood chips on our walking paths. And I cleaned the common house.

That job called for two people working two hours each, but my co-worker and I couldn't find a time to do it together. I really don't like cleaning alone, so Rom came and cleaned with me (we spent one hour instead of two since we had double the labor) and the other person did their portion at a later time.

That's it for the required work. There is also some optional work, such as meals and the garden, which I'll talk about in the next post.

Plus I'll reflect on what all this work means.

Hint: It's more than clean floors and raked leaves. :)


photo by apdk

9 comments:

  1. this is very interesting. i dont think cohousing exists in Malta but i wish to build a community for young families like us to meet up and make friends and herlp!

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  2. Very helpful. I have so many questions, mostly about getting quiet time in your own residence during the week. As homeschoolers, we sort of depend on a quiet weekday or two while most other people are in school or at work. Is it pretty quiet during the week, or are neighbors stopping by?

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  3. Andrea,
    I so am glad you enjoyed these posts.

    We love our quiet days, too! :)

    In actuality, there is hardly anyone “just stopping by” any time of the week. We see people in the courtyards and in the common spaces, but people tend to knock on each other’s doors pretty rarely. I would say it happens only for specific reasons or because someone has a question for you that they don’t use the phone or email for. Or, it would be a very specific invitation -- do your boys want to come over for cake? – rather than just “Hi, I came over to hang out with you.”

    Also, we are one of two homeschooling families here with the other family’s kids being preschool age. People and kids are around during the day but not as much as we are.

    The one thing that can be challenging is having private outdoor time. My kids used to play a lot in our backyard (at our old house). I could hear or see them from indoors and they could play on their own well.

    Here, however, when my kids are outside other kids might come out, or my kids might see kids outside and want to go. If it were just my two kids, they could play without adults around – however, when there is a mix of kids (especially with younger ones), I feel there needs to be an adult though I might not always be up for being outside or even for talking it over with another parent (e.g., who is willing to be there, is it okay for them to be in charge while I stay inside, etc.).

    If my kids are the first ones outside, I ask them to let me know if some other kids show up – so I can check in with the other parents, or ask them to be inside for a while, etc.

    So that has been the biggest challenge for me… when we get home from a day out of the house running around I really want to be inside my house for awhile to fill back up. So this is something I’ve been talking to the kids about – that I’m not willing to go outside with them right now but maybe later, that I’d like to rest for now, that I prefer that an adult be with them and I don’t feel it is fair to just send them out into someone else’s care without talking to that person first, that I don’t feel like talking to that person right now, etc. :)

    Hope this helps -- ask me anything else. And please leave an email address if you don't want to check back here for my answer (or you can email me mamaomblog at gmail dot com).

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  4. Thank you for answering! If it helps, when my kids were younger, that happened here in our neighborhood as well! It has changed as the kids have gotten older. Now they all go out and no one knows where they are (until they get hungry)! Interesting things to think about.

    And thanks for stopping by my little blog!

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  5. I am so enjoying reading about this, Stacy! Thanks for taking the time to share the details! Is there some sort of online resource for finding cohousing communities in different cities?

    I'm now pondering the idea of a cooperative homeschool type of setup, and the cohousing concept fits in nicely. I love that you're doing this and I get to learn about it through your beautiful writing and photographs.
    Cheers!
    Alexis

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  6. Stacy,

    I think you guys are so brave, to have sold your house and jumped into such a different way of life. It sounds like you've been very thoughtful in your process of deciding how much or how little to join in.

    We have a very successful co-housing in our county. They've started an enormous farm and greenhouse and are producing enough food to use and sell. There was even a homeschool co-op for awhile.

    I love the idea of cohousing for children especially. I love the idea of kids being able to join up to play with other kids without a formal playdate set up. We have some neighborhood kids that come by regularly to visit our chickens and it can be such spontaneous fun for my kids.

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  7. @Alexis -- yes, there is https://www.cohousing.org/directory and http://www.cohousing.ca.

    We toured a bunch of places in and around Seattle, which was a great way to get a feel for what each community is like. We knew right away which communities felt like a good fit for us and which didn't, which isn't something we could get on paper (or online as the case may be :)

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  8. Thanks. I have totally missed these posts and glad you pointed me to them.

    The first question that came up for me was how this fits in a family where both parents work. I know you've made it clear it's not a lot, but it does add up.
    After work, school activities, family outings, family obligations, visiting other friends and relatives, family time, alone time..... you know what I mean.

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  9. @monica -- It has definitely taken some time to settle in, and it will continue to take time to integrate the impact of this new situation on our lives. It does add to my sense of busy-ness and is definitely helping me get clearer about balancing input and output. Just the energy of so many new people in our lives is a (welcome) change, but a change nonetheless.

    At our meeting last month, I finally spoke up during Joys and Concerns, to share that I finally ready to say something in a big group setting like that, and that it has been an unusual process for me to feel so introverted during this time.

    Afterward, quite a few people mentioned that it took them a long time to get truly comfortable here and/or that they had a heightened sense of introversion when they first arrived.

    About the working -- there are families here with both parents working (though most people live a slower-paced life in general, either working part-time or homeschooling, etc.). The generation before us, whose kids are now ages 15-23, were almost all families with both parents working. They had an afterschool daycare here for the kids. :)

    So while there are more commitments, there is also more support... so perhaps it all evens out. We are still feeling our way and I suspect it will take a while to fully understand the ways in which our lives are changing.

    Thanks, Mon, as always, for your thought-provoking comments!

    -s

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Thanks for commenting! I welcome your stories, ideas, realizations, experiences, questions, and differences of opinion... I love watching the conversation develop and the connections deepen. So, thank you!