Changing Minds About the Countercultural Idea of Neighboring
If you are promoting a countercultural idea, like rebuilding stronger connections with neighbors, the most effective approach is not persuasion in the traditional sense. In my opinion, people often adopt new behaviors because they see them working, not because they lose an argument. Here are a few principles that tend to work well. 1. Make the idea visible before you make it ideological Many people may agree that community matters in principle but feel disconnected in practice. Rather than leading with arguments about social isolation or civic decline, create opportunities that demonstrate the value directly: Host a block gathering. Organize a neighborhood cleanup. Create a tool-sharing group. Start a neighborhood chat or email list. When people experience the benefits firsthand, the idea becomes concrete rather than abstract. 2. Connect the idea to values people already hold Different people may support neighborly connection for different reasons. A few of the reasons I ha...