Resource available | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Susan Sweitzer (ssweitzer![]() |
|
Date: Fri, 29 Jul 2005 11:30:36 -0700 (PDT) |
Yesterday I had a great visit with Liz Walker, co-founder of EcoVillage at Ithaca. She just published a wonderful book, EcoVillage at Ithaca, Pioneering a Sustainable Culture, New Society Publishers, April 2005. Great reviews by John Robbins, Vicki Robin, Starhawk, Bill McKibben, Diana Leafe Christian. Excellent reading. Susan Sweitzer Cobb Hill Co-housing 3 Linden Road Hartland, VT 05048 802-436-1277 -----Original Message----- From: Racheli Gai [mailto:racheli [at] sonoracohousing.com] Sent: Friday, July 29, 2005 11:31 AM To: Cohousing-L Subject: [C-L]_ Re: Multiple chemical sensitivity I'd add to what Sharon says that some things that at some point in time seem like a "cause", can become eventually part of life which isn't designated as such. For example: many communities, I suspect, take on themselves the task of building houses which are handicapped -accessible. Yes, there are laws in place to enforce some level of this, but by now I think our consciousness has evolved to a point that making extra efforts to accommodate wheel-chairs and such doesn't seem like a "cause", but has been assimilated into a fairly mainstream outlook of what spaces, public and otherwise, should be. This is regardless of whether the group has a handicapped person(s) among its members. I'm sure that a couple of decades ago this wasn't the case. My point is that what gets marked as a "cause" is that which hasn't been assimilated (yet?) into enough people's consciousness, and that this is an ever-shifting state of affairs. Which isn't to say that on every issue there is a change, or that a change is always in a predictable direction. R. > > On Jul 28, 2005, at 7:16 PM, Becky Weaver wrote: > >> What level of sensitivity do your community members have (mild - >> moderate - severe)? >> [snip] Do most cohousing-friendly people take a fragrance-free policy >> in stride? I'm trying to develop a sense of perspective. > > I think these two sentences go together -- some communities may have > no members who are fragrance sensitive. Is it important for that > community to be fragrance free? > > I think it is much better to be "fragrance sensitive." Setting a > policy that the community is fragrance free will make the "fragrance > unaware" feel very paranoid because they it will not be natural for > them. > > If you have people who are fragrance or chemical sensitive, then as a > community you can determine how far you can go in accommodating them. > We have several people who are very sensitive and some not so > sensitive and some who believe that the chemicals are negatively > affecting all of us but only some are aware of this. We only use > cleaning supplies and markers in the commonhouse that are fragrance > free, environmentally friendly. > > We don't have a policy about people wearing fragrances but I'm sure > people have modified their behavior voluntarily. On the whole, more > people are aware of this. > > One of the things that I think separates cohousing from ecovillages, > for example, is that cohousers tend not to form around "issues". While > some people will come to the community with a commitment to various > practices or convictions, in the end, communities do what works for > them. A cohousing community is in the end a good place to live for > those who live there. It isn't a school or political movement formed > to convince the world of anything. The aim is community and its > relationship to other communities, etc. but not specifically to > advocate a particular cause unless that community has decided to take > it on. > > So my answer would be, how do the people in your community feel about > this? > > Sharon > ----- > Sharon Villines > Takoma Village Cohousing, Washington DC > http://www.takomavillage.org > > _________________________________________________________________ > Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at: > http://www.cohousing.org/cohousing-L/ > > _________________________________________________________________ Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at: http://www.cohousing.org/cohousing-L/
- Re: Re: Multiple chemical sensitivity, (continued)
- Re: Re: Multiple chemical sensitivity Racheli Gai, July 29 2005
- Re: Re: Multiple chemical sensitivity OCC611ng, July 29 2005
- Re: Re: Multiple chemical sensitivity Sharon Villines, July 29 2005
- Re: Multiple chemical sensitivity Racheli Gai, July 29 2005
- Resource available Susan Sweitzer, July 29 2005
Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.