Crunchy Con

Communal living

Sunday June 11, 2006

Here's an interesting piece from today's NYTimes op-ed section, examining the contemporary appeal of communal living arrangements. When I think "commune," I think of free love, pot and an insufficient attention to personal hygiene. But that's a stereotype. There are all kinds of communal living arrangements. In "Crunchy Cons," I highlighted one of them: the loosely-organized intentional Catholic living arrangement that Rachel and Paul Balducci are part of in Augusta, Ga., (as were there parents before them). In the Balduccis' case, a bunch of like-minded Catholic families who wanted to grow up in something like a community got together, pooled their resources and bought a bunch of houses in a lower-income part of town. In a similar way, Phil and Leila Lawler up in Massachusetts relocated from Boston to a more rural area in western Massachusetts to live near a monastery, along with seven or eight other Catholic families who share their basic values. Leila once told me that you really need that kind of support if you want to raise your kids to hold onto their values.

Anyway, here's what caught my eye about today's Times story:

The new breed of cooperative living, however, is far from radical. In co-housing, the fastest growing segment, participants design their own subdivision with an emphasis on closely spaced, modest homes and Norman Rockwell-style social interaction encouraged by communal areas and pot-luck dinners. Eco-villages, many with solar-powered homes that are constructed with hay bales, are driven by an environmentally minded ideology. Residents are likely to avoid meat, wear hemp-fiber clothing and resemble the hippies of yore.

"There are plenty of people in the mainstream seeking an alternative to the alienation of suburban living, people who want more connection and community in their lives," Mr. Sirna said, as he prepared a stir-fry for three erstwhile strangers with whom he now shares a home and pooled income. "For them, it's not such a far-fetched idea to want to share resources and cooperate with their neighbors."

[snip]

Some say the time is ripe for a less atomized and wasteful existence. They cite an aging population that is seeking to downsize, the high cost of new housing and a surge in energy prices that will make old-school suburban life untenable.

Albert Bates, a lawyer from Connecticut who hitchhiked to The Farm, a commune in Tennessee, in 1972 and never left, says a flood of visitors seeking to learn about the 200-member community led to the creation of an eco-village training center that each year draws hundreds of people from around the world.

When gas hits $20 a gallon, Mr. Bates said, suburbia will wilt and Americans will flock to tight-knit, energy-efficient communities where they can walk or bike to stores that sell pesticide-free produce. "That time may not come for another 10 years," said Mr. Bates, 59. "But at some point people are going to look for alternatives."


The problem here, as the article in full notes, is that these kinds of utopian communties don't seem to last. I'm wondering, though, if that's because they were too ambitious in their separatist mentality. I, for one, would not be interested in living in a sort of "commune" as the understanding comes down to us from the 1960s, but I'd be quite interested in living in a development or intentional community as the Balduccis and the Lawlers have. In principle, by signing a petition in favor of historical district designation for the neighborhood I now live in -- a designation the city granted us a couple of weeks ago -- I agreed to give up some personal autonomy as a homeowner for the sake of preserving what Julie and I (and a majority of homeowners here) believe is the common good.

As readers of "Crunchy Cons" and this blog know, I believe the future for our sort depends on the creation of what Alasdair MacIntyre identifies as new ways of living in community to preserve our faith and values. Does anybody have any real-life examples, or at least ideas, for how ordinary people like me and thee might do this without signing up for something more radical than most of us are able or willing to commit to?
Comments
watsy
June 12, 2006 7:38 PM

I don't know of any communes. I've heard more about people forming home schooling networks. I'm sure that if you search within your community that you can find a group of people who are homeschooling and protecting their kids from the tripe in the public schools. You don't really need to be next door neighbors to socialize and help out your friends. Every community is large enough that I'm sure that if you look around, you can surround yourself with clones.>

Paul
June 13, 2006 8:44 PM

I think many of the small ethnic enclaves in rural America (as well as some urban ones, for that matter) tend to be those that last. This is especially true for those groups where ethnicity is primarily defined by religion and a committment to religious activity. Though I'm ethnically a German and confirmed a Lutheran--I've been living in a Dutch Reformed subculture with its own Christian schooling network across the country. It is NOT hermetically sealed (though some may think that who are outsiders--in areas like Northwest Iowa where I am. I teach at Dordt College, a school historically linked to the Dutch Calvinists--Kuyperians) --- but it has persisted for generations (though there are signs of this breaking down, in fact). That is an example that tends to work best, I believe, for the long term. They can welcome outsiders and it is not a formal agreement (those usually fail) but one driven by religious motivations of like-minded people.>

Rod Dreher
June 14, 2006 7:05 AM

Mungo, they live out by St. Bernard's, in the town of Harvard (not the university)>

Llyn Peabody
November 5, 2008 6:28 PM
http://www.fullcirclefamily.blogspot.com/

This is an interesting thread. Your opening lines caught my attention as my husband and I have been in the process of creating a communal living situation for some time now and one of our tag-lines is: Communal living, it's not just for hippies anymore. My husband lived for close to 15 years in two different communal situations. They were some of the best years of his life. Both had a faith-base (though not a mainstream Christianity). We would very much like to attract others who are resonant with our vision so we can begin demonstrating the life-style alluded to in Acts 4:32-35 where Jesus' disciples speak of the communal lifestyle they lived in. We want to create a home for many families that is faith-based, environmentally conscious and supportive of people living creatively and lightly on the Earth. If you're interested in reading more, please come to our blog: http://www.fullcirclefamily.blogspot.com Thanks, Llyn

PK
January 17, 2009 7:25 PM

This is old but maybe I will get an answer. I found this looking for Spiritual Self-sufficient Spiritual (non-religious) Rural Communities in the Northwest. I have spent all day googling in search and have not found but one in Oregon that is over crowded. Does anyone know where they are? Thank you.

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About Crunchy Con

Rod Dreher is an editorial columnist for the Dallas Morning News, and author of "Crunchy Cons" (Crown Forum), a nonfiction book about conservatives, most of them religious, whose faith and political convictions sometimes put them at odds with mainstream conservatives. The views expressed in this blog are his own.

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