Towards the second edition

After the first market being a success we felt we had to continue building on what we started. So we called a meeting with the townhall again to confirm a second date. They took their time to receive us (we should have been professional and book the market aftermath meeting beforehand) and confirmed our date. And then, after we immediately started distributing the information and receiving stallholder registrations, unconfirmed it again two days later because apparently we are too close to a voting booth, which the law doesn’t permit.

We sent them a rather unkind email. Had a somewhat heated meeting, and changed date, and then scrambled to let everyone know. One of the townhall people was really quite offended and emotional about the fact that we questioned their commitment, and I’m still confused by the fact how much emotion we stirred up with that. It’s like they are completely out of their depth and make things up as they go, and they look mostly overwhelmed - not that different from what we are doing. I guess we were actually lucky that whoever came to shove that law into their faces didn’t decide to wait with it until a day before the market.

We are, so far, still losing money. I’ll have time to come up with a collection of things to sell to support ourselves in this one, among ram pumps, trees and used goods. We also had a long discussion about the real worth of things, worth that has nothing to do with money. The seeds that are created even when you fail, the young people inspired to try and create something one day, the connections created with these events. It’s all worth it.

This is the first time the townhall confirmed not only that creating an association would be useful, but also that (and how) we could ask for financial support, and that they will support us in doing so. I feel we are now in the category of ‘annoying but useful’ and we also meet a lot of people who we might tag in a similar way. We know they are ultimately aligned with what we want (create a resilient community in our region) but the way they do things doesn’t align perfectly with our ideas. We’d rather limit our exposure to them if we can or don’t really think their methods work, but they are welcome anyway. That’s the heart of community, especially a multicultural one - the daily work of getting along also with those whose goals are close enough. It means people need to have space to get out of each other’s way, and that one also has to maintain a fierce stance for tolerance and being non-judgemental while keeping one’s own integrity intact.

We are learning a lot about different cultures. Someone invited themselves over for coffee in a rather abrupt way, and there I was confused, scrambling to produce some coffee in my unprepared kitchen! Just to find out it’s more of a figure of speech somewhere else as a way to ask if the person is prepared for someone else to pop by - actual coffee not necessarily expected.

And so edition two of the market is on the way, with a lot of friends from the last time getting ready to appear. This time the anxiety is way lower. There’s so much less to organize, we’ll have electricity and shade, according to the townhall.

Meanwhile our market activities are just one of many little things happening around here and bringing people together. The cultural bandwidth of events we’ve visited only in the last month is making us a little dizzy. And each of the places we visit brings another element to our mix. We went, pretty much in one row, to: a business-y and cautious kind of meeting with people from a large local eco-tourism project who would like to hold our event on their (beautiful but not public) terrain, the weekly clothes-farmers-food-everything market where I buy my sourdough bread, a rainbow gathering held by neighbours who will grace our next market with a vegetarian food stand, a quite surprising circus performance in the next town’s market hall, a renaissance fair … it’s nice and diverse here already with a lot of inspiring stuff being created, and we’re surfing through all of this inviting everyone to the market.

We have help from people distributing flyers now. We’ve convinced the right people to run food stands. Might be that on the next market we just can lean back and enjoy.

Fun fact: I was super pleased to hear that locals call our market the ‘Come-ons market’, ‘Come-on’ being a slightly derisive term for expats, and an excellent word-play with ‘Commons’. Couldn’t have come up with it myself. And I really like how the organization is playing out, with the right people already in place ready to advertise our event, and not just us this time - so it is turning into a multicultural Commons Market just as planned.

  • okasen@slrpnk.net
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    1 month ago

    Reading your updates on this project is always the highlight of whatever day’s scrolling it falls on.

    Though I have now unlocked a new fear of being abruptly asked if someone can come over for coffee.

    • schmorp@slrpnk.netOPM
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      1 month ago

      Thank you so much for your kind comment! I think it’s okay to say you have no coffee, or time. The abruptness of a functioning community can be startling for the post-pandemic social wrecks most of us are these days. I found it’s a matter of habit, half a year ago I would have had a panic attack at the idea of just dropping by at someones’ place, or vice versa - turns out these encounters are not only survivable but can be fun!