How does RFS work?
Community members (hosts) submit proposals to RFS describing an upcoming project, craft, event, etc. RFS posts the projects on the website where other community members (potential participants) can view the event descriptions. Those wanting to participate can then e-mail the host to reserve a ‘seat’ or spot for the project. The host decides how many can participate.
Project is loosely defined and can include anything from making baked spaghetti to re-shingling a garage. Here is a list of ideas to help get your creative thoughts flowing..
Cooking a favorite meal Tuning a guitar Creating a stone path in a garden Creating a garden Hemming garments Performing service on a vehicle Creating a mosaic table Weaving a basket Installing a ceiling fan Painting a room
The idea is to share your skills, knowledge and talents with others in your community.
We all have talents and skills that we can share. Sometimes we take our own skills for granted… having done something to the point that the skill or process becomes almost involuntary. To someone who has never attempted the same skill, it may seem too much to even try.
The benefits of sharing our skills are many; enriching the lives of our neighbors, creating a do it yourself community, creating economic opportunity by saving on the expense of having someone else do a project, but perhaps one of the greatest benefits is the creation of bond within a community through these shared experiences.
While visiting a friend on a recent trip to Vermont, I was taken aback by the strength and closeness of the community in which she lived. The postman let himself in the front door and placed the mail on the radiator. In the late evening, a policeman knocked on the door and reminded us to move our car before morning as to avoid getting a parking ticket. Our communities are only as close as we allow them to be. I’m not advocating leaving your front door unlocked, but I do hope that we will all consider our relationships with our neighbors and do what we can to strengthen our communities.
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