10 Great Things About Cohousing

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By Seafarer Mama

Images of Cohousing in Action

Community members conferring about a landscaping project
See all 7 photos
Community members conferring about a landscaping project
Source: Karen Szklany Gault
Community landscaping project in progress
Community landscaping project in progress
Source: Karen Szklany Gault
Our Common House Porch
Our Common House Porch
Source: Karen Szklany Gault
Lounge area with couches by a fp, a small section of our Great Room
Lounge area with couches by a fp, a small section of our Great Room
Source: Karen Szklany Gault
A very popular place to nap and hang out for residents of all ages
A very popular place to nap and hang out for residents of all ages
Source: Karen Szklany Gault
Foot path between Mosaic Commons and Camelot cohousing communities
Foot path between Mosaic Commons and Camelot cohousing communities
Source: Karen Szklany Gault
Process cards used at community meetings for group discussion and decision-making by consensus
Process cards used at community meetings for group discussion and decision-making by consensus
Source: Karen Szklany Gault

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10 Aspects of Living in Community that Make it Rock

Introduction

Living in an intentional community such as that offered by a Cohousing Village can benefit everybody, both within the individual community and those living in the greater town or city community in which the cohousing village is nestled. The town or city benefits from the extra tax income and social involvement of the the members of the comparatively smaller cohousing community or ecovillage. The cohousing community benefits from the close proximity of resources. My own community Mosaic Commons, is located within a larger Sawyer Hill Ecovillage , along with the cohousing community North of us, Camelot Cohousing. We all pay taxes to the town we are located in, have children that attend the local public schools, and participate in local sports and other social activities, and have members who hold positions of service,, such as Librarians and a member of the Town Finance Committee. We have also reached out to the town by hosting programs of mutual interest, such as a presentation of an historian about the local town history, seasonal gatherings, house concerts, and invitations to our community dinners. We benefit from having the post office and a couple of local farms within walking or biking distance. Since cohousing is a new lifestyle in the United States, little is known about it by people who are not involved directly in creating and living in such communities. General awareness is growing, but the best PR is reaching out actively to offer bonds of mutual benefit between the cohousing village and the town it is situated in.

The purpose of this hub is to outline 10 ways in which cohousing benefits the members directly. These benefits cannot help but benefit the larger community surrounding the cohousing village, and this will be described as it applies to each benefit listed below.

1. Friendly neighbors who want to get to know you

There is nothing that speaks more to feeling like you have moved to a friendly, genuinely welcoming neighborhood as when there are friendly people who wave and talk to you when you step out your front door. People in cohousing are interested in each other, care about one another's well-being, and want to help out if there is anything they can do when the need for such help arises. If they spot you on your way in the door from your work day or a long trip, they wave you over to find out about how your day or week went.

2. Decision Making by Consensus

Making a decision by consensus means that no decision is made unless everyone can live with it. This takes patience, thoughtfulness, creativity, and compromise - qualities not required by "majority rule." The entire community looks for a "win-win" situation for all community members, instead of one group "winning" and another group "losing." There is a level of trust that develops when everyone seeks the happiness and comfort of the community as a whole, and is willing to take into consideration the comfort of all its members. The community meets each month to discuss issues, and there are "process cards" that are used, which encourages each member to listen carefully and wait for their turn to speak.

3. Exchange of favors and resources is good for everyone's budget

In cohousing, neighbors tend to exchange favors and personal resources, such as moving in each others' belongings, watching pets, watering gardens, putting together furniture, painting rooms, sharing tools, watching children, etc. This saves on expenses such as child care, kennels, or unnecessarily buying new tools one would use only occasionally. There is a community gardening "shed" in one of the unsold carports, clotheslines for community use, washers/dryers, a fitness room, a wooded labyrinth, basketball hoops, playground equipment, and a playing field among other resources. In the community carport are also community-owned lawn mowers, and other equipment for which we set aside funds in our community budget. We often offer and acquire things through the online Freecycle network.

4. Sharing community over meals at least twice a week

One of the hallmarks of forming community and keeping the spirit alive for a group of people is the opportunity to eat together often. There is a group of people who rotate cooking, serving as assistant cook (including setup of the Great Room), and cleanup. The bond among community members is strengthened by sharing meals together, so our community eats a common dinner together two weekday nights a week, and brunch one weekend morning. Not only do we welcome our own community members to the table, we welcome the friends and family of our fellow community members, for we are a friendly bunch of humans and are eager to expand our ever-widening circle of "family."

5. Contributions made according to individual talents and passions

The common resources owned and benefited from by a community exist because of the combined contributions of all community members. Some people are technology-savvy, some are awesome cooks, and others are passionate gardeners. There are teams of people who keep our grounds and machinery in working order, and our common spaces clean and tidy for the frequent use they are given. Everyone contributes according to their talents and abilities, and thus our interdependence is reinforced. The bond between community members is also strengthened by working together.

6. Carpooling and other opportunities benefit the environment

Carpooling is a big asset to living in a cohousing community. It is doubled when one lives in an "ecovillage" that encompasses two cohousing communities. The odds are increased that there is a group of people sharing the responsibility of driving to a town nearby where you work, or to a local train station on a line that stops close to your place of work. Many people here also include each other in more local errands and visits to cultural sites. There is an email list for communicating with everyone else, so someone can post a message about an errand they are about to embark upon so that others may take advantage of it. People will pick up items needed by others if they are going to a particular store, or invite them to come along for the ride. There is a local pond and a rock formation for climbing that our community members have carpooled to, as well.

7. Community and Individual Gardens

One of the factors that benefits our community is the land we live on. It used to belong to a local farm, and then a nursery. There are many acres that are spread out, and one spot was chosen for our community vegetable garden. There is a community herb garden by the Common House entrance closest to the kitchen. These food items usually grow in enough abundance for the entire community to share in, but the priority is given to cooks preparing common meals. Community members passionate about gardening have chosen the plot of these gardens and planted the items we enjoy eating, fresh from their source. Others have taken turns watering all of the community gardens. By the vegetable garden there are compost piles for enriching the soil in which we grow our food, organically. They include dry leaves and grass clippings as mulch. This summer, we have enjoyed the benefits of all these efforts and they have been very satisfying...and downright delicious!

8. Big porches that encourage spontaneous gatherings

The buildings designed and constructed for cohousing villages vary from one community to another. Those who founded Mosaic Commons chose to make big porches a priority, and they have been used well. There have been organized gatherings on porches for birthdays, cocktails, card games, and crafts. Other gatherings have been spontaneous. Comfortable furniture is kept on each porch, and community members visit with one another often, especially during the warmer months. When there are larger gatherings, such as barbeques, the Common House porch is well-populated, as well as the long picnic table across from the Common House. The bonding between community members takes place during these gatherings as much as it does during common meals and community work.

Warning: Porch crawling can be habit-forming! On any given Saturday night, while the summer is in full force and I have time to fritter away before I drive to the train station to meet my husband for his ride home, I eat dinner on one neighbor's porch and visit with her, then stop by another neighbor's porch for a drop of wine and more fun conversation, before I make my way back to my own home to wait for my daughter to return from her own gallivanting with neighbors and their children. Aaaaah...that's the spirit of cohousing!

9. Lots of eyes to watch over children

Children are cared for, watched over, and kept safe in a cohousing community. Each adult will step in if they see one child treating another inappropriately, or give a child a bandaid if he or she is hurt. There is a system in our community, as well as others', that involves parents having other parents' landline and cell phone numbers to alert them as to the location of their child(ren). When children play, they often travel from house to house, and sometimes forget to check in as often as their parents would like. Because of this, if a child suddenly appears at a home they were not previously playing at, the adult present in that home will call to alert the parent of the wandering urchin.

In addition to the above safety net, all adults in the community are vigilant about whether there is a "stranger" on our property. We reach out with a friendly handshake to anyone we do not recognize to ask if they would like a tour, or are there to visit a particular community member. They do not remain a "stranger" for long, and our children are kept safe from any potential harm. There is no way for an individual to remain "anonymous" in our community.

10. Close proximity to town encourages transportation by walking and biking

My cohousing community is located in a rural town, which is very hilly. We use cars to get around often, but we cycle to town when we can. There are two farms, the town post office, a library, and several churches that are in cycling distance. There is conservation land and a wooded labyrinth on our grounds to walk around for exercise, fresh air, and the enjoyment of local flora and fauna. Within the village, both children and adults travel from one end of the property to the other, or to the common house, by scooter.

Cohousing communities promote sustainable living, and a healthy lifestyle. The beauty of gardens, chimes, and local wildlife surrounds us. We work together, rally to help solve problems with one another, and lift each other up. Our children play together, and in the long run they grow up together. Money, time, and energy is saved through the lifestyle promoted by cohousing, and loneliness is not a problem known to anyone in such a community.

Copyright © 2010, by Seafarer Mama/Karen Szklany Gault



Comments

Cinn Fields 21 months ago

This is a very nice summary of some of the benefits of group living. I live in an intentional community (http://www.Lafayettemorehouse.com), and it is definitely true about the benefits of having so many different talents in a group. We had one fellow who made biodiesel for everyone in the group - other people got the vegetable oil from the restaurants. He couldn't do it without the help, and we couldn't do all the chemistry and the plumbing. Communal living is the best!

Raines Cohen, Cohousing Coach 21 months ago

A nice piece that covers lots of the basic elements, but I can't in good conscience link to it because of all the strange embedded links pointing to things unrelated to what they say -- for example in "Seasonal Gatherings" the word links to the game Magic:The Gathering, not something about gatherings in general or cohousing gatherings in particular. If HubPages is doing that automatically (presumably for "Search-Engine Optimization" to cross-promote articles and get better search ranking), I recommend that you find another blog platform.

jacobkuttyta profile image

jacobkuttyta Level 1 Commenter 21 months ago

nice initiatives.

Thanks for the ideas.

Look forward more from you

Seafarer Mama profile image

Seafarer Mama Hub Author 21 months ago

Thank you for all for the lovely feedback.

Raines: I think I can fix this. Will let you know when I do.

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