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	<title>moolidoo &#187; gift economy</title>
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		<title>37 Ways to Join the Gift Economy</title>
		<link>http://blog.moolidoo.com/37-ways-to-join-the-gift-economy/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.moolidoo.com/37-ways-to-join-the-gift-economy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Dec 2008 16:18:40 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[gift economy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moolidoo.com/?p=279</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<script type='text/javascript' src='http://blog.moolidoo.com:80/wp-content/plugins/buzzwords/js/prototype.js'></script>
        <script type='text/javascript' src='http://blog.moolidoo.com:80/wp-content/plugins/buzzwords/js/prototip.js'></script>by Beverly Feldman and Charles Gray http://www.yesmagazine.org/ You don&#8217;t have to participate in a local currency or service exchange to be part of the cooperative gift economy. Any time you do a favor for a family member, neighbor, colleague, or stranger you&#8217;re part of it. Here are some ways you can spend time in the [...]]]></description>
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        <script type='text/javascript' src='http://blog.moolidoo.com:80/wp-content/plugins/buzzwords/js/prototip.js'></script><p><I>by Beverly Feldman and Charles Gray<br />
<a href="http://www.yesmagazine.org/article.asp?ID=87915">http://www.yesmagazine.org/</a></i></p>
<p>You don&#8217;t have to participate in a local currency or service exchange to be part of the cooperative gift economy. Any time you do a favor for a family member, neighbor, colleague, or stranger you&#8217;re part of it. Here are some ways you can spend time in the gift economy, where you&#8217;ll find fun, freedom, and connection.</p>
<p>1. Start a dinner co-op. Rotate among the homes of friends and neighbors for weekly or monthly potlucks.</p>
<p>2. Help a local farmer with the harvest in exchange for some of the crop.</p>
<p>3. Put up a traveler.</p>
<p>4. Hold twice-yearly sport supply exchanges so kids can acquire new skis and baseball mitts and everyone can try out a new sport.</p>
<p>5. Harvest wild or unwanted fruits and vegetables.</p>
<p>6. Grow your own, and give some of it away.</p>
<p>7. Share seeds and clippings from your garden &#8211; especially native and &#8220;heritage&#8221; species. Hold an annual plant exchange.</p>
<p>8. Organize a &#8220;non-consumption booth&#8221; at a farmers&#8217; market or street fair. At the Charlottetown Farmers&#8217; Market, the Environmental Chat Corner hosts discussions of environmental issues, sustainable building and landscaping, ecotourism, and community development.</p>
<p>9. Buy food or supplies in bulk and share with friends.</p>
<p>10. Form a home-repair team to fix your own place and others&#8217;.</p>
<p>11. Request help of someone usually regarded as needy.</p>
<p>12. Create your own rainy-day fund with your friends. One group pooled $1,000 each, which they lent to any in the group who needed it. The fund helped members survive a lost job, a stolen bicycle, and a broken arm.</p>
<p>13. Make space available to other people to grow food on your land.</p>
<p>14. Borrow garden space from someone who has extra land; give them,or a food bank, some of the produce.</p>
<p>15. Give co-workers neck and shoulder massages.</p>
<p>16. Offer to mentor a young person.</p>
<p>17. Ask a 12-year-old to show you how to get onto the Worldwide Web.</p>
<p>18. Throw a block party.</p>
<p>19. Show up at a soup kitchen and ask for volunteer help.</p>
<p>20. Rent out extra space to people needing a place to sleep, work, or just to get away, or exchange the space for yard work or baby-sitting.</p>
<p>21. Convert a duplex, apartment building, old nursing home, or seminary into a cohousing community.</p>
<p>22. Convert a barn or warehouse into a space for artists and start-up businesses.</p>
<p>23. Create a space for neighbors to keep and share infrequently used tools and extra garden supplies.</p>
<p>24. Start a baby-sitting or child care co-op.</p>
<p>25. Hold a monthly clean-up of a beach, park, roadway, river bank; get coffee houses to donate goodies.</p>
<p>26. Plant trees. Get the city to select and donate them.</p>
<p>27. Find a person on each block who will help neighbors get assistance when needed &#8211; from other neighbors when possible.</p>
<p>28. Share a car.</p>
<p>29. Or start a car co-op with various vehicles for different uses. Share expenses based on mileage.</p>
<p>30. Paint donated bicycles and place them in downtown areas with signs indicating they&#8217;re for anyone to use.</p>
<p>31. Become a foster parent, a &#8216;big brother&#8217; or &#8216;big sister.&#8217; Notice the ways everyone benefits!</p>
<p>32. Exchange lessons, for example, cooking for carpentry.</p>
<p>33. Teach a skill, like carpentry, and ask your students to donate time to others.</p>
<p>34. Adopt a stream or a highway to restore, maintain, and beautify.</p>
<p>35. Work with your neighbors to develop a vision for your neighborhood&#8217;s future.</p>
<p>36. Hold talent shows. Give kids lots of recognition, and everyone opportunity to discover their hidden talents.</p>
<p><b>37. Create your own money. Use ideas from YES! to start a community currency or skills exchange.</B></p>
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