Sitting in bed recuperating from back strain these long winter nights, I started reflecting on how "boomerang" could be a serviceable theme for reflecting on trends in community living…
In the last 25 years something
different has been happening in the demographics of intentional community. For
the first time in history there are significant numbers of people over 50 years
old trying community living for the first time. What has historically been predominantly
the domain and twentysomethings and thirtysomethings—sticking your toes in community
waters—has widened considerably. Now everyone’s doing it.
It used be that the way to get
older folks in community was to recruit younger folks and age them for a few
decades. Today though, some people are raising families in traditional
settings, retiring from regular jobs, and then
trying community.
What’s going on? I think there
are a number of things.
Boomerang Hippies
Interest in intentional
communities has ebbed and flowed over the entire history of the US. While we
are currently riding a long wave that started around 1990 (and featured a
secondary uptick in 2005-07), the prior boom to the current one was 1965-75:
the Hippies Era. In fact, many of the inspirational and best-known US communities
today started in that decade—notably Alpha Farm, Ananda, Camphill Kimberton, East
Wind, The Farm, Heathcote, Lama Foundation, Love Family, Madison Community
Cooperative, Magic, Miccosukee Land Co-op, Occidental Arts & Ecology, Prag
House, Rowe Camp, Sandhill Farm, Shannon Farm, Twin Oaks, and We’Moon Land.
Born in that decade of hope and chaos, they survived the lull of 1975-1990 to
become mother trees for many of the seedlings that sprouted in the next warm
spell and are flourishing today.
The reason I’m highlighting this
era is that the people experimenting with cooperative living then were mainly Baby Boomers when they were four or five decades younger. I think
one explanation for the greater interest in community among gray hairs today is
that there are a number of latent Hippies who didn’t scratch that itch back
when Janis Joplin and the Grateful Dead were performing live at Fillmore West.
This is a large age cohort, many of whom believe they were young adults at a
special time in history. Have you ever listened to commercials for Oldies radio
stations? (Go ahead and embarrass your kids, turn up the volume!)
Young men moved to Canada to
avoid conscription into an unpopular war; people were questioning whether
father really did know best; feminism
and anti-racism were on the front burner (the crock pot cooking from which eventually
led to Democrats choosing between a black man and a white woman for their
Presidential candidate in 2008—something that was very hard to imagine in 1972,
when a thoughtful George McGovern was getting crushed by Tricky Dick’s
reelection juggernaut).
There was widespread
experimentation with sexual mores and recreational drugs, and suburbia was assailed
as a cultural wasteland. Those were exciting times and some of us didn’t get it
out of our systems merely by following Timothy Leary’s advice to turn on, tune
in, and drop out. Many who came of age in 1965-75 went on to lead relatively
normal lives, but we didn’t necessarily forget those days of foment and what
if…
Golden Girls & Silver (Haired) Boys
It’s pretty clear today that
the nuclear family is simply not able to provide a decent quality of life for
seniors unless they’re very well off. Kids are expected to leave home and not
necessarily return to care for aging parents. In this bleak environment, seniors
are increasingly thinking about options for aging in place, where there’s
familiarity, dignity, neighbors who know you, and meaningful ways to
contribute.
For the most part, this translates
to some form of group living. Remember Golden
Girls, the critically acclaimed comedy series that aired 1985-92? The
premise was four older women figuring out how to make their latter years more
vital, more fun, more affordable, and less isolating by living together—instead
of alone or in a senior ghetto. They were a little ahead of their time, but not
by much. While there are plenty of examples of people today (not just older
folks) living together in informal enclaves of unrelated adults, the logical
next step is intentional community, with full-spectrum demographics.
In many ways,
intergenerational communities harken back to traditional extended families— the
very thing we left behind when going nuclear. If you think of intentional
communities as families of friends, there you are. To be sure, in recreating
neighborhoods with benefits, participants are emphatically not yearning for the stultifying hierarchy and limited
opportunities of yesteryear (think education, career, and partners picked out by Aunt Gertrude and Uncle Otto). They’re
looking for connection, support, and context.
Information Age
It’s probably not a
coincidence that the current wave of interest in community living grew
simultaneously with easy access to the Internet and the explosion of inexpensive
options in electronic communications. It’s now much easier to find out what’s out there and to learn from the
experiences of others, greatly enhancing the chances of avoiding others'
mistakes, or locating high-quality help when you don’t.
While community living is
still the road less traveled, there’s at least a beaten path these days, as
well as GPS and Google maps to help you navigate the road to Shangri-La.
Cohousing as the Missing Link
It happens that 1990 is also the
time when cohousing established a foothold in the US. This is significant both
because cohousing is the form of intentional community that looks most like
traditional housing options (with somewhat denser, smaller houses), which makes
it more accessible to people who are ready for something different but aren’t
ready to jump off a cliff (which is what moving into community can look like to
the immediate family left behind).
Though cohousing is a growing
segment of the Communities Movement, it’s less than 10% of the total. Nonetheless,
that concept is drawing a majority of the community virgins who are north of 50.
Without the concomitant rise of cohousing it would be hard to project the
growth we’re seeing today in Boomers joining communities.
If a Boomer Rang, Would You Answer?
While mostly I see the
expansion of seniors seeking community as a solid plus, it is not without its
challenges. If a Baby Boomer applies for membership at your community how would
you reply?
Overwhelmingly, communities
are looking for members who offer the prospect of giving in proportion to what
they receive. If a senior waits until this give and take is clearly out of
balance, this will not be attractive. To be sure, there are plenty of valued
contributions that a senior can make that don’t require a strong back, a strong
checkbook, or outstanding lung capacity. Think accounting, legal, planning,
organizing, research, correspondence, management, childcare, cooking,
marketing, etc.
While community members do an
outstanding job of being there for each other in time of need, it’s not very
appealing if the prospective member presents as someone needy right off the
bat.
If it’s early in the group’s life
(say less than 20 years old) and it was started mostly by younger adults, then
there won’t be many older folks in residence yet and seniors will be welcome as
a way to help normalize the age distribution. (It was true for me joining 17-year-old
Dancing Rabbit last year. In a group of 50+ adults, I was one of a small
handful of people over 60 and the welcome mat was out.) However, that’s not
usually how it works. Mostly people want to join groups in which peers are
already present. If you’re an older person attracted to a group in which seniors
are already well represented, there may be nervousness in your would-be home about
becoming too top heavy (it won’t work to have 70% of the population in
wheelchairs).
And nobody wants that.
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