1
The Project
I do not understand how anyone can live without one small place of enchantment to turn to.
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Cross Creek
Do you have a place that matters to youāa specific space to which your sense of self is tied, that evokes strong emotions and meaning? Your first answer might be the name of a town, city, or state. But that is not the answer we are looking for. Rather, identify a specific place or spot in that town, city, or state that matters. What is that placeāthe home you grew up in, the cafĆ© you go to every day to do homework, a park in which you relax, the place you worship, your grandmotherās house, or the place where you meet friends?
We understand the power of place in our lives when we realize that we are always in some specific place, headed from one specific place to another, planning to go to some specific place, and imagining what a specific place might be like. At any moment, our very being is bound to a place: āI am at a place called work,ā or āI am at a place called home,ā āI am on my way to a place called a church,ā or āI am leaving a place called a bar.ā Or āI would love to live in a place called Utopia.ā It is difficult to imagine a person not being in some place (Gieryn 2000). In this sense, self and place are intertwined (Flunk, Pease, and Rowe 2011). In fact, people are known in large part by the places they frequent and by their level of attachment to those places (Gieryn 2000). Simply think about how you feel calmed or angered when you learn the place someone you care about is or is about to go.
We often focus on the place that matters most to us and take for granted the surrounding neighborhood. We can think of the neighborhood as the home to the place that matters. It is the neighborhoodāthe residents, the vacant and occupied buildings, the streets and roads, the green spaceāthat āhugsā the place that matters to you. The neighborhood shapes how you relate to that specific place. In fact, the neighborhood deserves your attention given that it is the backdrop to that place, as the following remarks suggest.
ā¢ āOnce I get home, I just lock my door because I am afraid to go out.ā
ā¢ āWhen I am at my local library, I feel connected to the community that supports it.ā
ā¢ āThe little park by the river is where I go to just watch people in the neighborhood, just relax.ā
ā¢ āThe boys and girls club was a place I went after school to stay out of trouble.ā
ā¢ āI always go to a little nightclub to hear music. I donāt tell my parents where it is because they think the neighborhood is a dangerous place.ā
WHAT YOU WILL DO
Places That Matter guides you through an action-based research experience that is launched by identifying a specific place that matters to your life and then asking you to get to know the neighborhood that surrounds it. That place can matter to you now or it could have mattered at a crucial time in your life, but it must be a place with a physical address (as opposed to a virtual address) that you can get to without exerting great effort, time, or expense. That place can be a school, a residence, a cafƩ, a hair salon, a bookstore, a park, a place of worship, or a community center. You must have a role that gives you a stake in the place that matters. That role may be as
ā a resident;
ā a member of a church, mosque, or synagogue;
ā an employee (or frequent customer);
ā a friend, relative (grandmother, uncle, parent), or significant other of a resident;
ā a coach of a team whose home field is a park, ball field, stadium, or gym; or
ā a student at a school.
Your place that matters acts as a social, emotional, and physical (as opposed to a virtual) anchor attaching your very being to the neighborhood in which you move about and otherwise live parts of your life. This action-based research project asks you to take a hard look at that neighborhood. After all, not only is the place that matters to you part of a neighborhood, but the health of that neighborhood has a direct impact on quality of life as it relates to that place. For this reason alone, the neighborhood is deserving of your interest and support.
Those who have tested this project have named their grandmotherās house, a local library, a school running track, their workplace, a frequented restaurant, and their residence as the place that matters to them. Some reflections about places that matter are given below. Note the personal energy and level of investment that each writer brings to the project.
ā¢ I would have to say that the place that matters to me is my grandmotherās house. Ever since my father joined the Marines when I was a baby, my family has been on the move. By the time I graduated from high school we had lived in several states and even other countries. I did not get to see my cousins, aunts, and uncles very often. The place we always met up (and still meet up) was a quaint little house at 444 Reunion Road, in Anchor, Iowa.1 No matter where I was in the world, I knew I could always come āhomeā to visit with family, and that place remained the same in a life of constant change. Many times, where you live is not where your home is but where your heart is.
ā¢ The place that matters to me is Thai Heaven. It is a small, family-owned restaurant in Beanthread, New Jersey. The restaurant, as you can probably guess, serves authentic Thai food. I am absolutely in love with their dishes. They have a very spicy and unique flavor that leaves your mouth watering just thinking about it. It is a local favorite, a hole-in-the-wall eatery that one could easily drive right by without noticing. If you were to step inside, though, you would quickly be greeted by the scent of spices, meat, and rice. The owners are two brothers. They came over to America when they were young and decided to start their own business. Their story evokes a strong patriotic feeling in me.
ā¢ An important place to me is the Public Library located at 1786 Book Pike in Peaceful, Ohio. The silence of the library brings me peace from my difficult home and school life. In this library, I become anonymous. I am no longer the girl no one talks to at school. I am simply a woman eager to learn. The people sitting next to me on their computers do not care if I sit next to them. I can look at whatever I want, learn whatever I want, and be free from the people who see me in narrow ways. No one asks me why I am there. When I was homeless for a few months, I could go into the library to drink water from the fountain. I want to know something about the neighborhood that supports this library through its tax dollars.
ā¢ There are many places in my life that matter, but the one place that matters most to me is the running track at Ikaika2 High School (1515 Noa i ka3 Ave.) in Mokupuni Ma, Hawaii,4 where I went to high school. I still run on the track today. That six-lane track brought me smiles, laughter, tears, and pain. This place birthed my hunger for the sport of track and field. Here, I met many friends who became like family to me. The track was a place where I talked to friends, family, coaches, and spectators. This place really comes alive at night when those big stadium lights shine down, putting runners in the spotlight.
ā¢ My place that matters is a local Dairy Queen located on 3 Scoop Street in Spumoni, Indiana, where I have been working since I was sixteen. I chose this place because of how much I have learned by working there. This is the place I grew as a person. I have acquired job skills that I will take with me for the rest of my life. I learned to be responsible. I showed up for every shift and never called in sick, even in the summers when I worked six days a week. I learned how to balance my school, work, and social life. I learned how to save money from my paychecks and keep a budget. I stayed at this job because my coworkers are like a family to me. I also met my boyfriend there. We all have a close bond, and we even hang out in the store when we arenāt working. People think we are crazy to spend so much time āat work.ā We call ourselves the āDQ Crewā and always have each otherās backs.
Once the place that matters has been identified your charge is to do research that will answer two core questions:
ā¢ In what ways do you currently support, or fail to support, the neighborhood that surrounds the place that matters?
ā¢ Should your support be increased? If so, in what ways?
Now that you know the two driving questions, the challenge becomes how to begin. Typically, trying to answer the core questions generates more questions, such as those listed in Figure 1.1: What counts as the surrounding neighborhood? How do I learn about who lives there? What kind of things do I want to know about the residents? These secondary questions generate information that can help you assess the neighborhoodās strengths and weaknesses. In turn, you will gain insights about specific areas where support is needed and where your energies might be directed.
Figure 1.1. The Power of Supporting Questions to Guide Thinking
SOURCE: Joan Ferrante and Tabitha Kelly
THE PROCESS
For now, do not worry if you are unclear about how to frame the secondary questions that will ultimately drive the research you will do to answer the core questions. This book coaches you through the question-asking and question-answering process. Each chapter is broken into a series of modules with related exercises that take between 10 and 90 minutes each to complete. There are step-by-step instructions to guide you through them and to give you experience gathering and interpreting qualitative and quantitative data.
The coaching extends to subtle skillsāthe kinds of skills that can only be taught while doing the project and learning what to do when you run into roadblocks, forks in the road, and dead ends. Subtle skills are taught when someone in the role of mentor or coach shares helpful hints, conveys rules of thumb, and alerts you to challenges that are likely to arise along the way. Each exercise has been tested to ensure that instructions are worded clearly and deliver expected results.
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