Back to Story

Disrupt Yourself


ORIGINAL COMMENT

1 REPLY

User avatar
Rbrooks Aug 12, 2011

Interesting how the most frequent questions we get from some people are  "Won't people steal the books?" and "Won't kids just vandalize these things and smash them to pieces?"  Yes, it is sad to say.  But here are the responses from someone who has lived in places where people are killed almost every day for saying the wrong thing or wearing the wrong colors: 
   You can't steal a free book.
   Yes, someone might rip this little thing to pieces for his or her own reasons.  It's probably going to happen somewhere and we shouldn't be surprised.  On the other hand, the more we involve people in doing something that lets them feel as though they are valued and part of something besides, say, aggressive behavior, the less likely vandalism is.  That's why each Library has one or more stewards to look out for it, and why it helps to have kids, young people and adults feel as though they own it, literally and figuratively. 

If something like this belongs to "someone else "or "those people", it's vulnerable.  The more it belongs to everybody, especially "us" or people "like us," the more it is respected.

One other thing.  We encourage folks to think a lot about where to put the Library.  If it's in a vacant lot covered with weeds and trash across the street from a school that nobody likes, good luck.  If it's in a garden next to a historic church or the home of a grandmother that people love, different story.  If people fill it with junk...or really interesting books that are meaningful to the donor and the readers...it makes a difference.  

Go for the light; not the darkness...