Posts

What We Learned from 64 Neighboring Ideas Submitted For Our National Tournament

Image
  Something fun is about to happen. We’ve taken 64 different neighboring activities and turned them into a March-Madness-style tournament bracket . Over the coming weeks, people will vote, debate, and ultimately crown a “champion” neighboring activity. You can vote in different rounds online . But before the first matchup even begins, something interesting has already happened.  People from around the nation submitted actions for the bracket a month earlier. And when you look closely at the full list of 64 ideas, you begin to see patterns. The list reveals some important truths about how neighboring actually works in real life. And perhaps the most encouraging lesson is this:  Neighboring is simpler than most people think. Neighboring Happens in Small Moments Many of the activities on the list are incredibly simple: Coffee chats. Delivering flowers. Writing thank-you notes. Inviting a neighbor for a walk. Putting out a water bowl for neighborhood dogs. These are not large...

The Hidden Economy of Being a Good Neighbor

Image
  When people talk about economics, they usually focus on markets, prices, increased economic activity and formal transactions. But there’s an entire layer of economic activity happening outside our front doors that is embedded in everyday neighborly relationships. It’s informal, often unmeasured, but deeply impactful. I was doing some research on the economic value of being an engaged neighbor. You can read some of what I discovered in another upcoming blog post. But while researching, I asked a question in an online community I participate in and got a response from my friend in Ohio, Chet Ridenour. His perspective sent me in an entirely new direction. As Chet wrote: " In my experiences from trying to be a good neighbor, I can point to numerous examples of neighboring support that we could practically provide a tangible, economic value to." Brilliant .  Chet noted that while it may be difficult for a university or economist to objectively quantify these exchanges, the value...

Mission, Vision, and Goals for Missouri Good Neighbor Week

Image
  The future of neighboring will not arrive through a national campaign or a perfect plan. It will arrive quietly, the same way it always has—one street at a time. A conversation begins. A name is remembered. A neighbor is noticed. Over time, those small moments accumulate into something powerful: a culture where people no longer live beside one another as strangers, but as neighbors who recognize that the health of their community begins right outside their front door. I believe that Missouri can lead the way, especially with the following plan for Missouri Good Neighbor Week . Mission, Vision and More Vision: Make Missouri the most neighborly state by cultivating daily practices of neighboring that ease loneliness, spark belonging, build trust, and strengthen community resilience. Mission: To inspire, equip, and celebrate Missourians as they practice intentional acts of neighboring that create connection, strengthen communities, and position Missouri as the nation’s leading model...