A barn raising is a community effort. It’s something that’s done to aid a family – often more than one – with one of the most labor-intensive and expensive parts of getting settled domestically. It’s something that’s built collectively, because it’s an impossible task for just one person (or even a handful of people) to complete. It literally takes a village. And without barns and the group effort to build and tend to them, the community itself will suffer.

Communities – online and off – are ecosystems of their own, too. They’re not built. They grow, and they have to be collectively nurtured in order to survive. They don’t just exist without tending, and the people that make that happen are NOT the “community managers”. They are the community members themselves.

We can agree on that part, right? Okay good. Now here’s the rub.

If you are a member of a community, and if you are asking for and expecting the benefits of that acceptance, you have a responsibility to contribute to the community in a constructive manner.  It is your responsibility to ensure that you build instead of tear down. It is your responsibility to steward the health and future of that community as one of its inhabitants.

That’s not to say you can’t disagree, engage in intelligent discourse or respectful dialogue, or hold differing opinions. But if you’re asking to be part of that group of people and asking for them to embrace you (including exercising your freedom to speak your mind), you bear the responsibility of creating dissonance with a positive purpose. Being contrarian for the sake of it is utterly valueless.

Why? That community isn’t owned by you, and it is not your stage. You didn’t build it alone, and you are not entitled to take a hammer to its walls because it pleases you or makes you feel important behind the shelter of that keyboard. That community is collectively invested in, and you are a part of it. You are not it’s purpose nor its sole steward. Simply put, it’s not about you.

The whole is greater than the sum of its parts. That’s what makes communities powerful.  You are not entitled to membership and acceptance. The community does not owe you anything. Truly being a part of something bigger than yourself means that you earn it. So if you enter communities to tip tables, throw rocks, leech off of others and leave a trail of self-important debris in your wake, you aren’t a community member. You’re a vandal.

We have many platforms that are open and freely accessible today for us to speak our minds, share our thoughts and opinions, and express our individuality. It’s an amazing time to be an individual voice.

But that does not and never will negate the need for respect, and the recognition that you are raising a barn upon which others will also come to rely. Can we learn to behave accordingly?

photo via Wikipedia

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