Saturday, July 20, 2019

 

Invest in Getting to Know your Neighbors

How well do you know your neighbors? Can you name each of the neighbors that adjoin your property or apartment? Do you know a personal fact about each one? Do you speak to your neighbors? Turns out that less than two percent of Americans can say yes to all three of these questions.

In the meantime, our culture is becoming angrier and much less forgiving. We are more isolated. Part of the reason is that we have forgotten the art of neighboring.

It takes effort. It takes some purposeful planning. Neighboring will also take some time. But it should be a priority and the benefits are plentiful, both personally and for our community.

I am not asking that you try to be neighborly to everyone in town. However, what would our towns look like if we all made an effort to be neighborly to the people living next door? Your neighbor may be starved for a friend! On the other hand, your neighbor might have amazing skills or insights to contribute to a neighborhood.

Take time to get to know the widow next door, the single mom, the grandparents raising their grandchildren, the new family to the area. Yes, people can be challenging. We all have our own messes. However, we also need relationships and your neighbors are the perfect place to start.

Current social research is showing that many in our culture suffer from a lack of personal relationships, which leads to isolation, depression, anger and more.

Let me be clear, stalking what people are doing on Facebook is not a real relationship. In fact, there is a lot of new research showing very negative emotional impacts from being on Facebook a lot and seeing the highlights folks post from their life.

When my wife and I were young, we lived in the Meadows subdivision near the airport, south of Willard, Mo. I got talked in to being the president of our homeowners association. Then the calls started. A resident who said his neighbor’s dog barked all night and he wanted me to come tell the neighbor about the rules violation and to tell him to make his dog stop barking. Imagine with me how that problem might be better resolved if the neighbors had instead had a relationship by being neighborly.

I see the same thing with local government where residents are quick to call the city about a code violation but never consider helping a neighbor. In one example I know about, an overgrown yard was reported and cited with a ticket. It turned out the single mom living there was taking care of her terminally ill mother and the yard was the least of her concerns. Before you call the city about your neighbors two foot tall lawn have you considered checking on the neighbor and offering to help? Which action would be neighborly? Which actions would result in a strengthened relationship?

So let us get started. Plan a simple get together and invite your neighbors over. Extend an invitation to each neighbor who has a home bordering you (this includes across the street neighbors and back fence neighbors). Get acquainted and work on staying connected.

You may find that being neighborly not only blesses your heart and shows kindness to others but that it also has the power to improve our community one family relationship at a time.

You can find and download a useful “who is my neighbor” chart on the Greene County MU Extension website at http://extension.missouri.edu/greene.



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