Moving out, aging founders, varieties of communities | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: fernselzer [at] aol.com (fernselzer![]() |
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Date: Sat, 21 Jun 2025 16:19:56 -0700 (PDT) |
Hi all, I’m responding to the thread about Sharon moving, the variety of community types, and the realities for founders in the community. Of the original group who created our agreements and found the property for New Brighton Cohousing (11 townhomes), I’m the only one still living here. Over the 17 years since we began, the community has naturally evolved — as it should — but I now find myself the only person here who knows the importance of staying connected with the broader cohousing movement. I was drawn to cohousing wisdom because it offered a framework for living cooperatively with neighbors. It anticipates conflict and offers tools for navigating it. My prior experience in a conventional neighborhood taught me how easily unresolved disputes over fences, animals, parking, or noise can turn into years of silence, sides-taking, and resentment. But beyond that original attraction for me, I’ve found that the larger cohousing community offers a much larger collected body of valuable knowledge for community, sharing property and lives. Today, I’m concerned that even long-time residents in our community may not understand or value the support and insight available from the wider cohousing network. None of them seems to read this list-serve or has pursued additional training on their own time, and we no longer hold orientations or regular trainings as we once did. Earlier members received extensive orientation — both before and after joining — but our most recent buyers met with just one neighbor before legally committing to buying in. We used to have a steering committee who met infrequently. It was made up of some of us familiar with cohousing who discussed the big picture and offered foresight and leadership to the community and committees. A lot of that comes from knowing what goes on in other communities and how it is handled. Now there seems to be little interest by anyone to be on a steering committee. Without forethought, certain things fall through the cracks and will come up as urgent and unplanned in the future. People here still see the value of community — the fun, the connection, the support for conflict resolution, the shared work — but what feels missing is the deeper wisdom that comes from engaging with the larger cohousing community. For me, that has always been a kind of safety net. And now, as I contemplate moving on in the next year or so, I feel not just sadness, but worry. I fear I may leave it with experienced pilots, but no equipment for navigating deep waters. I’d love to hear if others have had similar experiences or have advice. Also, I’m really missing Laird. Any suggestions? Warmly, Fern New Brighton Cohousing Aptos CA
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