|
Stories
|
|
| Service
Adventure team including the Chisholms. |
Taking community north: Group
living in Alaska
Carrie Lehman Chisholm '99 spent her childhood
in Paoli, Ind., in an intentional community, even
though she did not know it at the time. During college,
both she and her husband-to-be, Jeff '00, took
part in Goshen College's small group houses.
But neither experience completely prepared them for
the community living they currently experience as
unit leaders for Mennonite Mission Network Service
Adventure house full of teens and young adults in
Anchorage, Alaska.
Carrie grew up surrounded by physician friends. Her
parents, Eric Lehman '72 and Louise O'Connell,
were part of a group of Indianapolis doctors that
moved together to Paoli and built houses that surrounded
a shared yard space.
"Growing up I didn't really realize it
was a community. I just thought we lived close together
and shared things sometimes," Carrie said. The
difference between the neighborhood of her youth,
the communities at school and the Chisholms'
current arrangement is choice.
"With small group housing in college, I picked
my friends who I wanted to live with, so we all got
along for the most part," Carrie said. "Here
I don't get along with all of them all the time.
You don't have to like them, but you have to
live with them."
Added Jeff, "You take seven people from seven
different places in the world and say, OK, do
it.' It's like MTV's Real World,'
except in that program they try to find personalities
that will clash and in this program we seek to find
people who will live by the guidelines," Jeff
said.
Jeff knows how those teens feel when they are tossed
into a group of strangers from different origins.
He spent his senior year of high school studying in
Sweden, where friends and acquaintances challenged
his beliefs and the way he hoped to live his life.
"In them questioning me and in my dialogue defending
my own position, I think I became anchored. I also
learned from them a new perspective that happens when
you get out of a closed community," Jeff said.
Service Adventure, he added, can be similar. "This
is an opportunity for people to discover their own
faith and become their own people," Jeff said.
"It creates a place where people can be challenged."
Added Carrie, "They learn what they believe,
and not just what their parents believe. They gain
self-confidence. They can live on their own. They
are more focused, know themselves better.
Some
people came away switching their whole outlook on
what they want to do. One girl came up after hanging
out with the wrong crowd in high school. She wanted
to get away and refocus. She ended up staying here
after the term was over so she wouldn't have
the tendencies to go back with her old crowd."
Within the unit, Carrie and Jeff are parents, best
friends, spiritual leaders and mediators, to some
extent. They meet individually with each person in
the group and help coordinate learning components,
weekly worship and other household necessities, but
the group participants have ultimate responsibility
for the health of the unit. Still, the Chisholms are
the epoxy that holds everything together, acting as
facilitators when problems arise - cleaning,
doing dishes, leisure-time activities, personality
clashes, the house budget, etc. - and help group
members solve their own disputes instead of offering
easy answers.
"How
someone adjusts to this (type of living) in a large
part has to do with what kind of communities they've
lived in in the past," Jeff said. "Those
who are individualistic learn that they don't
get everything they want.
A lot of people may
come in with a very authoritative background from
their parents and want to tell others what to do.
We won't be a third party in triangulation in
dealing with their issues, but we will work with them
in dealing with reconciliation."
Jeff's peace studies minor and Carrie's
experience teaching at an area preschool/kindergarten
has helped them guide the 2001 group through some
rough spots that culminated in an eight-hour meeting
over two days where group members wrote problems anonymously
on slips of paper which were pulled from a hat and
discussed until they could be resolved.
"When you put yourself in with a bunch of people
who will let you know when you're doing something
wrong, you become very in tune with your own tendencies,"
Jeff said. "They'll let you know when you've
crossed some boundaries or are being too critical
or need to grow in a new way. It's a highlighter
for me as far as growth areas."
The Chisholms examined other voluntary service group
living programs, but wanted a place where they could
live out their faith while enjoying the early stages
of marriage.
Jeff said, "The idealism that a lot of people
come out of college with, I wanted to put into action
rather than being trapped into making the bucks that
a lot of people get into. (At Goshen) we were studying
about simplicity - how do we go about doing service
or living without using so many resources? Community
gives a great opportunity for doing that type of thing."
Service Adventure promised a chance for simple living
in community with structure and some couple-specific
privacy built in. So, after a summer at Amigo Centre
in Sturgis, Mich., spent working and discerning God's
will for their lives, they went to the Mission Network
in 2000. Service Adventure, with its emphasis on community
as well as simple living, seemed to fit.
"How do I look at my life in relationship to
Christ's message?" Jeff said. "Living
simply does not always mean having the cheapest things
around you. And it gives you another value besides
just work," he said. "Service teaches so
much about doing things and never getting anything
in return. Somebody might notice that you cleaned
up the counters after everyone took off for work,
but if you're waiting around for the repayment
or the thanks, it's not really service."
Besides the community within the unit, Anchorage
also features a small, tight-knit and ultrasupportive
group of Mennonites at Prince of Peace Mennonite Church
- as well as a significant military presence
due to several bases in the area. In his work as an
agency nurse, Jeff frequently is sent to Elmendorf
Air Force Base, where he is asked regularly why he
has not yet enlisted.
"I have to be honest and say what I believe
or that I don't think that's where Christ
is leading me," Jeff said. The teens in the Service
Adventure unit often receive the same types of questions
and are forced to explain their own ideas about faith,
war and peace. Many of those conversations are discussed
and reinforced in group conversations.
But living, and working as leaders, in a group setting
does have disadvantages.
"You never go home from work. I make a joke
sometimes when I'm working as a nurse that this
is my break," Jeff said. "There are those
communities that are so close that there is no privacy.
You can be socialized by your group so much
that you don't give yourself the time you need."
Still, the Chisholms said the Service Adventure model
of community teaches servant leadership in comparison
to the values of the world. "When you look at
communities this close, in comparison to this culture
and the emphasis it places on individualism, very
few survive," Jeff said. "It takes a lot
of give and a lot of willingness not to take."
Ryan Miller is a writer at Goshen
College in Goshen, Ind.
|