Landscape dreams | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: John Greene, Nancy Lowe (greenelowe![]() |
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Date: Wed, 7 Apr 1999 07:57:05 -0500 |
Here at Lake Claire Cohousing in Atlanta, we certainly can relate to what Brian Setzler writes about incomplete projects after move in. We've been in for 2 years now, and are just now seeing the completion of several projects. Our site was a mud hole for a long time, and much of it is still covered with wood chips and gravel. When we first moved in we were still in go-go, hurry-up mode. Everything had been on an emergency basis for a couple of years, with the needle always in the red, so to speak, and it took us a while -- several months I'd say -- to calm down and realize that from now on things would be happening more slowly. We're a small group (only 12 households), and we're all, as Rob Sandelin wrote recently, working hard elsewhere to pay our mortgages and such, so there's just not that much time and energy to go around. But I think once we got over the impatience (and the attendant combination of guilt and finger-pointing), the slower pace was actually kind of nice, at least compared to the anxiety of the development and building phase. And now, suddenly, in the last 3 or 4 months, several large projects that always seemed way off in the distance have actually begun falling into place. A big drainage problem got fixed, some fences have gone up, our common house courtyard is taking shape and looking beautiful, some stone walls are being built for our vegetable garden, and soon we might actually have signs up at all the entrances identifying who we are. Why all this has happened so fast so recently I don't know, but it moves me to tell Brian and others that you should just take a deep breath, keep the faith, work out your group processes, and be patient. Your group's cumulative energy and creativity will get things done over time -- probably not quickly or efficiently -- but eventually. And the upside is that because you're pooling your money and talents, you end up surrounded by beautiful stuff that you could probably never have afforded or created on your own. I mean, I look around every day -- at the fountains, courtyards, stone walls and so forth -- and know that we'd never have this kind of setting if we were in single family housing. Ironically, the only nice feature we had at the beginning -- a pretty little patch of grass that everyone played and picniced on -- is looking dead and terrible now -- just when everything else is starting to look great. So now fixing that goes on the to-do list, and by the time we get that done, who knows what else will have come up? Such is life. But the fact is, the same is true when you're in a house by yourself -- the never-ending, revolving to-do list -- except that you don't have a whole group of people helping you to deal with it. So the bad news is -- it'll *never* all be done. But the good news is -- a lot of beautiful things will get created as you go along, and you'll get used to the slower pace, and the strengths of the group working together can outweigh the slowness of the process. Just remember, as time goes on, to celebrate what you've already completed and not just to focus on the still unrealized dreams. John Greene Lake Claire Cohousing Atlanta To get random signatures put text files into a folder called "Random Signatures" into your Preferences folder.
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