The
Children's Story Project | Adventure
Game Project | Film Project
On Wings of a Dream: Model Community and Resource
Center
The long-term vision of the organization is to create a highly
self-sufficient community as a model and resource center for
others who want to explore harmonious ways of living. The community
will have five primary focuses: 1) care for and education of
the children; 2) food production; 3) architectural design for
energy and resource efficiency with an emphasis on aesthetic
beauty; 4) healing and transformational services, and 5) consulting,
communications and external project funding. The objective is
to provide livelihoods for community members through these five
focus areas.
People from all walks of life would come to this community not
only to explore the idea of cooperative living, but to take part
in a series of experiences which would open them up to their
creative potential by reconnecting them to a part of themselves
that longs to dream and to celebrate. Intuitive knowing and a
sense of balance within our environment has been conditioned
out of many of us, or at least significantly repressed. How many
of us are even the least bit aware of what our own bodies are
trying to communicate to us through discomfort or illness? We
have been taught not to pay attention—take a pill and it
will go away, rather than exploring where our body is telling
us we are out of balance. Similarly we are taught not to pay
too much attention to the environmental imbalances that speak
to us of a system in distress. If the water is not healthy to
drink, we are sold water filters rather than being asked to look
at how we are contributing to the situation.
The objective of the experiences people would go through in
this community is to get them back into their bodies, so to speak,
to enliven their senses and empower them to be acutely aware
of how they are interacting with everything going on inside of
and around them. Visitors would follow a program that included
some or all of the following: 1) dream work and journaling; 2)
body movement including five-rhythms, ecstatic or freeform dance,
Tai Chi, yoga, etc.; 3) music workshops, i.e., drumming, singing,
toning, etc., 4) communication workshops, i.e., consensus or
team building, effective dialoging, mediation; and 5) solo or
guided wilderness quests. Body work or healing modalities geared
toward accelerated release of emotional and physical blocks would
also be available upon request, but would not be required.
During the course of a day, visitors would have free time to
spend with members of the community whose function they were
particularly interested in. For example, if someone’s profession
was as an educator they might be interested in observing how
that function happened in the community.
At the end of a day, people might gather around a fire to the
sound of drumming to hear the storyteller weave a tale of who
we are and where we have come from. Then the group would begin
to develop their own story of where they want to go. By creating
one’s own dream, the chances of maintaining the commitment
to follow through are greatly increased.
The emphasis of the community experience would be to empower
people to start from wherever they are to create a more satisfying
life. Although the community itself would serve as one model,
it is only that. This would not be presented as the only way
to live sustainably, since it will simply not be within the reach
of some of the people who come as participants. Ideally, funds
will be raised to enable people from a range of social situations
to come and participate and to have access to the help they need
to actualize their dreams. For example, inner-city youth who
are interested in taking their energy for organizing gangs and
directing it another way can apply for scholarships. Once they
have developed a plan or vision for how they want to enhance
the communities from which they have come, staff members would
be available as consultants to assist with the development of
plans or to guide them to the resources they will need. It is
even possible that some type of foundation could be set up as
a part of the community that would provide funds for start-up
projects on a limited basis.
Community Core Centers
Urban or suburban communities can also be enliven and transformed
with the introduction of a community core center. Again, the
On Wings of a Dream resource center would provide consulting
services to guide people through the process of designing centers
in their existing neighborhoods for the purpose of reestablishing
and deepening their joyful engagement with one another. These
centers would incorporate nodes that catered to the needs and
interests of the members of that particular community. Existing
buildings can be adapted for this purpose. In new developments,
or where vacant lots exist, earth-friendly, energy-smart centers
can be built. Following are some of the components that might
make sense:
A type of “general store” that would be a food co-op,
carrying locally grown organic foods and also hand-crafted goods.
An important aspect would also be to have a type of café or
gathering space for socializing. Having live music or open-mike
events further attracts people to hang out and interact, as well
as creating venues for artistic expression.
A shared garden, either a community food garden or just as a
beautiful space to reflect upon.
A business resource center, particularly for people who have
home-based businesses who would benefit from convenient access
to equipment or services such as shipping. These can be relatively
small and still serve the needs of the immediate community.
A community room for gathering to play music or have performances,
meetings, classes such as yoga, dance, or celebrations or various
kinds.
In artisan communities there may be a desire for a ceramics studio
or a workshop that people wouldn’t necessarily have room
to incorporate in their personal space, but would enjoy sharing
with others.
There might also be a desire for a few spa type rooms with hot
tubs and space for services like massage or body work.
There could be spaces for after school programs with the elders
of the community being available for tutoring, storytelling,
or childcare.
Basically, members designing the center would want to think
in terms of what would draw them into the community space with
others, feel nurturing, and make their life easier and more joyous.
When I think about these spaces I know that beauty draws me
in, not just functionality. I suppose this would be the Feng
Shui aspect of the design, or what encourages energy to flow
there. Buckminster Fuller captured it when he said: “When
I am working on a problem I never think about beauty. I only
think about how to solve the problem. But when I have finished,
if the solution is not beautiful, I know it is wrong.”
The garden aspect of the core center seems key. Personally,
I like the idea of rooms or spaces that are built out around
a beautiful hub—a garden that people can even walk into
and sit in. Hot tub rooms could be situated to look onto the
garden in areas that would have privacy. The café or other
socializing spaces would also be enhanced by the garden. Additionally,
there could be two garden spaces, one a community garden for
growing food, the other aesthetic.
These centers would be supported financially both by membership
fees from the community members, similar to homeowner’s
association dues, and revenues generated different aspects like
the business center, café, or healing services. There
could also be some initiatives put forward with local governments
to give financial incentives for these centers since they would
increase the health and well-being of their citizenry. This isn’t
out of the question, since this is a common practice with large-scale
development.
The
Children's Story Project | Adventure
Game Project | Film Project
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