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10 Courageous Things You Can Do to Build Community

Building strong communities is critical, hard work. I feel it’s one of the most courageous, important things each of us can do every day.

We can speed up the realization of good community building ideas if we live our lives consistent with community priorities. The good news: practically every activity and every moment grants us the opportunity to practice community-minded behavior.

Here are 10 ways you can start the courageous work of building community today.

  1. MOBY's Community Playground, photo by

    Vancouver residents work on constructing a community playground on Commercial Drive under the city SkyTrain. The group organizes itself as MOBY (My Own Backyard Garden Association), and has created 40 garden plots in a community garden, the playground, and a greenspace.

    Photo by Christopher Porter.

    Take interest in other people’s passions as much as you want them to be interested in yours.
    We all have ideas for how life should be. The thing is that, unless we are unsurpassed geniuses, we only see a small part of the picture. Asking others what they see can only enhance understanding.
  2. Become a mentor to others less involved in their community. In every community there is a small, overworked group of leaders who try to figure out everything for everyone. They go to all the meetings and take on huge loads of work while others are silent—until it is time for them to complain. This will not do. If you are such a leader, mentor someone with less experience. If you are not, approach someone and ask them to mentor you.
  3. Support a cause with no direct personal benefit. We are involved with things we care about the most. That’s natural. My experience tells me, however, that the most interesting and possibly most important discoveries happen in the spaces between interests and disciplines and ideologies. Step outside your natural zone—it’s necessary for uncovering new solutions.
  4. Invite “them” to your meeting. It is convenient to show our importance by pitting “us” against “them.” But “they” may have insights that will help us better understand the problem and appreciate the marvelous tensions that form a healthy community.
  5. Reject the tendency to blame. Everyone plays a role in the problem and everyone must participate in the solution. Practice compassion towards those who, like ourselves, unwittingly contribute to the problem they wish to solve.
  6. Confront internal contradictions. Claiming that the problem is someone else's doing conveniently absolves us from doing our part. If I drive my car to a transportation meeting and complain about traffic jams, it’s necessary that I acknowledge my contribution to that traffic. At the very least, acknowledge the irony of the situation.
  7. Practice industrial-strength listening. Do not react until you’ve received.
  8. Render unto community… Shrink your home to what is necessary and conduct the rest of your life in the community. For example, resist a “theater” room and visit your local theater instead. Anytime you bump into others you make your community a bit stronger.
  9. Clarify your image of the future. I find that most decisions we make are shaped by impulses so deeply ingrained we fail to be aware of them. Unexamined impulse is prejudice. Examined impulse, once confirmed, is guidance that leads to something better. Examine your embedded assumptions, embrace the relevant ones, and discard the rest. What remains is a clear intuition, an image of a possible future. Then engage with others to make it a reality.
  10. Resist the temptation to choose between the ideal and the reality. Hold them both in your awareness. Learn to enjoy the creativity and humor this tension offers. It can be quite funny.

I would love to know what courageous community building acts you are doing. Please add your stories in the comments.


Milenko MatanovicMilenko Matanovic is a community builder and a visual artist with an international reputation and a professional career of over 40 years. He is the founding director of  Pomegranate Center. The non-profit Pomegranate Center facilitates the conception and construction of open-air gathering places, and integrates art into architecture, landscape and communities.  

Interested? Practical Steps For Bridging the Political Divide. Organizing, building trust, taking direct action—this feature shows you how to get media attention, build a coalition, organize online, and reach out and communicate.

 

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Matanovic, M. (2009, December 29). 10 Courageous Things You Can Do to Build Community. Retrieved February 03, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/people-power/10-courageous-things-you-can-do-to-build-community. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

A community hub to honor true wealth...

Posted by Pancho Ramos Stierle at Jan 04, 2010 09:46 AM
* What about starting a community hub for community transformation where people can gather to nourish real wealth?

A gift economy/pay-it-forward experiment like KarmaKitchen.org has shown that the ripples of kindness are unnumbered and unpredictable. They always strengthen the community. Not only the experiment is subversive and fun, but also it is a bridge between the old-phantom-wealth paradigm and the Great-Turning-emergent paradigm.

* And what about a healing center where anyone in the community can trust to request a Restorative Circle to resolve a conflict, from intrafamily misunderstandings/differences to corporate abuse?

* Or what about implementing permaculture at its best in the neighborhoods one house at a time? Then, with plenty of community gardens, an experiment like the FreeFarmStand.org will foster more relationships and gratitude among people.

Perhaps in the near future we will be living in a society that is not a "thing"-oriented society but rather a relationship-oriented society.

Then and only then the origin of the word "community" will make more sense: it comes from the Latin "munus", which means the gift, and "cum", which means together, among each other. So community literally means to give among each other.

* And above all, what about _regularly_ spending some time to be in receptive silence to nourish the inner (r)evolution?


May we embody the values of our BeLOVED CommUNITY.
May we all become compassionate, courageous and wise.

Planetizing the Movement of the Ahimsa (R)evolution from some corner of our round borderless country...
Pancho

Building Community

Posted by Serena Kovalosky at Jan 06, 2010 11:23 AM
Great article! I particularly resonated to your suggestion for those who are leaders to mentor others, inspiring them and teaching them to take on some of the tasks that can overwhelm organizers of a community-building project.

In 2005, I co-founded an Open Studios project for the professional fine artists in Washington County, NY. Over the past 4 years, the project has unified the professional artist community, brought tourism and tax dollars (from substantial art sales as well as hospitality revenue) into this economically underdeveloped region, and is helping to establish the county as a cultural destination. We are now mentoring area artists in areas of marketing and client development which helps the artists and will indirectly benefit the Open Studios event.

Anyone who has ever worked with artists will agree - it's a bit like herding cats, and I mean that in a positive way, but it creates an additional challenge of organizing and motivating people who are highly creative but incredibly independent. But we now have an exceptional group of artists who work together well to create successful events.

I have shared your article with the rest of our team. Many thanks!

For information on our project, visit our website:
http://www.OpenStudiosWashingtonCounty.com

Serena Kovalosky, Executive Director
Open Studios of Washington County, NY
http://OpenStudiosWashingtonCounty.com

Serena Kovalosky Studios
http://www.kovalosky.com

# 10: Choose!

Posted by Vic Anderson at Jan 20, 2010 03:09 PM
OR else, it's DOUBLETHINK!

Growing food when I don't have land

Posted by Jeremiah at Jan 25, 2010 05:52 PM
I am building community this way.

I don't have land of my own. Instead, I have friends. To get past the land problem and to intentionally build friendships, my friend and I have agreed to grow food on his property.

I'm pretty excited. He'll always be there to look after the crops, and yet he won't be going it alone. I'll be visiting regularly.

I think food, children, local economy, local organizations, and public space are the heart of community.

holding both the ideal and the reality in mind

Posted by Anna at Feb 09, 2010 11:58 AM
I love that statement about community. Being in several communities, there is always my ideal of what I want, and then there is the reality of the humans around me, including me. there are days I don't want to do the work. and then I look around and the benefits outweigh the negatives!

Communal Living Center

Posted by Natalie Watson at May 29, 2011 11:32 AM
I'm trying to gather enthusiasm for a proposal for a sustainable communal living center, also functioning as a community garden, community,
educational, and meditation center in Evanston, Illinois at http://www.enyadatta.com/proposal. Communal living as part of the solution is rarely discussed. Please comment on the blog.

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