The Experience of Community
Introduction to Section One
Part of Being A Planetary Villager
(IC#1) Winter 1983, Page 7
Copyright (c)1983, 1996 by Context Institute
"With the falling of the leaves, the masks of green are
stripped off the hillsides revealing the diversity and uniqueness of each
ridge and valley, rock and stream, old shed and oil well hither to unseen.
It is in the winter, when the hills bare their innermost selves, that we
get to know them. Then in the spring, when the masks return, we can look
at the hills as old friends few others understand. So it is with people.
Most of the time we wear our masks. But during difficult times, during the
winters of our lives, we shed the facades and reveal all the intricacies
of the unique beings we are. It is in these moments that friendships are
formed, and we experience one another as few ever will."
John Walker
HALF of the idea behind being a planetary villager is that community
is an important part of a truly satisfying, good life. There is nothing
unusual about this feeling. Face to face communities - the tribe, the band,
the village, the neighborhood - have been central to human life for as long
as we can trace, at least hundreds of thousands of years and probably millions.
In an historical sense, it is now that is unusual, for it is only since
the development of industrial urban society, primarily in the 20th century,
that community has become unimportant in the lives of large portions of
the population. Now, in the late 20th century, as the grand promises of
"ever newer, bigger, and better" are losing their shine and appeal,
it is not surprising that many of us feel the need to look at what has happened,
see the price we have paid, and attempt to rediscover some of the experience
of community that we have lost.
Yet just what do we mean by "community"? Its standard usage, as
the dictionaries define it, is broad and loose, ranging all the way from
describing a group of a few friends to a whole society. For the purposes
of this issue, we can narrow that scope somewhat to focus on face-to-face
groups where each person has a sense of belonging to "the community".
This is still broad, including as "communities" such things as
groups of friends, co- workers, neighbors, and the special case of intentional
communities. In all of these cases, the people in the community see themselves
as having at least some important things in common, and they know each other
as at least acquaintances.
Most of the articles in this section deal with what it is like, in direct
personal terms, to be part of communities of this type, ranging from traditional
villages to intentional communities. The last article then looks back at
history and sets the stage for considering, in the "Being A Planetary
Villager" section, how community might develop in the future.
But for now, let us begin with the present.
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