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Live Dangerously: 10 Easy Steps

When Shannon Hayes made a list of easy steps for becoming a radical homemaker, she didn’t realize just how revolutionary they were.

Laundry on a line, photo by Chiot's Run

Photo by Chiot's Run.

When I first released Radical Homemakers: Reclaiming Domesticity from a Consumer Culture, I was advised to make a list of “easy steps for becoming a radical homemaker” as part of my publicity outreach materials. My shoulders slumped at the very thought: Three years of research about the social, economic, and ecological significance of homemaking, and I had to reduce it to 10 easy tips? I didn’t see a to-do list as a viable route to a dramatic shift in thinking, beliefs, and behaviors. But since the objective of such a list was smoother discussion and communication of Radical Homemaking ideas with the public, I did it.

I came up with the simplest things I could imagine—like committing to hanging laundry out to dry, dedicating a portion of the lawn to a vegetable garden, making an effort to get to know neighbors to enable greater cooperation and reduce resource consumption. I would perfunctorily refer back to them when radio dialogues flagged, when interviews seemed to be getting off track, or to distract myself when an occasional wave of personal sarcasm (I do have them on occasion) threatened to jeopardize an otherwise polite discourse about the book. After about 40 media interviews, I was pretty good at rattling them off, and I began to see their power and significance beyond helping me to be polite.

Every time a person sticks a clothespin on a pair of undies, he or she is saying, “I want a better world. And I’m willing to do what it takes.”

Take hanging out the laundry as an example. At the outset, it is deceptively simple: It saves money and resources, and it’s easy. As I spoke about line-drying laundry more, however, the suggestion took on more meaning. Of course everyone would like to hang out the laundry. But many people don’t do it. They’re too busy. Thus, the commitment to hanging out the laundry represents a commitment to slowing down—it means starting to align one’s daily household activity with the rhythms of nature. In my mind, hanging out the laundry moved from being a simple chore to being an act of meditation and reflection on a deeper, more profound commitment that a person wanted to make. Thus, draping shirts and socks on a clothesline wasn’t just about getting a chore done; it represented the new, sane world so many of us are working to create. Every time a person sticks a clothespin on a pair of undies, he or she is saying, “I want a better world. And I’m willing to do what it takes.” Laundry may be a simple first step, but it ultimately leads to something bigger.

Radical Homemakers Book Link

Radical Homemakers: Reclaiming Domesticity from a Consumer Culture

By Shannon Hayes
Left to Write Press, 2010, 300 pages, $23.95.
Support YES! when you buy here from an independent bookstore.

Laundry became the central theme of a talk I gave recently in an affluent community, where golf course-quality lawns are ready at a moment’s notice as the backdrop for the season’s latest fad: large screen outdoor television sets. I was speaking at a community eco-festival, where volunteers were teaching residents about the importance of composting, solar panels, buying locally, and changing light bulbs. In my session, I talked about the power of living by one’s values, the misery of excessive consumption, the importance of social change, the deep fulfillment and happiness that results from living with less and having more.

To help me drive my point home, my husband Bob armed me with a seemingly endless collection of images of fellow radical homemaker’s lives: pictures of happy kids showing off their homemade toys, families gathering for feasts, piles of tomatoes on a kitchen counter following an early fall harvest, a sink full of grapes ready for juicing, friends in their backyard gardens, smiling bike riders. At the end of my talk, I was presented with a single question from a man wearing an expensive watch: “Americans fall on a spectrum with money,” he explained, holding his hands about a foot apart from each other. “Most of the people you’re talking about fall on this end,” he said, waving one hand. “And what you’re talking about may work for them. But what about those of us on this end?” With that, he waved his other hand. “What are we supposed to do to be able to live like that?”

There were a number of snarky remarks on the end of my tongue. But this man’s eyes were earnest. Perhaps he saw something in those slides that his affluence could not buy.  Nevertheless, my sarcasm propensity meter was no longer registering on the dial. It was time to switch to the safety zone and draw from my 10 easy tips: “Grow some vegetables in your backyard. Try learning how to can,” I chirped at him. Once I re-gained my bearings, I talked about changing the world by moving toward what we love, not running away from what we fear. I talked about the power of small changes to result in a deep personal shift. I suggested he hang out the laundry.

There were no further questions. People politely thanked me for my time and left the room. One other man, who sat in the back corner, lingered. A longtime activist, he expressed his despair at the lifestyles of his neighbors. The social pressure to have a perfect lawn is huge, he explained.  For years, he’d been doing programs to encourage residents to allow parts of their lawn to go wild for habitat—an even simpler step than gardening. The majority of his efforts were unsuccessful. There was too much shame. “It’s so much easier for you,” he lamented. “You can hang out the laundry.” I gave him a quizzical look. He went on to explain local zoning codes. By law, people in his community weren’t allowed to hang clothes outside. It was trashy. It would diminish property values.

Canning food, photo by Chiot's Run

Photo by Chiot's Run.

But what about home values? I felt deeply sad for his neighbors. They’d devoted their life energy in pursuit of the material affluence required to live in this particular community. At the same time, the number of people in attendance at this eco-festival suggested they truly wanted to play a role in healing the planet. Ironically, the very laws of their community—both social and written—compelled them to turn their backs on their personal values. Henry David Thoreau’s observations about the imprisonment of wealth were spot on: “The opportunities for living are diminished in proportion as what are called the ‘means’ are increased,” he wrote. That day, I saw people who cared about the Earth, who wanted a better world. But their power to act according to these concerns was limited to their purchases alone—to buying solar panels, buy local campaigns, buying new light bulbs. They could try to buy some of their beliefs. But they couldn’t live them. 

I suppose that is the deepest wealth in the radical homemaking lifestyle. By needing less, we are free to live our beliefs. To us, this seems ordinary. To someone else, a values-driven lifestyle might seem an extraordinary act of bravery.

We need that bravery. Now. Worrying about our planet while adhering to local zoning codes or social norms forbidding ecologically sensible behavior is a recipe for disaster. Such laws require citizens to commit an ecological injustice by using a disproportionate share of our Earth’s resources. They scream out for civil disobedience. As Thoreau reminds us, “break the law. Let your life be a counter friction to stop the machine.” Go on and live dangerously. Hang out the wash.

For those who might be curious:

10 Easy Steps for Becoming a Radical Homemaker

  • Commit to hanging your laundry out to dry.  
  • Dedicate a portion of your lawn to a vegetable garden.  
  • Get to know your neighbors. Cooperate to save money and resources.  
  • Go to your local farmers' market each week before you head to the
    grocery store.
  • Do some spring cleaning to identify everything in your home that you absolutely don’t need. Donate to help others save money and resources.
  • Make a commitment to start carrying your own reusable bags and use them on all your shopping trips.
  • Choose one local food item to learn how to preserve for yourself for the winter.  
  • Get your family to spend more evenings at home, preferably with the TV off.
  • Cook for your family.
  • Focus on enjoying what you have and who are with. Stop fixating on what you think you may need, or how things could be better "if only."

Shannon HayesShannon Hayes wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Shannon is the author of Radical Homemakers: Reclaiming Domesticity from a Consumer Culture, The Grassfed Gourmet and The Farmer and the Grill. She is the host of grassfedcooking.com and radicalhomemakers.com. Hayes works with her family on Sap Bush Hollow Farm in Upstate New York.

Interested?

  • Read more from Shannon Hayes' blog about the life of a radical homemaker.
  • On Facing Judgment: Live radically, and you’ll inevitably face the judgment of others; loving unconditionally is the antidote. 
  • The Work Ahead: Building a better world is hard work. It's time we embrace dirty hands.
YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Hayes, S. (2010, June 07). Live Dangerously: 10 Easy Steps. Retrieved February 08, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/blogs/shannon-hayes/live-dangerously-10-easy-steps. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

Joke

Posted by cornish_k8 at Jun 29, 2010 12:03 PM
What a joke - in the land of the free you aren't allowed to hang out your washing or replace your front lawn with something useful!

In 'socialist' Britain I think we have more freedom than you do!!

Civil Disobedience

Posted by Ed Straker at Jun 29, 2010 06:31 PM
The world needs a little peaceful civil disobedience. Do you really think they'll haul you off to a FEMA camp if you put a vegetable garden in the front lawn? Would they come in with bulldozers to tear it down? Do you know what kind of media sh*tstorm that would generate if they did? So it's okay to have a victory garden on the White House lawn but not on Main Street? People just don't want to rock the boat.


Unfortunately...

Posted by Chris at Jun 30, 2010 02:21 PM
While they won't haul you to FEMA or anything, they can and will bulldoze it if it breaks town ordinances. We had to mow the part of our yard next to a creek rather than letting it grow up so the creek critters would have more room to play. Otherwise, the city would do it and fine us $2500 to pay for the privilege. From what I can tell from local ordinances, I can't have a compost bin even unless I get one of the expensive covered ones because it would mean "leaving trash laying around". Sadly, it all depends where you live and how picky the neighbors are...

Oh, and that fine? It's every time they decide to mow or catch you non-compliant...

civil disobedience

Posted by Mary Brown at Jul 14, 2010 05:34 AM
Yes, they will take you to court. Here in the southwest there are several court cases where people are being sued by the Homeowners association for not having a green lawn. THis in the southwest where water is at a premium and something useful in the frontlawn is not vegetables (takes too much water), but some native plant that doesn't require water every day to keep it alive.

Yeah, right

Posted by flog the monkey at Jun 29, 2010 10:03 PM
And keep on flying, driving, and using fossil energy at whim.

That's some revolution, lady.

You have to walk before you can run.

Posted by Ed Straker at Jun 30, 2010 02:49 PM
And you, criticizing from the made-in-china computer keyboard powered by electrons generated by fossil fuels?

on a Whim

Posted by Richard Eis at Jul 01, 2010 12:48 AM
Ah, all or nothing... She dared use a plane once therefore she is personally responsible for every air mile of every holiday maker...and everything she ever did for the world is instantly undone of course...

There is nothing wrong with using fossil fuels to get something useful done. It's the overconsumption and belief that this mostly wasteful consumption is necessary that needs to be focused on.

Even you must agree (when you re-read the article properly because let's face it you missed the point by several leagues) that the housing laws in America are a joke and probably the best way of getting around them is simply to ignore them. Laws without enforcement mean nothing.







re: yeah right

Posted by Shellie at Aug 25, 2010 01:15 PM
It is not all or nothing. She's doing SOMETHING. Have you read her book?

use half now campaign

Posted by alyce santoro at Jun 30, 2010 06:33 AM
EXCELLENT article - many thanks to the author. all radical homemakers and those striving towards radical homemaking are welcome to join/contribute to the USE HALF NOW campaign on facebook - it's a grassroots movement/idea-sharing resource for those ready, willing, and able to take the steps necessary to live less wasteful, more sustainable, healthier lives NOW. there's no time to wait for climate legislation or green technology - we ARE the technology!! http://www.facebook.com/[…]/316473176497?ref=mf

Yikes!!!! We are ALL living in Stepford.

Posted by Jenny at Jul 01, 2010 09:01 AM
Great article and for the most part very good points. An accurate description of where I live, which can only be referred to as Stepford (as in the flick The Stepford Wives)
A horror show! The only exception to the advice provided with regard to changing light bulbs. DO NOT use those toxic liitle curly fluorescent bulbs!!! Very dangerous on many fronts, so please Do Your Own Research and never beLIEve what someone tells you!

sound familiar?

Posted by Angie at Jul 01, 2010 09:07 AM
I would say at least 8 of these 10 steps are common practice in Europe. Have some courage to become more like the "old world" ;) Good luck!

Front lawn edibles

Posted by Nina at Jul 02, 2010 02:15 PM
Been walking through a very nice neighborhood, and I am noticing that these people are growing edibles right in with their ornamental stuff. Some are replacing their entire yard, terracing, and putting in herbs,(rosemary and thyme seem to be the most common) nasturtiums, rainbow chard, strawberries, cabbages, amaranth, etc. The tomatoes are staked on beautiful wrought iron towers and seem nearly like topiary. I am certain that there are rules about how yards must be maintained in this area, but I think just because a plant is edible, it shouldn't be ruled out as unusable for landscaping. I think it's a matter of care for the aesthetics, that's all.

Hanging diapers

Posted by Susan Lohmuller at Jul 03, 2010 06:20 AM
It's been a few years now, but when I used to hang out the diapers (2 children were in diapers at the time)I felt a deep inherent connectedness to women throughout the course of human history. From the time the first diaper was woven, ("diaper" is even the name of a type of weave structure) hundreds of generations of women have hung them on lines and bushes to dry. For me, hanging diapers was a deeply loving act that was not just for my children but for myself; it connected me in some spiritual way to my grandmothers that I never met, and their mothers and grandmothers..... And when the diapers were dry, I could bury my nose in sweet, sun drenched fresh cotton.

cotton diapers

Posted by Jacqui at Jul 13, 2010 12:20 PM
Thanks Susan.
Do you have an advise on how to do the cotton diaper thing? I'm not a mother (yet), but I certainly don't want to me one of the millions relying on disposables. My good friend did cotton until their washing machine broke from too much ****. Is there any alternatives to all the nasty chemicals like bleach going down the drain?
If there's a solution it would be totally radical.
Aside from this, nice article. Happy to say it's all everyday practice for New Zealand. Good luck changing America...

Hanging diapers

Posted by Nicole at Jul 29, 2010 07:10 AM
Jacqui - re avoiding nappy washing... there is a thriving "natural infant hygeine" movement just google elimination communication or nappy free babies. i have a 6 month old who has never worn a disposable - in fact use cloth nappies only at night or in the car seat / on public transport. he pees / poos on cue from birth. This is returned to mother eatrh, the cycle is complete.
This is my 3rd using this method - the method of choice of course in all those countries of the world still having their traditional mothering wisdom intact (PNG, parts of Asia, certainly Amazonian indians, etc etc) it

Doing Diapers

Posted by Joan at Jul 15, 2010 04:53 PM
I used cotton diapers back in the '80s for my 3 kids. I rarely used disposables (only when traveling). I agree with everything Susan has written. It's a messy process, but also a very rewarding one. I even created my own pinless diapers with strips of velcro before there was such a thing on the market. From rinsing them in the toilet (don't let them go down with the flush), soaking them in the diaper pail with Borax water, and washing them with sweet smelling IvorySnow (or Dreft for the stubborn stains, the same soaps my mother and grandmother used, vinegar in the rinse water (fabric softener makes them less absorbent) and maybe a second clear rinse for the baby with sensitive skin, to hanging them on the line to dry. But, it was the folding that was almost meditative and connective effect. Every diaper folded was a mission in love for my children and the environment, as well as a connection to the women of my past. Nothing, nothing else has had that effect like doing diapers.

Working Hard Toward Sustainability

Posted by Trying Really Hard at Jul 03, 2010 07:24 AM
I like this article and I really like the radical homemaker moniker. I think that one of the challenges with top-10 lists is that when people have completed them, they feel 'done'. How do we deeply communicate the depth of the change that needs to happen without scaring them off? Wouldn't it be great if we could do 10 things and the world would change enough...

10 easy steps

Posted by Aunty Kamala at Jul 03, 2010 08:57 AM
This is a wonderful article, that encourages the movement of the people away from consumer-itis towards localization, self reliance, community building, all of Gandhi's ideals, as well as those found in the Catholic Worker Movement - in all efforts to be simply Humane People to each other and the Earth again!
Yeah! Shannon!

radical change is a journey

Posted by Alan at Jul 03, 2010 09:24 AM
Must admit as an Australian now living in France that it is often tempting to feel smug and superior when we see or read about the appalling waste and environmental degradation that seems fundamental to the American way of life. Our family also has always practised eight out of Shannon's ten points as unquestioned habits. But what of the other two? Hmmm. Okay, we can do even better.
But the USA is not alone in having legislators enact laws which the majority of the citizens find abhorrent. This happens disturbingly often in both countries where we have lived.


Hanging Laundry Outdoors

Posted by Tom Stites at Jul 03, 2010 08:33 PM
Hang your sheets outside to dry and go to sleep smelling the sweet freshness of the outdoors. Put on an undershirt that dried outdoors and it will smell sweet. There's a wonderful sensual payback on top of the environmental savings and the valuable spiritual practice that comes with the careful placement of clothespins. It's win, win, win.

radical homemakers everywhere

Posted by Grace at Jul 04, 2010 09:13 AM
There are more than 10 steps, of course, it's an attitude and a lifestyle. Our local paper ran a piece (based on Haye's book) profiling two families who have long been living the Radical Homemaker lifestyle by necessity as well as choice. Inspiring!

http://www.ohio.com/news/top_stories/96659934.html

Live Dangerously: 10 Easy Steps

Posted by Lillianese at Jul 08, 2010 02:59 PM
Thank you for the article, Shannon, and these thoughts. I think step 11 is accepting we don't have to do it perfectly before we do it!

Living dangerously

Posted by Martin at Jul 15, 2010 11:58 PM
Well, Shannon, congratulation for this item. However, you should make a trip in Eastern Europe to see what it means to live like that, even on a big scale.

Laundry on the line

Posted by Allison at Jul 31, 2010 06:33 AM
I really enjoyed this article. We are fortunate to live where we can hang laundry out on the line, and it is truly one of the things I am grateful for very often - that I can use the laundry lines to dry my laundry. I never understood why until reading this article - I am able to spend my time outside, in nature, and be in rhythm with the natural world while also doing work on behalf of my family. Thank you for your work, Shannon.

Allison

clotheslines

Posted by paula at Aug 01, 2010 03:26 PM
For those who aren't allowed to hang laundry outside, consider hanging inside. As an apartment dweller I've successfully dried clothing indoors using regular hangers, on a collapsible drying rack. I hang sheets over the shower curtain and then flip it over after a few hours so the bottom gets to dry too.

This works better in winter, when the air is dry, but it can be done in summer, too.

indoor clothesline

Posted by Ellie at Aug 18, 2010 06:56 AM
We have an indoor retractable clothesline in the laundry room that hangs over the washer & dryer. Was inexpensive & easy to install. With 2 kids, one in diapers, we need about 5 more to keep up with the laundry, though! :)

Laundry List

Posted by Shannon at Aug 10, 2010 01:18 PM
Folks - I just learned about this terrific organization - thought some of you might be interested: www.laundrylist.org

Radical Homemaking July 2010

Posted by sharon fulton bevers at Sep 19, 2010 04:04 PM
Wow - some great down to earth suggestions around good writing. Loved the article. I felt a bit like the U.K. writer because most of the ten suggestions are pretty standard in New Zealand, although less and less people are preserving fruit and veg. It's not paradise here, but it is wonderful as sustainablilty is more the norm for things like re-cycling and taking your own bags to the supermarket. It makes sense to turn off the most expensive commodity in your house - the dryer, even in bad weather. Alot of people have built in log burners -we have heaps of sustainably grown wood near almost everyone - and tend to use clothes racks, where you can leave washing overnight, or put the same clothes rack in the most sunlit window. Hope this helps a few laundry warriors :)

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