Nourishing Mind and Body
For the residents of Food House, the road to personal development is paved with comfort food, cupcakes, and a community of growth and learning.
âAs a first-year student, I had a floor that was very committed to creating a community,â says Sheva Greenwood â16. âI wanted to make sure that I was going to continue getting that kind of interpersonal support. Food House in particular seemed like the place to be because I think that sometimes we put wellness on a back burner in college.â
At Food House, residents rally around the idea that cooking food together is a centering activity. Itâs a break from the constant stress of classes, papers, and group projects. âEven the application is kind of funny,â Greenwood notes. âWe have questions like âwhat is your relationship to garlic?â and stuff like that.â
Greenwood, a Food House resident from 2013â15, sees project houses as an extension of the Collegeâs ideal of self-governance. âIt makes sense to me that as an extension of self-gov you have these spaces where people can really work out what their values are, work out what they want to do with their lives and how they want to live, in a more holistic way than just figuring out what they want as a future career.â
Residents of Food House cook âfamily dinnersâ together Sunday through Thursday, which are open to anyone on campus in search of a home-cooked meal and good company. They host fun outdoor movie nights, fancy cupcake soirees, and a Thanksgiving dinner for students who canât go home for the holiday.
âFor us, community building is not just for the members of Food House. We try to create ways for other people to connect to us,â Greenwood explains.
âAdulthood on Training Wheelsâ
Project houses like Food House are a long established tradition among 91´óÉńians. Past houses have included Music House, Art House, Dag House, Bird House, Bohemian House, and Tennis House. The project house program allows any group of 10â12 students to
- unite in a common interest
- delve deeper into their extracurricular passions
- experiment with a more independent living situation.
Many students jokingly refer to project houses as âadulthood on training wheels.â Theyâre a way to learn the skills necessary to thrive after graduation while having a safety net of College support when needed.
That doesnât just mean learning how to clean an oven or a toilet. It means learning how to say that you canât eat another bite of that casserole your roommate made three weeks in a row. It means getting up the courage to ask everyone if they want to watch Broad City with you, even though you think they might be busy. It means learning to let loose and eat that weird recipe you found on Pinterest, just to see if it might taste better than it smells! In a project house, youâll learn how to have fun, make friends, and overcome your fears.
âI think itâs just hugely important to have spaces where you can grow in the way that you want to,â Greenwood says. âI donât think you need to know a massive amount about food justice to live in Eco House, and I donât think you need to be an amazing artist to go live in Art House. And you certainly donât need to be a chef to live in Food House. Everyone acknowledges that this is just another space of learning, and that youâll get there. It might be a bit of a crash course. But youâll come out of it with a lot more skills than you had before!â
Sheva Greenwood is a gender, womenâs and sexuality studies major from New York City.