Things were a bit different when we returned to The Farm in 1980. The population had swelled to somewhere around 1500 people, but the infrastructure and income needed to support that many people just was not there. By the fall of 1983, the communal system collapsed under its own weight and over the next several years there was a mass exodus until only 100 adults and 150 kids remained. We were among those that stayed.
I started a small business and worked as a writer. Deborah went back to school earning a degree as a registered nurse, graduating first in her class. She also became one of the community's midwives. Our kids grew up and started their lives as adults.
In the meantime over the next several decades I got more involved in the community, serving 4 years on its membership committee, 6 years on its board of directors, and 8 years as community manager/mayor. I took on the role of public relations and interfacing with press and media.
A natural extrovert, I have always used my gift of music to provide entertainment, starting with the communal households of the 70's, but even more importantly as part of the glue to hold the community together once the communal period came to an end, performing in bands, organizing festivals and keeping alive our annual tribal reunion.
Starting around the turn of the century I began developing retreats, workshops and conferences wrapped in the various themes of community and sustainability as a way to encourage others to follow their dreams. Community provides a richness of experience that is unparalleled, deeply intertwining work and play, family and friends, joys and sorrows. It is the fabric of life, an element lost in the disconnect produced by modern society.
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In my book, "Out To Change the World, The Evolution of The Farm Community" I have tried to tell our story and history as accurately as possible to the best of my knowledge. I came to The Farm to be a part of something bigger than myself, to follow a spiritual path, to make a difference in the world.
For my second book, "The Farm Then and Now, A Model for Sustainability," I examine the building blocks of community, looking at government, earning a living, green building, health care, health and diet and the role of spiritual values. It is my hope that people young and old will be inspired to follow their dreams and maximize their potential, using community as the catalyst and a way to leverage their efforts.
Community has given me a very full life. I am honored to share The Farm's story...and my story, with you.
To learn more, please visit:
http://www.greenliferetreats.com
http://www.thefarmcommunity.com
http://www.thefarm.org
http://www.plenty.org
http://www.swantrust.org
http://www.farmmidwife.com
http://thefarmmidwives.org
http://www.midwiferyworkshops.org
Contents
Chapter 1 Prelude to the Sixties
Chapter 2 San Francisco, Monday Night Class and The Caravan
Chapter 3 Looking for Land
Chapter 4 Three Days or the Rest of Your Life
Chapter 5 Living Together
Chapter 6 The Satellite Farm
Chapter 7 Plenty: Because There Is Enough, If We Share
Chapter 8 The Vow of Poverty
Chapter 9 The Changeover
Chapter 10 The ’90s
Chapter 11 The New Farm
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