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Disclaimer: I am drunk.
All my family are from small towns that are now nearly dead -- at this point they're filled with drug addicts, despair, and people too old to move anywhere else, and little in between. I remember when these places were vital, respirating organisms, teeming with life of all kinds.
It's insane to me how far we are from what we need to flourish. The shape of society, the shape of culture, is so distorted from the shape that can hold life without mortally wounding it.
It's been interesting, and hopeful, to see people in my orbit start to think about how maybe some of what we have can be re-imagined. The neighborhoods where none of the residents know each other; towns where the only visible form of life is cars; work paradigms where you defer anything sweet in life for some imaginary future decades away, and in the meantime grind in service of that other person who will hopefully one day come into existence.
The most recurring lesson for me, and the biggest, is that when you put something into the world, reality can cohere around it. It has been remarkable, the times I've managed to do this. A whole host of invisible allies solidifies from the mist like de-cloaking predators.
The bad news is that things are so fucked. The good news is that remarkably quickly after you staunch the bleeding, the flesh starts to knit.
Please keep the booze and words flowing... this was a pleasure to read! 👍 ⚡
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I agree on the dying small towns.
When I was younger, in the mid 80's, I visited family members for months at a time, in a small town in Europe. The visits were a revelation from my point of view (I grew up in a very car-dependent suburb where people didn't really know each other).
People stopped by the house regularly, no appointment, to say hello. I went shopping with my aunt many mornings, we went separately to the butcher, baker, a greengrocer, and a small grocery. The sidewalks were packed with other people doing the same, and people were greeting each other all the time. Lots of visiting happened.
I visited this same town again about 4 years ago. Things have changed pretty radically for the worse. Now, at around the same time of day where previously the sidewalks would be busy with pedestrians, doing errands and shopping, there was almost nobody. The buildings are the same, it's the people and community that are different.
And this is definitely not one of the worst small towns ("filled with drug addicts, despair, and people too old to move anywhere else, and little in between"). This was still an economically viable place, just now much less social, much less community.
Yes, things are fucked. I am interested in how the rebuilding can start to happen. And how I can help initiate.
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