Wednesday, 24 August 2011

LIVING WITHOUT MONEY

The following piece has been reprinted from the Sunshine Coast Daily newspaper 23 August 2011...
Methinks the time is ripe.... people are becoming interested if this info is reaching halfway round the world....

Life, happiness, with NO $$$
Sixty-nine-year-old German Heidemarie Schwermer never thought she could go so long without money, but what began as a 12-month experiment became a unique lifestyle 15 years ago.
With only a touch of makeup, a light pink cotton sweater and string of fake pearls, the elegant pensioner with a warm smile says she can hardly remember the last time she spent a cent.
Instead, since 1996, she has lived by a unique scheme of swaps and barters she says held her in good stead.

Schwermer is an urbanite living in the heart of a materialistic society and says she has no plans to go back to the world of euros and cents.
“Giving up money gave me quality of life, inner wealth and freedom”, she says.
Turning one’s back on consumerism in Europe’s top economy particularly now in a period of relative growth compared to its neighbours, has a radical charm rooted in a tumultuous life history.
Born during World War II in what was then East Prussia, Schwermer as a child joined the flood of refugees expelled by Russian forces. Her family arrived in Germany penniless.
“I saw how you were considered to be even less than worthless if you did not have possessions or money”, she said.
In the late 1960s, she spent a year in Chile, and “I saw extreme poverty there”.
Back in Germany, she had two children, divorced and moved to the western city of Dortmund in 1982, where she opened a psychotherapy practice.
“I wanted to understand what is going on in the minds of human beings. But that was not enough, I wanted to do more for the world”, she explains.
Thus the idea was born in 1994 to start a swapping network for people short of cash – a ground-breaking notion. Pensioners and students answered the call in droves.
Schwermer began to housesit in exchange for payment in kind. She quickly noticed that she could take care of almost all of her material needs.
In 1996, she took the decisive leap – she quit her job, moved out of her rented home, gave away all her possessions, closed her bank account, cancelled her health insurance and threw herself into what was planned as a year without money.
Those closest to her were baffled. “My daughter was worried to death, my friends nearly cried. Now they’re behind me”.
Schwermer flopped on sofas where she could and started writing a book about her experience, which has also been translated into other languages.
“I earned a lot of money with that book”, she confides. “I gave it all away to passers-by, in five-mark bills,” she said.
She has appeared on television, moderated seminars and been the subject of a documentary film.
Now she is editing her third book in a house in the northern seaside city of Wilhemshaven where she is crashing for awhile.  In return, she takes out the rubbish and mows the lawn.
Schwermer gives her pension of 700 euros (A$972.42) a month to “acquaintances who need it” and refuses to think about old age.
“Of course I worry if there is nothing in the fridge,” she says.
“In the beginning I was afraid all the time but what I love above all is not knowing what will happen tomorrow.”


Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Community Inspiration Centre

We opened the Community Inspiration Centre in Woodford, SE Queensland on May 29th 2011.

It began as an idea on January 1st this year.... actually it began as a germ of an idea a long time ago.... but this particular incarnation started in January 2011.

I decided I wanted to open a LETS (Local Exchange Trading System) shop!!!  I emailed my contact list asking if anyone knew of a venue we could rent for LETS (or cheap $)... I got a few replies.... one in Forest Glen that turned out to be entirely unsuitable.... one in Maleny which was always a possibility and another in Maleny that still is...... but although the Maleny ones were distinct possibilities the energy wasn't flowing to them at the time.  I kept coming up against brick walls....

I had been attracted to Woodford in 2010 and had hired the Bush House (an old church and church hall - now available for hire) on occasion and been involved there several times.  The Bush House are members of LETS so it had definitely gone through my mind that I could set a shop up there..... but I kept dismissing the idea as both of the halls were too large and quite unsuitable for what I had in mind.

Then one day towards the end of January I was speaking to Deb (one of the committee members at the time) and telling her my idea and she took me by the hand (figuratively) and took me down and showed me the space they called the old Child Care space...

Oh My Goodness!!!! It was perfect!!!!

It then took several months to get insurances etc set up which was perfect as Gary and I were able to start working on the space and turning it into what it is today.

We opened officially at the beginning of June this year - our social objectives were/are to:-
                    - educate and raise awareness of LETS/CES and how to increase abundance and prosperity without the need for extra money...
                   - create a space where people can come and connect more deeply with themselves, each other, the community and the environment that they live in.
                   - inspire people to create

We've been open a little more than 2 months and I am thrilled to say that our social objectives have been/are being met already!!! 

In order to be sustainable at this stage we need a little $ income so are also trading at this stage with non-LETS members.  My dream is to be able to change that!!!  I would REALLY like to see the Inspiration Centre trading in LETS/CES only.... we are a considerable way from that.... and maybe it's a pipedream.... who knows!!!

We are a social enterprise in that we use a business model to create the necessary income to fund the social objectives.  That I've been told makes me a 'social entrepreneur'.... which I figure is a fancy way of saying ... someone who gives a damn about social outcomes and who is willing to put their own time, energy and money into creating it.... in the hope that it will become sustainable - both energetically and financially ($ and LETS).

We have a coffee shop, a book exchange, a range of Simple Living products - laundry gel, laundry powder and hopefully in 3 - 4 weeks, soap!!! A selection of recycled clothes, a selection of upcycled clothes and goods and lots of other bits and pieces - inspiring fridge magnets, humorous greeting cards, a beautiful range of rainsticks, jewellery, Nepalese handknitted socks, handbags etc etc etc.

We're the only stockist in Woodford of Kingaroy Kitchen biscuits!!!!  These are amazing bikkies.... firstly they are made to raise funds for the Endeavour Foundation, so by me purchasing them wholesale we are already contributing.... when you buy them from us the money we make on them goes to help sustain our Centre and THE BEST BIT... the ingredients list on these biscuits read like one of Grandma's old-fashioned recipes - there is not a single number or unpronouncable word in the ingredients.... just plain old-fashioned FOOD!!!!!

We've also just started stocking "Thank You" water..... bottles of water that when you purchase them from us you help to fund clean water projects in countries that currently have unreliable fresh drinking water.

There is so much more to us than what I have just mentioned.... we're open Wed, Thurs and Fri 9am to 3pm and Sundays 10am to 2pm.... OR When The Flags fly!!!!! so pop on in and say Hi!!!!

Stay tuned for info about the Community Garden that came about at the same time as we set up!!!!!

Cherie

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

YAY!!!! Home-made soap!!

I bought my first book on making soap about 12 years ago.....

....and yesterday I finally made my first batch!!!!

It looks like it should... now just have to leave it for about 4 weeks to saponify and then I'll test it.

It's a non-perfumed, non-coloured soap - believe it will be good for people with sensitive skins - if it works we'll have it for sale at the Community Inspiration Centre.

When I was telling Gary about it he mentioned he'd just watched a program that was saying that goats milk soap was good for people with eczema and skin conditions..... didn't like my chances of finding goats milk apart from the supermarket variety.... and then guess what....

A woman came into the Centre this morning who milks her own goats!!! 

AAaaaahhhhh.... I love the synchronicity of living in the flow........

It's taken/is taking me a lifetime to learn how to live in the flow....... but the miracles and synchronicities that happen there are worth the effort.

Just realised I haven't told you all about the Inspiration Centre yet.... that's a really neat story...

Will tell it soon....

Tuesday, 9 August 2011

Thanks to Michael Linton

Today I give thanks to Michael Linton in Canada who established LETS. 

What an awesome thing he has done for the world!!! 

I wonder if he knew back in the 80's when it was developed just how far reaching it would be.....

I wonder how many realise today just how much bigger it is going to get....

We started a LETS group in Woodford a couple of months ago and we now have 24 members... Big deal you say????  Woodford is a little town of a few thousand people.... I wonder how many people in Woodford will grasp the idea and run with it.

Here's a piece of writing by Michael Linton, founder of LETS - the full article can be found on http://www.lets.org.au/
 
"Local currencies have been common throughout history, emerging whenever a community needs to protect its internal economy from outside disturbances such as war, or depression. The Social Credit movement was one example, and more successf ul systems were used in Austria before the second world war.
 
Not surprisingly, the current economic climate has spawned several systems ranging from small, informal self help networks to the hundreds of commercial "barter" networks now operating throughout the US, and increasingly elsewhere.
 
The growth of these commercial networks is extraordinary.
 
In 1991 they reported $5.9 billion trading among 240,000 clients, in 450 systems. Two years later estimated trading had almost doubled to $10 billion, at a time when the US economy as a whole was standing still. This growth has occurred despite the high costs of taking part.
 
At present the LETSystem - Local Exchange Trading System - is the most advanced form of local currency in circulation.
 
The first LETSystem was developed in Canada's Comox Valley, in 1983, where some people adapted the "barter" network model and turned it into a full scale community system with greater advantages, yet operating at a fraction of the cost.
 
This prototype was very successful, despite considerable antipathy and even active resistance from key elements in the local community, and about 20 similar systems sprang up across North America.
 
By 1988 a combination of factors, principally research and development costs and fragile user confidence, caused trading in the Comox Valley system to decline virtually to a standstill.
 
While this created a general loss of confidence in N. America, LETSystems began to grow worldwide. Since 1987 some 70 LETSystems have been established in New Zealand and almost 200 in Australia. In Britain the number has rocketed from 7 systems in early 1991 to 150 by the end of 1993.
 
All these systems are based on the original prototype in Comox Valley, which has recently resumed trading with improved computer software, administration and more ways of introducing and educating people about LETSystems.
 
For a local currency to work people need to be able to use it alongside conventional money, and its design should resolve the three fundamental problems of that money. A local currency should ideally

  • stay within the community it serves
  • be issued by the people who use it
  • exist in sufficient supply to meet the needs of that community.
The LETSystem meets these criteria. It is also friendly, convenient, cost effective, simple and secure.
It works much like a bank or a building society. Everyone has an account, but instead of money transferring from one bank to another, all exchanges are within a single system.

Personal Money

Each new account starts at zero and thereafter may hold a positive or a negative balance. Those with negative balances have, quite simply, created the money which is in the positive accounts. So this local money is essentially a promise by some members of the community to give service to others.

Money like this, which you issue yourself, is personal money.
 
Conventional money, while easy to spend, is hard to earn. As a result it is coercive by nature - people with money exercise power over people without it. Who pays the piper calls the tune.
 
In a personal network , however, money is easy to earn. Everyone has money to spend.
 
By the same token, nobody needs it, so things only happen when people want them to. People serve willingly, or not at all. Nobody can tell anyone else what to do.
 
We are acknowledged for what we give to others. Acknowledgement in the local money has value because that money is actually the commitment of people in the community, to the community. "

Monday, 8 August 2011


Diary to self.... when I've finished writing this blog I have to log onto the CES system and send an email out to all the members of Maleny LETS reminding them that the monthly LETS market is on again this Saturday.

I'm the Market Coordinator for Maleny LETS and have been for about 15 months now.  We have our markets at the Neighbourhood Centre, who are also LETS members so the rent is in LETS currency (in Maleny the currency is called "Bunyas"). 

The market starts at 9.00am and generally lasts until early afternoon - LETS members come together to trade with each other - often we get members of other LETS systems come along also.  We usually have food and drinks, produce, books, jams, chutneys, massage, recycled and upcycled clothes, readings, plants, bric a brac, cds, dvds, haircuts etc etc.

We never know until the day who is going to be there but there will definitely be lattes, cappuccinos, hot chocolate, chai latte, various teas, spinach and feta rolls, curried vege triangles, cakes and bikkies from the kitchen this weekend!!!

How do I know that for certain???

Because Gary and I are the ones that do it!!!  We sell food and drinks at the Maleny LETS market in order to raise LETS points to pay for our work in raising awareness of various social justice issues.

LETS markets (sometimes called "trading days") are often held by LETS systems - it's a great way of bringing members together to connect socially and trade with each other.  If you belong to a LETS system but haven't really ever gotten into it then a great way to get it going is to go along to the market/trading days.... you get to meet the other members - they get to meet you and it can often turn out that you meet someone who is looking for something you offer but just hadn't gotten around to checking the CES system for it....

Try it.... if you're anywhere near Maleny on the 2nd Saturday of each month pop in to the Neighbourhood Centre in Bicentenary Lane and introduce yourself to me....

If you tell me that you're there because you've read my blog your coffee is on me!!!

'til next time....
Cherie




Sunday, 7 August 2011

WELCOME TO THE GOOD LIFE!!!!

It is my intention with this blog to write about our lifestyle and promote the use of LETS (Local Exchange Trading System) and CES (Community Exchange System).  You may belong to a local LETS group who are part of the online CES system as I am, or you may belong to a LETS group who use a different management system.  I know of some that do this. 

My preference is the CES system - it's online, it's easy, it's convenient and it's packed with potential!!!!  This is really an untapped resource that most people haven't heard of yet.

You can find more information on CES at http://www.ces.org.za/ and you can join your local group online too. (NB: Some of the LETS groups listed will have a small $ charge to join to cover admin costs... some are free...)

I am not and never have been a writer - and I write the way I speak - but if you can forgive me "grammatical incorrectness" then I'm sure we can share info and ideas about living free.....(well, cheap anyway!!!)

If you like where you think this blog might be going then please sign up as a follower - you can always just pop in from time to time - but I'm especially hopeful that I might get a handful of people who follow my blog regularly.

If you google "L.E.T.S" you'll get lots of information and probably be able to locate your local group - and if you google "L.E.T.S" and "James Taris" together you'll be inspired I'm sure of it!!!! 

James Taris calls himself a LETSaholic and has travelled the world using and promoting LETS. He also has the same (or similar) philosophy about LETS as I do.... and he has been promoting it for a lot longer so has tons of information available on his pages.... MOST of which is available to you FREE!!!

I don't know James - I've never met him and I receive absolutely NO PAYOFF for promoting him here - (he doesn't even know I'm doing it) but he is such an inspiration when it comes to LETS trading that his pages are a great place to start doing your research.

So there's your first FREE resource for this blog....

Happy trading!!