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Jonathan Moregård's avatar

I was about to mention the (2) note, I've lived in communities for many years, and I've seen unequal power distribution mess things up.

I like the "small annoyance" system, and think it might be good to have a "gratitude" system as well, to balance the vibes/salience long-term

Another key factor is group sizes. Groups tend to morph as they hit limits. Limits are roughly 7-8, 30-33, 150. Expect a huge change as you grow from 7 to 10 people, due to the combinatorial growth in # relationships.

Also, FIRO model stages, the ephemeral nature of the experiment likely led to most time being spent in honeymoon vibes, expect to iterate when things cohere over time. Also expect reset when people churn.

Finally, the kitchen is the heart of the home. Two kitchens = two groups. Having one kitchen means that everyone will bump into each other regularly. If you want to design a system based on subgroups (possibly needed past 7-8), multiple kitchens might be a way. I have always kept to 4-5 people, so scaling considerations are mainly based on startup experience

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Alex Bretas's avatar

Hi Richard!

It's lovely to see how you and Nati ran this experiment. Thanks for sharing your learnings.

I'm also amazed by hoe it resembles a few experiments we're doing in Brazil we call "learning residencies". Me and a friend (Luis Sérgio) created the concept and started hosting the first experiences – one-month living together with a group of 4-10 people and doing periodic rituals and processes for enabling intentional learning, individually and collectively, and deep human connection.

We're writing a PDF Guide for people who want to host similar experiences. It will be only in Portuguese at first, but maybe in the near future we can translate it to English and other languages!

Very nice to see that we're having similar ideas in two different parts of the world :)

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