- Wed Nov 13, 2013 9:38 am
#12431
I am looking for advice on this optional statement. The prompt is: how would you define global common good? provide an example of how you have contributed to the global common good
I understand the global common good as the economic and social health of society. While taken as a whole on a universal scale, it is built upon the well being of local communities and individuals. The development of the common good requires a standard equality of opportunity so that each person has the ability to share resources and use their skills in order to maintain a happy and productive life. Our creation and consumption of material goods and wealth that irrationally robs other people of those same goods and wealth weakens the common good, and the support of those who are marginalized from access to goods, services, and attention must be prioritized. The global common good is promoted by awareness and cooperation among people of different backgrounds, cultures, and experiences in an effort to create sustainable communities, businesses, and networks.
Last year I lived in an intentional community with seven other women in Harlem, New York. Along with spirituality and social justice, we chose to live out the values of simple living and community. In doing so we contributed to the global common good in a number of ways.
We each accepted $500 a month from the particular public service organizations we worked for. We all put our entire paycheck into a shared bank account. As a group, we managed our account to pay for rent, groceries, transportation, and modest personal spending. We realized that combining our resources and sharing among ourselves allowed us to live on smaller individual incomes, freeing the excess funds to the benefit of the organizations we worked and the people they served.
We ate together most evenings, each of us taking turns to cook a meal made from scratch. We decided to take on a sustainability challenge each month. One month we did not eat meat, another month we did not buy any plastic water bottles or containers. In our attempt to reduce our use of resources and products whose production takes resources away from other people unnecessarily, we learned how to make responsible and ethical choices about our consumption of common resources.
We made a conscious decision to give our time and attention to each other every day. We chose to live without cable and Internet, and we had a spirituality night and a community night each week. During spirituality night, we explored a particular faith or engaged in a dynamic reflection. During community night, we went to a local event or played board games together. The effort to maintain personal relationships taught me how to be more understanding and collaborative with those around me and appreciate other people’s insight and opinions. I grew in my ability to let go of my personal agenda and desires in order to focus on how I can contribute to the good of the community, and I practiced lending my skills and ideas to positive teamwork. This experience allowed me to grow in empathy and responsibility towards the people around me, and self-confidence to actively challenge societal norms in order to continue to promote the global common good.
I understand the global common good as the economic and social health of society. While taken as a whole on a universal scale, it is built upon the well being of local communities and individuals. The development of the common good requires a standard equality of opportunity so that each person has the ability to share resources and use their skills in order to maintain a happy and productive life. Our creation and consumption of material goods and wealth that irrationally robs other people of those same goods and wealth weakens the common good, and the support of those who are marginalized from access to goods, services, and attention must be prioritized. The global common good is promoted by awareness and cooperation among people of different backgrounds, cultures, and experiences in an effort to create sustainable communities, businesses, and networks.
Last year I lived in an intentional community with seven other women in Harlem, New York. Along with spirituality and social justice, we chose to live out the values of simple living and community. In doing so we contributed to the global common good in a number of ways.
We each accepted $500 a month from the particular public service organizations we worked for. We all put our entire paycheck into a shared bank account. As a group, we managed our account to pay for rent, groceries, transportation, and modest personal spending. We realized that combining our resources and sharing among ourselves allowed us to live on smaller individual incomes, freeing the excess funds to the benefit of the organizations we worked and the people they served.
We ate together most evenings, each of us taking turns to cook a meal made from scratch. We decided to take on a sustainability challenge each month. One month we did not eat meat, another month we did not buy any plastic water bottles or containers. In our attempt to reduce our use of resources and products whose production takes resources away from other people unnecessarily, we learned how to make responsible and ethical choices about our consumption of common resources.
We made a conscious decision to give our time and attention to each other every day. We chose to live without cable and Internet, and we had a spirituality night and a community night each week. During spirituality night, we explored a particular faith or engaged in a dynamic reflection. During community night, we went to a local event or played board games together. The effort to maintain personal relationships taught me how to be more understanding and collaborative with those around me and appreciate other people’s insight and opinions. I grew in my ability to let go of my personal agenda and desires in order to focus on how I can contribute to the good of the community, and I practiced lending my skills and ideas to positive teamwork. This experience allowed me to grow in empathy and responsibility towards the people around me, and self-confidence to actively challenge societal norms in order to continue to promote the global common good.