Nicole’s Reviews > The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World > Status Update
Nicole
is on page 55 of 112
Public libraries seem to the author a powerful example of the way that gift economies can coexist with market economies.
They embodied the civic scale practice of a gift economy and a notion of common property.
— Jul 29, 2025 10:11AM
They embodied the civic scale practice of a gift economy and a notion of common property.
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Nicole’s Previous Updates
Nicole
is on page 91 of 112
Sense of belonging, relationship, purpose and beauty can never be commoditized. Cultivate a system in which wealth = having enough to share, meeting your family needs is not poisoned by destroying that possibility for someone else. A society where the currency of exchange is gratitude, the infinitely renewable resource of kindness, which multiplies every time it is shared, not depreciating with use
— Jul 29, 2025 11:31AM
Nicole
is on page 81 of 112
In Potawatomi culture there’s this concept of ‘Windigo’, a monster who takes too much and sharing too little. This mindset incentivises individual accumulation far beyond enoughness.
Up til this part of the book it compares how Serviceberry’s natural system is an analogue to human’s economic system. What if scarcity is just a cultural construct? This calls to differentiate manufactured vs real scarcity.
— Jul 29, 2025 10:56AM
Up til this part of the book it compares how Serviceberry’s natural system is an analogue to human’s economic system. What if scarcity is just a cultural construct? This calls to differentiate manufactured vs real scarcity.
Nicole
is on page 65 of 112
The author raised examples from Dish With One Spoon Treaty and the Honorable Harvest that the indigenous people were involved in. Basically it translates to sustainability, constraining rampant consumption to ensure that the Dish remains full.
I like how she names Human people, Deer people, Bear People, Fish people - to see them as someones, not somethings.
— Jul 29, 2025 10:30AM
I like how she names Human people, Deer people, Bear People, Fish people - to see them as someones, not somethings.
Nicole
is on page 56 of 112
Not necessarily a gift economy since it’s supplied by our tax dollars, but it’s close
— Jul 29, 2025 10:13AM
Nicole
is on page 50 of 112
Margaret Atwood writes, every time a gift is given it is enlivened and regenerated through the new spiritual life it engenders both in the giver and in the recipient’
You can store meat in your own pantry or in the belly of your brother both have the result of keeping hunger at bay but with very different consequences .
— Jul 29, 2025 10:04AM
You can store meat in your own pantry or in the belly of your brother both have the result of keeping hunger at bay but with very different consequences .
Nicole
is on page 45 of 112
I like how the author suggested the alternative to Adam Smith’s ‘Rational Economic Man’ - Empathetic Mutualist Human
— Jul 29, 2025 09:51AM
Nicole
is on page 44 of 112
How to cultivate our inherent capacity for gift economics without the catalyst of catastrophe? The key is to build trust
— Jul 29, 2025 09:48AM
Nicole
is on page 30 of 112
The author introduced us to Ecological Economics, where the prof and friend of hers, Dr. Valarie Luzadis defines economics as ‘how we organise ourselves to sustain life snd enhance its quality’. A different definition when compared to traditional economics - all about scarcity.
— Jul 29, 2025 09:24AM
Nicole
is on page 25 of 112
When something moves from the status of gift to the status of commodity, we can become detached from mutual responsibility.
— Jul 29, 2025 09:18AM

