In many spiritual circles, it is popular to talk about
gratitude. Gratitude encompasses much
more than a quickie “thank you.” It
implies a much deeper state of mind, one that practitioners realize will
position you to receive even greater abundance.
Gratitude – together with all the volumes that have been
written about it – is very much an ingredient of the gift economy. A very beautiful ingredient, which enriches
our hearts and spirits, at the same time as it potentially invites more
substantial and tangible gifts.
Some communities are beginning to set up "gift circles" -- a collection
of people who want to engage in gifting practices on a regular basis.
But you don't need to wait for an official gift circle. Here's how you
can get gift economy concepts rolling right now.
In cultivating the gift economy, one of the simplest,
baseline starting points is appreciation. Letting people know you noticed. Thanking them, yes, but even moreso, giving
them credit, and helping build their reputation as a giver within the
community-at-large. “John designed the
community garden.” “Karen arranged for
the contribution of native plants.”
“Deno very generously gives us discounts.” We’re not talking about brass plaques here,
capitalist markers of bragging rights and Mine.
Rather, we’re talking about verbal and emotional appreciation – social
credit. It doesn’t cost you anything to
give people credit. In fact it makes
your heart feel good. And it builds a
whole lot in community goodwill.
By cataloging the
benefits, the recipient -- and any listeners -- come to realize the
magnitude of how much has been achieved.
We begin to acknowledge the Flow.
I wrote about a gift transaction in a previous essay: “My friend feels
gratitude for use of the tool; feelings of goodwill flow from others who heard
about the transaction; people now know a sawzall is available within the
neighborhood; the community garden tanks are now operational; and public
education continues.” In conventional
society we don’t usually say it like this.
We stop at “John borrowed my sawzall.”
And in that curt telling, we have cut ourselves off from the beauty of
the full chain of events.
In Simple Abundance,
a best-seller in the 1990s, Sarah ban Breathnach encouraged us to keep a
gratitude journal. Each night before you
go to sleep, write down five things you are grateful for. It’s a great personal exercise and can create
great personal transformation. It can
change your outlook completely.
But the gratitude journal exercise remains fairly personal. As a community-builder, you need to go an
extra step: do it publicly. Get out there and tell people. Let people know you noticed the gift
they gave. Each and every day. It becomes the “gratitude journal” on a
community-scale. You’ll feel great, and
they’ll feel great. Together you’ll
begin to realize how much goodness – and potential extra goodness – exists
around your community.
Another place we can begin is by learning to be a better recipient.
(disclosure: This would be the “do as I say and not as I do” portion of
this essay, because personally I’m terrible at it.) A good recipient doesn’t reject a gift
offered, not even with a polite decline “that’s okay” or a mannerly “oh, you
shouldn’t have!” Instead, he makes it
comfortable and easy for the donor to give.
A good recipient doesn’t abuse the system by taking more than his fair
share. And at the same time he
understands that for the system to work, everyone has to receive as well as
give. Become someone whom people enjoy
giving to.
The first step toward a sustainable
sense of success is taking pride in the value of our contributions to others
rather than taking pride in the value of our possessions. --Gifford Pinchot http://www.context.org/iclib/ic41/pinchotg/
Honor people for what they give, rather than for what they
have. We create and reinforce social
norms by what we applaud. If you ooh and ahh over the neighbor’s new
sportscar or your friend’s new designer dress, you’re applauding the capitalist
retained-earnings lifestyle. If instead
you highlight the volunteer hours he has given to the community and acknowledge
her for the carrot cake recipe she shared, you help reinforce the new paradigm
within your circle of friends.
As we cultivate gifting as a community-building technique, facilitating the gifts of others
becomes important. You can help a donor
match up with a recipient, or vice versa.
You know someone with rooted raspberry vine cuttings, and you know
someone who is building a garden – help them find each other. This can be done in a formalized way, through
time banks and LETSystems, or gifting circles.
But you don’t need to wait for such circles – just start listening. People tell you what they need – it spills
over into conversation. What makes this
practice different is, you pick up on those little indicators and match them
with other people. Or, you start asking
around: “Do you know anyone who wants to
grow raspberries? A friend of mine has …”
Help others to understand
the concept of a gifting culture.
That it can become far more than just giving stuff to each other. A gift culture weaves new and different
connections between people. It brings a
different perspective on values and what is valuable within the society. It embodies a concept of Flow -- which in
many ways is the antithesis of “capital”.
When we operate from within these new perspectives, distribution begins
to change. Different people become
standouts within society than within the old order.
- How to start a gift circle http://opencollaboration.wordpress.com/2009/11/28/gift-circle-faq/
- Wonderful video about gifting in Mali http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ELNsQdSMOc
- “The Gift,” Charles Eisenstein video, Amsterday Sept 2009 http://youtu.be/cS07gM74tww
- The Gift, by Lewis Hyde (1979), particularly Part I : “A Theory of Gifts”
- Sacred Economics, by Charles Eisenstein
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