Aging Better Together

Posted on March 5, 2016 by
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34 childcare2 One of the great tragedies of our hyper-individualized society is the separation of the generations. There is so much love and wisdom lost, and so much needless suffering endured as a result of the isolation between elders, single adults, and children. This separation has been enacted so effectively that it is now seen as preferential by most people, even if they recognize the negative social consequences.

Itā€™s easy to lament the struggle of parents to raise their kids while making ends meet, or the plight of elders stuck in their homes or in facilities without adequate care or social activity, and easy to see how these problems could become solutions for each other. But when it comes down to it, people still choose isolation. And itā€™s understandable. Society is not structured to make it easy for people to come together. Intentional communities are incredible models for an intergenerational society, and embody some of the greatest hope for healing this rift.

20130405_183810To a large extent this is a problem of architecture and design. For the most part, conventional development seeks to minimize necessary interaction between neighbors. Intentional communities have the exact opposite goal in mind. Itā€™s also a problem of economics. Individualized finances are an assumption. How many married couples even share a bank account anymore? Most communities donā€™t share finances, but most do share common facilities and hold the communityā€™s land in common, and the principle of self-management means that their members have to interact in ways that most people donā€™t. This can be very challenging, but it fosters intimacy and leads to a far more satisfying life.

2002 willow hawina joy at confIt means more support. People who live in community together care about each other, look out for each other, and show up for each other. They canā€™t help it. They want to, because it gives them something, a sense of meaning and connection that you donā€™t get when you donā€™t share your life with others. You canā€™t buy this kind of support. It takes work, but itā€™s an integral benefit of living in community.

Ā 22 social age rangeWhere this becomes most powerful is between the generations. Community provides the opportunity for elders and singles to support parents, for young people to assist their elders and elders to share their wisdom, for children to have relationships with a wide variety of adults, for the young and old to care for each other and have fun together.Ā 

We all know that elder care is big issue, and many communities, especially cohousing communities, are facing this issue head on. This is why the Cohousing Association of the US is hosting Aging Better Together, a conference in Salt Lake City, UT, this May 20 – 21, and the Foundation for Intentional Community is proud to be a co-sponsor. The conference aims to bring together communities who have dealt with these issues, who are beginning to face them, and who are looking ahead at how to successfully navigate them. Thereā€™s a tremendous amount of wisdom and experience already existing in the communities movement, and a long way to go towards finding the best solutions for communities to adopt. This conference will be an important platform for coming together and finding a path forward.

 

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