Hi, I was in the
city over the weekend and did not have a chance to use a computer.
I was really interested to hear these ideas. Nathaniel keeps asking the most important question, I think, which is, what is the answer to living successfully in community? I think the main reason communities succeed is when people share a vision of what they want their community to be like, and articulate this vision and agree to it. I got this idea from a book on intentional communities by Diana Leafe Christian. Prior to reading that book, I was like many people in thinking that a community has to be everything to all people. I no longer think that. I think it is important to find other people who share the same values and can agree upon a mission.
Some people say that money is the
root of all evil, and so they do not view money as just a harmless accounting tool. I think, when a culture depends upon money, everything in that culture becomes "commodified" and priced, and compassion is forgotten.
I grew up thinking it is possible to live without money, because I saw my grandfather do that. He was a medical doctor who quit charging patients. He was Cherokee and decided he did not want to assimilate afterall. He simply quit charging people one day. Long story there!
Well, I would like to be in a community that is a lot like a Cherokee community. So I came up with the idea of creating a legal entity which would enable a "counter culture" to operate within a dominant society which has values diametrically opposed to the counter culture. [We still have to pay property taxes.]
Steven, you actually have an idea that will work because I know a community that did what you suggest. It is called the Goat Lady Farm, and it is near Greensboro NC. Originally they survived by selling goat cheese, and they worked very hard raising a huge goat herd. Then they opened a restaurant. Then they began offering "brunch and farm tours", and they did so well that they gave up the goat herd. They only kept a few goats to supply the brunch meals and they quit working so hard.
The tours were just walking tours of their sustainable gardening and farming plan. They did not offer bed and breakfast, however.
Actually, I have a list of 60 ways a farm could raise money to pay necessary costs, but my favorite idea was to have a weekend brunch with free play readings or storytelling, and tours, and a gardening hostel. I am personally not interested in goats and goat cheese, which I think is too much work, but am not opposed to that. I just mention that farm because they do have a restaurant like you suggested
That farm was serving big meals on Sunday, but now I think they just offer the light brunches, and they make more money that way! I had an idea for having bed and breakfast too, but only a couple of V.I.P. cabins, expressly for people who pay money. But I would want to emphasize people working in exchange for staying awhile or coming to hear their play read etc. [I write plays so I included this in my dreams.] I am more interested in working on permaculture, gardening, food forests and wildlife projects than just having a farm though. I don't particularly want to kill myself running a CSA either!
I like the idea of people sharing resources too, for ex., people having one bath house, one laundry house, one big kitchen and dining area, one work truck etc. I think the community that gardens and eats together will stay together!
I think people ought to share land too, and I am prepared to do that, and have been talking to people about getting a lawyer to help me set up a creative form for doing this...maybe a land trust where people "lease" homes in exchange for doing work they are passionate about.