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Communal housing is coming of age

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Filed: Country: Philippines
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Seniors are beginning to see the advantages of shared-living complexes.

By Maria L. La Ganga, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

GRASS VALLEY, CALIF. -- Suzanne Marriott's brave drive into the future started with a traffic jam, which gave her a lot of time to think about what she was getting herself into -- and out of.

Newly widowed and recently retired, the lanky 64-year-old was making her way to the Sierra foothills to meet a group of complete strangers that she might just spend the rest of her life with.

Left behind in the rearview mirror was a sprawling ranch house in Castro Valley, near Oakland, that managed to be full and empty all at once, jammed with the stuff of a long, happy marriage but drained of life since the death of her husband, Michael, from multiple sclerosis six months before.

For decades, the couple, avid backpackers and mountain bikers, had wandered the world together. Now she was striking out on her own, placing big bets on the rest of her life and on a nascent movement called senior cohousing.

Marriott was betting that she could join a group of like-minded people -- all relatively healthy and not that old -- and together they could build a community that would be something between commune and condo complex.

She was wagering that they could all live there to the end without burdening family members or enduring life in an institution picked by somebody else. And she hoped they would have fun in the process.

So as Marriott navigated Interstate 80 toward her fellow pioneers in late-life living, she was more curious than terrified.

"I wanted to see if there was a way to make more meaning in my life now that Michael was gone," she said. "We'd been together 30 years. I thought I was being led to something that would be meaningful and be a way to move forward."

In the 18 months since she hit the highway, Marriott and her future neighbors have done something only a few groups of forward-thinking seniors in America have accomplished.

Along with the architects who imported the idea of cohousing from Denmark 20 years ago, they have designed their 30-unit complex from the ground up, complete with an elaborate common house where they plan to dine together several nights each week.

They've attended scores of meetings, made thousands of decisions -- all by consensus -- buried one beloved member and welcomed others. They have pledged to "support each other through rough times, whether physical, emotional and/or spiritual." They have learned how to listen and how to disagree.

And if all goes according to the meticulous planning of the 16 women and four men who have so far signed on, Wolf Creek Lodge will break ground in spring here in the heart of Gold Country. It will be California's second elder cohousing community and only the fourth such project nationwide; a dozen or so others are in the works.

"Many people don't have an extended family, or it's an extended dysfunctional family," Marriott said. "We'll have this close community for, well, the rest of our lives."

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/laland/200...g-in-la-an.html

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Filed: Country: Philippines
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I think they should have these for young people too. I'd move in!

They do exist. I'll see if I can find some info. I think it's a great idea for some people.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Morocco
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I think they should have these for young people too. I'd move in!

They do exist. I'll see if I can find some info. I think it's a great idea for some people.

Yeah, like lazy people.

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Filed: Country: Philippines
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I think they should have these for young people too. I'd move in!

They do exist. I'll see if I can find some info. I think it's a great idea for some people.

Yeah, like lazy people.

LOL....I'm thinking of the young people right out of high school who are working and going to school or just working - many of them move out of their parent's home into a rental share.

(edited)

Edited by Mister Fancypants
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Good idea for lazy illegals. :jest:

Citizenship

Event Date

Service Center : California Service Center

CIS Office : San Francisco CA

Date Filed : 2008-06-11

NOA Date : 2008-06-18

Bio. Appt. : 2008-07-08

Citizenship Interview

USCIS San Francisco Field Office

Wednesday, September 10,2008

Time 2:35PM

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I think they should have these for young people too. I'd move in!

They do exist. I'll see if I can find some info. I think it's a great idea for some people.

I can't imagine anything worse...

Lady, people aren't chocolates. Do you know what they are mostly? Bastards. ####### coated bastards with ####### filling. But I don't find them half as annoying as I find naive bobble-headed optimists who walk around vomiting sunshine.
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Filed: Country: Philippines
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I think they should have these for young people too. I'd move in!

They do exist. I'll see if I can find some info. I think it's a great idea for some people.

I can't imagine anything worse...

LOL....If you haven't seen it, I recommend watching An Unfinished Life with Robert Redford as a rancher in Wyoming, living in solitude with the exception of his friend, Morgan Freeman, who he takes care of after Freeman survives a bear attack.

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...and try reading "The Solace of Open Spaces" by Gretel Ehrlich.

"She began to write full time in 1978, living on a Wyoming ranch, after the death of a loved one. Her first book was The Solace of Open Spaces, published in 1984. Annie Dillard commended it. The Solace of Open Spaces is a collection of essays written by her while she was in Wyoming. describing her love for the region."

(stub from Wikipedia)

Lady, people aren't chocolates. Do you know what they are mostly? Bastards. ####### coated bastards with ####### filling. But I don't find them half as annoying as I find naive bobble-headed optimists who walk around vomiting sunshine.
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Filed: Country: Philippines
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...and try reading "The Solace of Open Spaces" by Gretel Ehrlich.

"She began to write full time in 1978, living on a Wyoming ranch, after the death of a loved one. Her first book was The Solace of Open Spaces, published in 1984. Annie Dillard commended it. The Solace of Open Spaces is a collection of essays written by her while she was in Wyoming. describing her love for the region."

(stub from Wikipedia)

I can see myself drawn to both ways of living. I've got an older brother who lives out in the middle of nowhere, in Northern Arizona, and he loves it. He says he couldn't see himself ever living in a big city.

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Russia
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No thank you!

Jeffery AND Alla.

0 kilometers physically separates us!

K-1 Visa Granted... Wednesday, 21 May 2008

Alla ARRIVED to America... Wednesday, 12 November 2008

russia_a.gif Алла и Джеффри USA_a.gif

AllaAndJeffery.PNG

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  • 2 weeks later...
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It's a good idea for people who live in high-rent areas but can't afford an apartment on their own - at least you have more autonomy if everyone has an equal share in the arrangement, better than looking on Craigslist and renting a room from someone who has the right to call all of the shots and tell you how to live because the lease is in their name.


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Filed: Country: Philippines
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It's a good idea for people who live in high-rent areas but can't afford an apartment on their own - at least you have more autonomy if everyone has an equal share in the arrangement, better than looking on Craigslist and renting a room from someone who has the right to call all of the shots and tell you how to live because the lease is in their name.

Yes. I don't know if we were the first ones to come up with the idea that families live in separate housing....as much as an inconvienence may happen with having my parents or in-laws living with us, I'd rather do that then have them in some retirement home.

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My current living situation has me about as close as I want to get to other people. My wife and I have our own living space but we share walls with 2 other 'homes' (condos).

Any more 'communal' than that and I'll have to take a pass.

Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is.

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