RE: Community Dinner and its role in community | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Rob Sandelin (robsan![]() |
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Date: Mon, 17 Apr 95 14:31 CDT |
> The casual observer would conclude that eating dinner together >3-4 nights a week is the most important thing in the world. -Snip_ My own conclusion (what's yours?) is that this is a very nice, valid, and important community-building factor for some people, but not for others, and that it has somehow been transmuted into a general value assumed to be important for all cohousing communities. Having experienced community dinner now for a couple of years I would say that much of the connection you get with people in their day to day lives is at dinner. Sharingwoods community dinner environment is extremely unpleasant for me. It is much too loud and chaotic (we are all jammed into a basement space as we wait to build our commonhouse). I actually get indigestion from the environment and last year I took a 4 month sabbatical from community dinner in order to get myself healthy. However, in making a complete break from community dinner, I found myself out of the loop in much of what was going on. A tremendous amount of communication and decision making happens at dinner. Often the whole context of a decision which is to be made at a general meeting comes from discussions at community dinner and missing those discussions, you miss the context. Now, if being out of the loop doesn't matter to you, then this is not so important. Also, after dinner is prime "personal storytime". Knowing each others histories and the events that shaped each others lives is a very important ingredient in building community. The more you know about your neighbors history, the better you understand them today. For example, one of my neighbors once backed over a kid on a bicycle. When they built their home, they wanted a driveway that formed a circle so there was no backing up. Knowing their history, I understand why. This is echoes throughout all your community relationships and much of this knowledge and connection, at least at my community, comes over dinner. Rob Sandelin Sharingwood
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RE: Community Dinner and its role in community Rob Sandelin, April 17 1995
- RE: Community Dinner and its role in community Martin Tracy, April 17 1995
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