Re: Co-living Bloom | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Crystal Farmer (crystalbyrdfarmer![]() |
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Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2016 06:47:21 -0800 (PST) |
I have seen the co-living trend too. It is definitely from the Millennial start-up culture, and yes, they don't have a connection to the current cohousing movement. That's probably because they are the type who aren't interested in the traditional methods of investing money (like buying a house). For those on the list, are you interested in connecting with that group of folks? Do you think you have something to learn from them? Or is there a lot you can teach them? I'm a Millennial but also a single parent from a lower class background, so I feel like an outside observer. I know I have many friends in Asheville and DC who would do co-living! Crystal Farmer Charlotte Cohousing Community (We are on Facebook at www.facebook.com/charlottecohousing) Quote from John: Over the last 6 months, I have started noticing that the co-working conversations are starting to have a side conversation about co-living. The folks at We Work is the first large commercial effort with their We Live project that I heard about. Today, I got a social media reference to a collection of articles about co-living. It looks to me like there is a new energy building around co-housing, by a group that has no information about co-housing or any of the previous efforts. Take a look: https://medium.com/browse/cf96582c6b64 This is why I think it is important for the cohousing communities to spend more effort talking to the wider world. Any chance your community has a regular social media program telling your story? A YouTube Channel perhaps?
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Re: Co-living Bloom Crystal Farmer, December 11 2016
- Income tax on voluntary contributions Carol Agate, December 11 2016
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Re: Co-living Bloom Ty Albright, December 12 2016
- Re: Co-living Bloom Kathryn McCamant, December 12 2016
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