How cohousing can make us happier (and live longer) | Grace Kim

772,388 views ・ 2017-08-07

TED


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00:12
Loneliness.
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All of us in this room will experience loneliness
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at some point in our lives.
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Loneliness is not a function of being alone,
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but rather, a function of how socially connected you are
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to those around you.
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There could be somebody in this room right now
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surrounded by a thousand people
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experiencing loneliness.
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And while loneliness can be attributed to many things,
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as an architect,
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I'm going to tell you today how loneliness can be the result
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of our built environments --
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the very homes we choose to live in.
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Let's take a look at this house.
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It's a nice house.
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There's a big yard, picket fence,
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two-car garage.
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And the home might be in a neighborhood like this.
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And for many people around the globe,
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this home, this neighborhood --
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it's a dream.
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And yet the danger of achieving this dream
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is a false sense of connection
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and an increase in social isolation.
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I know, I can hear you now,
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there's somebody in the room screaming at me inside their head,
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"That's my house, and that's my neighborhood,
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and I know everyone on my block!"
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To which I would answer, "Terrific!"
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And I wish there were more people like you,
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because I'd wager to guess there's more people in the room
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living in a similar situation
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that might not know their neighbors.
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They might recognize them and say hello,
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but under their breath,
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they're asking their spouse,
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"What was their name again?"
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so they can ask a question by name to signify they know them.
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Social media also contributes to this false sense of connection.
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This image is probably all too familiar.
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You're standing in the elevator,
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sitting in a cafe,
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and you look around,
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and everyone's on their phone.
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You're not texting or checking Facebook,
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but everyone else is,
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and maybe, like me, you've been in a situation
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where you've made eye contact,
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smiled and said hello,
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and have that person yank out their earbuds
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and say, "I'm sorry, what did you say?"
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I find this incredibly isolating.
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The concept I'd like to share with you today
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is an antidote to isolation.
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It's not a new concept.
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In fact, it's an age-old way of living,
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and it still exists in many non-European cultures
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around the world.
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And about 50 years ago,
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the Danes decided to make up a new name,
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and since then,
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tens of thousands of Danish people have been living in this connected way.
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And it's being pursued more widely around the globe
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as people are seeking community.
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This concept
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is cohousing.
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Cohousing is an intentional neighborhood where people know each other
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and look after one another.
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In cohousing, you have your own home,
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but you also share significant spaces, both indoors and out.
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Before I show you some pictures of cohousing,
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I'd like to first introduce you to my friends Sheila and Spencer.
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When I first met Sheila and Spencer, they were just entering their 60s,
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and Spencer was looking ahead at the end of a long career
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in elementary education.
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And he really disliked the idea
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that he might not have children in his life
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upon retirement.
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They're now my neighbors.
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We live in a cohousing community that I not only designed,
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but developed
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and have my architecture practice in.
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This community is very intentional about our social interactions.
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So let me take you on a tour.
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From the outside, we look like any other small apartment building.
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In fact, we look identical to the one next door,
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except that we're bright yellow.
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Inside, the homes are fairly conventional.
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We all have living rooms and kitchens,
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bedrooms and baths,
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and there are nine of these homes around a central courtyard.
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This one's mine,
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and this one is Spencer and Sheila's.
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The thing that makes this building uniquely cohousing
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are not the homes,
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but rather, what happens here --
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the social interactions that happen in and around that central courtyard.
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When I look across the courtyard,
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I look forward to see Spencer and Sheila.
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In fact, every morning, this is what I see,
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Spencer waving at me furiously as we're making our breakfasts.
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From our homes, we look down into the courtyard,
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and depending on the time of year,
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we see this:
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kids and grownups in various combinations
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playing and hanging out with each other.
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There's a lot of giggling and chatter.
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There's a lot of hula-hooping.
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And every now and then, "Hey, quit hitting me!"
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or a cry from one of the kids.
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These are the sounds of our daily lives,
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and the sounds of social connectedness.
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At the bottom of the courtyard, there are a set of double doors,
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and those lead into the common house.
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I consider the common house the secret sauce of cohousing.
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It's the secret sauce
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because it's the place where the social interactions
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and community life begin,
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and from there, it radiates out through the rest of the community.
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Inside our common house, we have a large dining room
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to seat all 28 of us and our guests,
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and we dine together three times a week.
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In support of those meals, we have a large kitchen
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so that we can take turns cooking for each other
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in teams of three.
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So that means, with 17 adults,
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I lead cook once every six weeks.
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Two other times, I show up and help my team
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with the preparation and cleanup.
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And all those other nights,
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I just show up.
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I have dinner, talk with my neighbors,
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and I go home, having been fed a delicious meal
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by someone who cares about my vegetarian preferences.
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Our nine families have intentionally chosen
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an alternative way of living.
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Instead of pursuing the American dream,
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where we might have been isolated in our single-family homes,
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we instead chose cohousing,
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so that we can increase our social connections.
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And that's how cohousing starts:
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with a shared intention
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to live collaboratively.
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And intention is the single most important characteristic
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that differentiates cohousing from any other housing model.
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And while intention is difficult to see
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or even show,
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I'm an architect, and I can't help but show you more pictures.
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So here are a few examples to illustrate
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how intention has been expressed
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in some of the communities I've visited.
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Through the careful selection of furniture,
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lighting and acoustic materials to support eating together;
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in the careful visual location and visual access
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to kids' play areas around and inside the common house;
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in the consideration of scale
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and distribution of social gathering nodes
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in and around the community to support our daily lives,
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all of these spaces help contribute to and elevate
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the sense of communitas
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in each community.
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What was that word? "Communitas."
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Communitas is a fancy social science way of saying "spirit of community."
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And in visiting over 80 different communities,
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my measure of communitas became:
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How frequently did residents eat together?
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While it's completely up to each group
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how frequently they have common meals,
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I know some that have eaten together every single night
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for the past 40 years.
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I know others
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that have an occasional potluck once or twice a month.
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And from my observations, I can tell you,
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those that eat together more frequently,
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exhibit higher levels of communitas.
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It turns out, when you eat together,
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you start planning more activities together.
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When you eat together, you share more things.
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You start to watch each other's kids.
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You lend our your power tools. You borrow each other's cars.
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And despite all this,
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as my daughter loves to say,
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everything is not rainbows and unicorns in cohousing,
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and I'm not best friends with every single person in my community.
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We even have differences and conflicts.
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But living in cohousing, we're intentional about our relationships.
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We're motivated to resolve our differences.
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We follow up, we check in,
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we speak our personal truths
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and, when appropriate,
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we apologize.
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Skeptics will say that cohousing is only interesting or attractive
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to a very small group of people.
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And I'll agree with that.
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If you look at Western cultures around the globe,
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those living in cohousing are just a fractional percent.
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But that needs to change,
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because our very lives depend upon it.
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In 2015, Brigham Young University completed a study
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that showed a significant increase risk of premature death
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in those who were living in isolation.
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The US Surgeon General has declared isolation
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to be a public health epidemic.
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And this epidemic is not restricted to the US alone.
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So when I said earlier
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that cohousing is an antidote to isolation,
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what I should have said
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is that cohousing can save your life.
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If I was a doctor, I would tell you to take two aspirin,
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and call me in the morning.
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But as an architect,
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I'm going to suggest that you take a walk with your neighbor,
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share a meal together,
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and call me in 20 years.
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Thank you.
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10:09
(Applause)
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