The Porching Revolution
The quiet way that civility is healing our world, which I wrote about in USA Today
Gracious reader,
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Are we really lonely and mean?
In the pages of USA Today yesterday, I responded to an essay The Atlantic, "How America Got Mean," by New York Times columnist David Brooks.
There, Brooks argues that our fellow citizens are both overwhelmingly sad and angry − to the point that being rude and downright mean to one another is the everyday norm.
Brooks writes: "We’re enmeshed in some sort of emotional, relational, and spiritual crisis, and it undergirds our political dysfunction and the general crisis of our democracy."
It's an important and interesting assessment of our current society, and Brooks has ample evidence to support his opinion.
But is Brooks' diagnosis entirely correct? And can any generalization about such a culturally and geographically diverse nation of 332 million people truly capture the nuances and contradictions of life in America in 2023?
In my book, The Soul of Civility: Timeless Principles to Heal Society and Ourselves, being published October 10, I explore concerns about belonging, human flourishing and the challenges to the joint partnership of life together in our nation.
One thing I discovered in my research is that it's not new for commentators, like Brooks, to decry the state of a society's manners.
Concern about social decline is an ancient fear
The oldest book in the world — written in 2400 B.C. in ancient Egypt — is a civility handbook. Pharaoh’s adviser Ptahhotep was prompted to write the guide, featuring maxims for human flourishing, out of his concern that Egyptian life had become intolerably rude.
So, the challenge of how to live together with others across our differences is timeless.
Yet, Brooks notes that Americans are statistically sadder and ruder now than in past eras. He's right to link those trends. “Hurt people hurt people” is a cliché because it is true.
But what Brooks missed in his diagnosis of modern American life are the many people who are working to counter meanness with empathy, loneliness with being a good neighbor.
Consider, for example, my friend Joanna Taft, executive director of the Harrison Center for the Arts in Indianapolis. Joanna is an active leader in what I call "the porching revolution."
Five years ago, soon after my husband and I moved from Washington, D.C., to Indianapolis, Joanna offered me an unexpected invitation.
“I’m Joanna,” she said. “Would you like to porch with us sometime?”
It was the first time I had ever heard the word “porch” used as a verb. But I soon learned that for Joanna, "porching" is about actively seeking to revive community, to build friendships and to learn together that the things that seem to divide us as neighbors aren't as important as those that bind us.
In Joanna's model of community engagement, the porch becomes a neutral place where people of different backgrounds can meet and befriend one another.
A century ago, before air conditioning and Netflix kept Americans occupied behind closed doors, it was common for homes to feature large front porches, where families gathered in the evening to talk and play and where waving at and chatting with neighbors and strangers made a statement about commitment to community.
In time, families' outdoor gathering spaces moved behind their homes, with backyard decks and patios, screened from the neighbors by privacy fences, now common.
The architectural shift tracks with a cultural one – individualism has replaced community. And with greater individualism come the loneliness and meanness that Brooks bemoaned in his essay.
The Porching Revolution
Observing her neighbors' social isolation, Joanna Taft rebelled. And her front porch became her countercultural tool of choice to connect with guests from a diverse set of life experiences and opinions.
In doing so, Joanna is helping her community combat the epidemic of loneliness and sadness that plagues many of our neighbors.
Joanna understands that porching isn't a panacea. But she focuses on what she can control by cultivating her porch as a haven from the hurriedness and hurt that define much of contemporary life.
Her porch is a place where those who differ politically, racially and culturally can begin to form bonds of friendship and trust and to feel seen, known and loved. Her revolution against our atomized and fractured society is one that many more of us can be a part of, if we choose connection over isolation.
It's important to note that it's not about the porch. It's about people. You can decide to connect with your neighbors whether you live in a high-rise apartment or a cabin in a forest, a suburb or a small town.
How do we join Joanna's rebellion? We can start by inviting others with different opinions, experiences and walks of life around our table, onto our real or metaphorical porch, and into our lives.
Yes, as Brooks notes, there are more than enough sad and mean people in America today. But that's far from everyone, as my friend Joanna well knows.
The best part is that there are people with the “Porching” frame of mind across the country. I met many at the Braver Angels convention in Gettysburg last month. This also includes many of you who are part of the Civic Renaissance community.
The civility—the basic respect for the personhood and dignity of others—is the bedrock of the Porching disposition that supports our civil society, and in turn our democracy.
More than supporting our freedom, however, the basic kindness and hospitality of Porchers also helps us flourish. Life with others is rife with challenges, and always has been, but Porchers help make life together fun and rewarding.
Will you join us on the porch?
There's enough room for everyone.
Read the full article in USA Today here.
Have a great week—and don’t forget to grab your copy (or two!) of the book today and claim your $700 in gifts now if you haven’t already!
It was quite common, when I was growing up in India, during the 50's and 60's to gather around in a porch or veranda, and have open discussions. The only rule was civility. The discussions were on various topics such as science and politics. Convincing others of your opinion was not the goal; we were all informed better. In other words, it was an exchange of knowledge and wisdom. People of all ages engaged in these discussions. Of course, it is easier to sit on a porch in a tropical country or during summers. Sadly, in the USA, 'porching' as you call it has become rare. In Vienna, Godel, Wittgenstein, Hilbert and others would get together in a Cafe and discuss Philosophy and Mathematics. My generation knew civility. I am glad you are trying to revive it in the present generation.
I like your optimistic take, look forward to the book. We should be due for an upswing in civic participation, as Putnam notes in his new work (http://robertdputnam.com/the-upswing/).