Life in Tacoma 2022: 5 Ways to Create Belonging

Nothing says “I belong in Tacoma” like sitting out in the cold and damp enjoying a hot drink at a local coffee shop, right? Cosmonaut Coffee’s been a bit hidden behind all the road work these days, but you can still get a cup to keep your hands warm while walking Wright Park.

As we step into 2022 we’re thinking about belonging, about what makes us feel like we belong, about how we experience belonging in our lives, and how we can create it.

Belonging to a place—say a city, like Tacoma—doesn’t happen in just one way. A person could belong by being born here, by never not knowing this place. Or, a person could be born here and never really feel like they belong. On the other hand, you could live here for just a few months or years and experience a deep sense of belonging. How does it happen? For us it came with time and with intention. As our years in Tacoma began to grow into a longer and longer path behind us, we began to feel the belonging that comes from noticing changes, from remembering how things used to be, from recognizing people on the sidewalk. That kind of belonging just kind of happened. But then there’s the belonging that’s come from intention, from deciding to make friends with this city. Friendship with a place is kind of like friendship with a person. You listen, show up, help out, pay attention, participate, and receive.

In this list we’ve collected some of the ways we’ve found belonging, or ways we’d like to continue finding it. These aren’t deep Tacoma secrets, or never-been-seen-before ideas. There’s nothing sensational here. This list is more like suggested ingredients for finding your place by giving and receiving, exploring and settling down.

Speaking of exploring, take some time to experience the Tacoma Light Trail from December 31st - January 16th, 5 - 9 pm. Like many of the other things on this list, it’s free. Belonging is not all about money, that’s for sure!


You can be a regular at a park, in a shop, at a restaurant, where you buy groceries, in a place where you volunteer (more on that later!). The Fernseed on South Tacoma Way is a place where I’m a regular. We give flowers throughout the year, and that’s been even more satisfying since the stem bar opened at Fernseed. Be a flower shop regular, a pet shop regular, a barber shop regular, a book shop regular, a beach walk regular!

1. Become a Regular

Small town settings in stories have always really drawn me in. I think what I love is the way people go to the same places every day or every week and always end up bumping into people they know. Why is that appealing? It communicates belonging to me. I’ve mentioned before the subtle, yet positive shift I feel in my day when I go somewhere for an errand and the person helping me with my task or purchase knows my name. I even enjoy being in a place where I can see that others are regulars. It’s a cozy, small-world feeling.

As we said, belonging isn’t all about money. You can be a regular at a park. Go often, go the same day each week, or at the same time of day.

Becoming a regular can take a bit of money, but it’s more about where and how you spend it than how much you spend. If you have money set aside for groceries, try going to the same place each time you shop, maybe even get in line with the same cashier. After a bit, you’ll recognize each other.

If art supplies are a fairly constant need in your home, start visiting the same shop and choose one of the smaller chains or locally owned stores like Artist & Craftsman Supply or ArtCo Crafts & Framing (locally owned for over 25 years!) rather than the big box operations.

Being a regular at a coffee shop is a classic way to carve out a place that feels like your own, and it doesn’t cost much. But those dollars in support of a small, locally owned roaster can have a powerful impact both on that business and your daily life.


2. Explore Arts, History, Culture & Craft

Don't save museums just for trips and vacations, explore local museums and deepen your experience of home. Actually, museums can be a way of feeling like you’ve traveled to another place or time, so they’re a good destination on days when you feel cooped up or maybe wish you were away on holiday.

  • If a museum offers memberships and you can afford it, that’s a good way to support special exhibits, ongoing costs, and programming and to encourage yourself to go more often, but it’s absolutely not the only way to participate.

  • You could also commit to visiting a chosen museum 2 or 3 times this year if that’s a better fit for your budget.

  • Or go for variety; visit as many different local museums as you can in 2022. Even if you just go every other month it’s probably more than before.

  • If funds are tight go out for a free community night (Tacoma Art Museum hosts free Neighborhood Nights every Thursday from 5 - 8 pm) or choose a museum with free entry and just donate what you can.

Not sure where to start? Tacoma is home to a pretty impressive variety of museums for its size. We’ll share some of those and give you a start on museums to explore in our neighboring areas too.

Tacoma Museums

Image from the Pacific Bonsai Museum

Museums in Neighboring Communities


Picking up litter with a bunch of friendly Oscar’s Enemies volunteers is a surprisingly satisfying way to spend a couple of hours on a Saturday. We’ve been out in the summer, fall, and winter, from the Dome District to Lincoln to 6th Ave and so far the rain has held off! Join on Saturday, January 22nd on McKinley!

3. Give Time - Give Love

One of the best ways to create belonging is by spending your time (rather than your money). Volunteer! Maybe even volunteer in a new way, or with a group you haven’t spent time yet. There’s a wide range of commitment levels from dedicated weekly time, to monthly or one-time opportunities. Here are few local non-profits and organizations where your hands, head, heart, skills, and abilities will be put to good use:


I’m grateful for the library on our block. It’s a place I can walk and always feel welcome. And I like showing this book Sing, Unburied, Sing in particular partly because it’s extraordinary and Jezmyn Ward’s writing is spellbinding, gut wrenching, illuminating, and distinguished. But I also like sharing it because the library introduced me to her work by featuring Salvage the Bones on their new books shelf years ago. I hadn’t gone looking for it, but there it was, and now Ward’s writing is part of my life.

4. Make Friends with the Library

The library is more than books (but if it was just books I would still love it), it’s a hub for the community, it’s one of the only places where you can just walk in—no money, no membership—and make yourself comfortable. I’m a fan. The library nearest our home is the Swasey Branch. It’s so close I walk over there frequently. I’m in and out to pick-up holds and return books, to use the printer, to browse the shelves and special displays featuring new books or themed collections. I wish everyone lived as close to a library as we do. It really makes me feel at home. Did you know new branches of the Tacoma Public Library are coming to Hilltop and the Eastside? This is something to celebrate! And did you know every library card holder automatically gets $5 worth of printing per month? No need to keep ordering printer cartridges at home.

  • Making friends with the library could just mean digging up your library card, or stopping by for a new one, and checking out books - that’s a good place to start!

  • Take the next step in the friendship and participate in community reading programs with TPL like Summer Reading, Extreme Reader Challenge, or Tacoma Reads

  • Join a Book Club! (Book clubs are virtual these days.)

  • Get your kids and teens involved. Try Radical Readers Book Club for readers under age 13, listen in on Storytimes, write letters to a new animal friend with Pasado’s Pen Pals.

  • Attend events and activities from regular weekly events to special opportunities. Find events on TPL’s Facebook page, or use filters to search for specific events on the TPL website. Learn how to create your own record label or podcast, join a Pokémon League, attend an author reading, and more, and more, and more.


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5. Engage in Local Stories - Listen, read & watch

There’s a big world out there, and we’re not suggesting you shut it out or forget about it, but we do recommend getting cozy with local new sources too. For one thing, local journalism will become a lost art, a thing of the past, unless we support it. For another thing, it’s enriching to know about what’s going on in the nearby world. You might hear a voice you recognize, you might learn more about a park, person, place, or establishment you love, you might begin to feel connected not only to your news source, but to the community too.

Listen

  • KNKX 88.5 (formerly KPLU) - NPR local and national news, blues and jazz

  • KTAH RadioTacoma 101.9 - “venue for local voices, news, and talent”

  • KUPS 90.1 - University of Puget Sound college radio, music station

  • InsideAbode Podcast - interviews with community members about the life, people, issues, challenges, and celebrations of our city

  • Channel 253 - hosts an array of podcasts rooted in Tacoma life, social justice, and community issues

Read

Watch


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