Forum Activity for @derek-a-peterson

Derek A Peterson
@derek-a-peterson
07/16/21 09:12:41AM
51 posts

Books, Websites, Social Networking Sites that give insights and/or advice on increasing capacity and connection in rural areas.


ABCD and Rural Communities

Pod Cast - https://www.peoplesworld.org/article/to-see-each-other-peoples-action-podcast-challenges-rural-americas-stereotypes/

For decades, progressive and even leftist, organizers have ignored small town, rural and “red” areas. They have given them up, and their people, too, as lost causes, those too far gone, backwards, politically insignificant—the “deplorables,” one might say. This has been the trend for nearly 70 years in the post-World War II U.S. Organizers have abandoned areas where, generations ago, some of their strongest supporters led powerful movements.

A new podcast from People’s Action addresses this issue head-on.

Derek A Peterson
@derek-a-peterson
07/10/21 09:12:58AM
51 posts

Rural life in literature


ABCD and Rural Communities

While not in literature, I found this YouTube video heart warming this morning... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVZLbtU-rVE

Decluttering rural life...

Minimalism - A new Journey Extreme Declutter of my small Village room : A rural school teacher's mini room makeover - Slow living rural minimalism - cottagecore -journey to minimalism - massive declutter - simple living on a farm- room makeover on a budget - extreme minimalism A School Teacher's Mini Room Makeover : Massive Declutter - Rural Minimalism | Slow Living #12

Derek A Peterson
@derek-a-peterson
07/09/21 01:49:46PM
51 posts

Books, Websites, Social Networking Sites that give insights and/or advice on increasing capacity and connection in rural areas.


ABCD and Rural Communities

Some hopeful news...

After generations of disinvestment, rural America might be the most innovative place in the U.S.



Rural leaders, governments, and philanthropic funders who aren’t afraid to break with long-standing assumptions about the inevitability of rural decline can leverage the potential, talent, and innovative spirit of rural America to build the new Heartland.

https://www.kauffman.org/currents/rural-america-most-innovative-place-in-united-states/

Derek A Peterson
@derek-a-peterson
07/09/21 08:51:09AM
51 posts

Principles from ebook Conversation


ABCD and Rural Communities

The Positive Principle - In my experience, this value/inclination/belief is the foundation for transformation. We all don't need to be on a constant, deficit-based, plan of improvement, that demands that we shore up our weaknesses (our FEATURES). That is exhausting, and doesn't allow us the growthful energy to thrive.

Derek A Peterson
@derek-a-peterson
07/09/21 08:46:55AM
51 posts

Principles from ebook Conversation


ABCD and Rural Communities

The Appreciative Inquiry folks also have some effective principles. https://www.centerforappreciativeinquiry.net/more-on-ai/principles-of-appreciative-inquiry/

CORE APPRECIATIVE INQUIRY PRINCIPLES


The Core Principles of Appreciative Inquiry, which describe the basic tenets of the underlying AI philosophy, were developed in the early 1990’s by David Cooperrider and Suresh Srivastva (Cooperrider’s advisor at Case Western Reserve University). The five original principles are: Constructionist, Simultaneity, Anticipatory, Poetic, and Positive.

The Constructionist Principle:


Words Create Worlds

Reality, as we know it, is a subjective vs. objective state and is socially created through language and conversations.

The Simultaneity Principle:


Inquiry Creates Change

Inquiry is an intervention. The moment we ask a question, we begin to create a change. “The questions we ask are fateful.”

The Poetic Principle:


We Can Choose What We Study

Teams and organizations, like open books, are endless sources of study and learning. What we choose to study makes a difference. It describes – even creates – the world as we know it.

The Anticipatory Principle:


Image Inspires Action

Human systems move in the direction of their images of the future. The more positive and hopeful the image of the future, the more positive the present-day action.

The Positive Principle:


Positive Questions Lead to Positive Change

Momentum for [small or] large-scale change requires large amounts of positive affect and social bonding. This momentum is best generated through positive questions that amplify the positive core.1

EMERGENT APPRECIATIVE INQUIRY PRINCIPLES


Additional principles that have surfaced throughout the years that are based on, or constructed from, the five original core Ai principles. They are:

The Wholeness Principle:


Wholeness Brings Out the Best

Wholeness brings out the best in people and organizations. Bringing all stakeholders together in large group forums stimulates creativity and builds collective capacity.

The Enactment Principle:


Acting ‘As If” is Self-Fulfilling

To really make a change, we must “be the change we want to see.” Positive change occurs when the process used to create the change is a living model of the ideal future.

The Free Choice Principle:


Free Choice Liberates Power

People perform better and are more committed when they have the freedom to choose how and what they contribute. Free choice stimulates organizational excellence and positive change.2

The Narrative Principle:


Stories are Transformative

We construct stories about our lives (personal and professional) and live into them.3

The Awareness Principle:


Be Conscious of Underlying Assumptions.

Understanding and being aware of our underlying assumptions are important to developing and cultivating good relationships. Practicing cycles of action and reflection can build one’s self-awareness.4

Derek A Peterson
@derek-a-peterson
07/09/21 08:44:16AM
51 posts

Rural life in literature


ABCD and Rural Communities

[quote="Angie K"]

This reminds me of our daughter and her husband who both grew up in the rural community and thought the city life would be MUCH better.  They couldn't wait to get out of here.  They lived in a suburb of Indianapolis. Then they lived in a suburb of Columbus, OH.  Then a suburb of Denver, CO.  Back to Indiana to a city center near Indianapolis again.  Now they are back in the rural community and can't figure out why they ever left.  They don't regret their adventures, but they never found home to be so much a home as the rural community where you can see the stars and hear the crickets at night.

[/quote]

I wonder about my own journey - I NEVER thought that I'd end up, back on this farm. Perhaps some of us became more attached to HOME when we were young? Perhaps some of us are hard-wired for the mysteries of rural life? I really do wonder.

I do know that it is easier to be here, on the farm, and NOT TO HAVE TO WORK the farm. ;-)

Derek A Peterson
@derek-a-peterson
07/09/21 08:40:39AM
51 posts

Urban Rural Divide


ABCD and Rural Communities

Good morning Angie, Yes, the Rural-Property-Report-5.4.20.pdf. (The file was too large 3.6 MB to attach.)

Derek A Peterson
@derek-a-peterson
07/08/21 11:36:21AM
51 posts

What does it mean to be Rural?


ABCD and Rural Communities

https://www.dailygood.org/story/2758/returning-to-the-village-hang-mai-and-friends/

For those of us who live in urban areas, what does returning to a life in the village really mean? What is the impulse that moves folks to reverse the direction of migration of their recent ancestors to the city? What can living on the land, growing your own food, and using your hands to make clothing and shelter offer souls hungering for a real connection to the Earth? Here, Hang Mai, a Vietnamese natural farmer and social entrepreneur, who together with her partner Chau Duong mid-wifes those wanting to make this transition to the village, reflects on this question.

I belong to the baby-boomer generation in Vietnam after the end of the war in 1975. My generation experienced the difficult life in the city after the war. We did not have enough food, clothing, or even clean water. After school, all of us children were involved in housework like standing in line to collect water, carrying water home by foot or by a wagon. We all had to find a way to fetch enough water for our family. Once I asked my dad: “If the war happens again, and we don't have water and electricity, what shall we do?” He said: “Go back to the village.”

So I began to understand that in the war time people can go back to the village or go to the forest. Only in the village or in the forest can we find food and shelter. In times of peace, people destroy the forest and leave the village to join the city. Like many of my peers, I only came back to the village during summer breaks, and we all wanted to stay in the city. The movement was one direction: from the village to the city, from the smaller city to the bigger one, and from the bigger city to the mega city. The village gradually became empty.

However, in recent years, in Vietnam, I have seen an upstream flow from the city back to the village. It is a small flow, but persistently runs along the side of the mainstream rural-urban migration. When I look at this upstream flow, I can categorize 5 groups:

Group 1: Those who want to farm as a form of therapy
Group 2: Those who want to farm as a leisure activity
Group 3: Those who farm as a livelihood
Group 4: Those who choose farming as a way of living and of self-sufficiency
Group 5: Those who choose farming as a way of living and make surplus to sell

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