An increasing number of
Americans are growing their own food, making their own clothes and generally
embracing the domestic lifestyle of their grandparents' generation. Although
there are no statistics yet, some experts say this do-it-yourself movement has
been gaining momentum among the under-40 population.
Shannon Kline and
her daughter Alice are picking the last of the summer harvest from the family's
vegetable garden while her husband Geoff Delanoy prepares the soil for their
fall crops.
Life for this Baltimore-based family is all about living
close to nature.
“We like to grow our own food because we want to know
what goes into it. We want to know what we’re feeding our family,” said Shannon
Kline.
Older ways
Kline also makes clothes for
her two young daughters.
“The organic cotton is really soft and it is not
going to hurt my young children’s skin. They like that I made it. My older
daughter tells me that she’s very proud that I make her clothes,” she
said.
Kline also makes and sells children's clothing online and at craft
shows.
Having a home-based business allows her to spend time with her
daughters. Today, she’s using some of that time to make skin lotion with
Alice.
“What we do here is a lot of work. It’s worth it because I’m doing
it side by side with my family, and this is the time that we’re never going to
get back, and this is what my daughter’s going to remember when she’s older,”
she said.
Family time at home
Kline is one of a
growing number of young Americans embracing the home-centered lifestyle of their
grandparents’ generation.
Culture writer Emily Matchar said in an
interview via Skype that she's writing a book about the movement, which she
calls “New Domesticity.”
"People spend a lot of time at their computers
and there’s just something very lovely and very appealing about doing something
with your hands and maybe doing something that seems old-fashioned or seems to
connect you with previous generations," said Matchar.
Sociologist Betsy
Greer said that connection is the key to this growing movement.
“It’s
this dual thing where it connects us to ourselves, because we have time to think
while we’re doing it, and it connects us to others,” she said.
Shannon
Kline agrees. “I’ve met a lot of women who have really taken up sewing and
canning and gardening, and have really been loving it.”
It's a feeling
that many Americans apparently believe has been lost in today's fast-paced
world.