Use when the community itself may not survive — founding schism, major exodus, or an existential question of whether to continue. Distinct from individual member departure (grief-transition) and governance failure that can be repaired (organizational-stewardship). Covers both dissolution and transformation into something new. Activate when stewards face: a founding conflict that cannot be bridged, multiple members leaving in a compressed period, explicit or implicit questions about whether to keep going, or the aftermath of rupture so significant that the community's future is genuinely in doubt. This skill treats dissolution as something that can be done well or badly, and provides the tools to do it well — including the decision of whether to continue, how to dissolve with integrity, how to rebuild after rupture, and the specific grief of mourning a community.
Communities end. Not all of them, and not often — but the possibility is real, and it deserves honest attention. When a community faces that possibility, the people inside it need something more than reassurance that things will be okay. They need clear thinking, honest questions, and a framework for making one of the hardest decisions a community can make.
This guide is for stewards, founders, and members who are navigating an existential moment — one where the question is not "how do we get better?" but "do we continue to exist?"
That question is not a failure. Communities that can ask it honestly, and answer it with care, honor what they built — whether they end, transform, or find a way forward.
The first thing communities in genuine crisis often get wrong is misidentifying what kind of trouble they're in. Hard periods look like existential ones. Existential crises look like hard periods. Getting the diagnosis right matters — because the responses are different, and mistaking one for the other causes harm.
Every community that lasts long enough goes through periods that feel like dying. Someone important leaves. There's a conflict that doesn't resolve quickly. Contributions dry up. People are tired. Meetings are painful. This is normal. Communities have seasons; some seasons are winter.
Signs that you're in a hard period:
Hard periods are painful. They require real work. They are not existential.
An existential crisis is different in kind, not just degree. These are the signals:
The founding relationship is broken. The people who built the community — who share the origin, the vision, the institutional memory — are in irreconcilable conflict with each other. When founding relationships fracture, the community often cannot survive in its current form because the roots that hold it are the relationships that are now damaged.
The shared vision has dissolved. The community can no longer articulate what it's for or what it values without fundamental disagreement. People who once agreed on purpose now hold incompatible visions, and there's no obvious way to reconcile them.
A significant portion of the community has left or is leaving. Not one person, not a natural transition — but a wave. When multiple people leave in a compressed period, especially people who had been central, it signals something deeper than normal departure. It signals that the community's conditions are no longer livable for a significant number of people.
Governance has lost legitimacy, not just function. In a governance crisis (see organizational-stewardship), structures have broken down but people still believe, in principle, that they should work. In an existential crisis, people no longer believe the structures — or the project itself — is worth fixing.
Exhaustion has become the dominant emotion, not conflict. Active conflict still suggests people care about the outcome. When exhaustion and withdrawal replace engagement, the community may be ending by default — not through a decision but through gradual abandonment.
The most committed people are asking whether to continue. This is the most unambiguous signal. When the people who most believed in the community are no longer sure, the question is genuinely open.
When you're not sure which kind of trouble you're in, ask:
You don't have to get this perfectly right. But naming which kind of crisis you're in opens the possibility of an honest response.
When the people who built the community are in irreconcilable conflict with each other, the community faces a particular kind of existential crisis — one that is different from any other because it cuts directly to the roots.
Founders don't just hold roles in a community; they hold it. They carry the origin story, the institutional memory, the culture that was established before anyone else arrived. When they learned to trust each other — which founders had to, in order to build something — they created bonds that the whole community is built on. When those bonds fracture, everyone feels it, often without understanding why.
Founders also tend to have outsized cultural and practical authority, sometimes formally but more often informally. They are the people others look to when things are unclear. They are the interpreters of "what we're really about." When they are in conflict, that interpretive authority splits, and the community often splits with it — not because people are taking sides strategically, but because different people have been shaped by different versions of the founder's vision.
Founding conflicts carry a particular burden of grief, too. The people in them are not just fighting about the present situation; they're fighting over the meaning of everything they built together. Every disagreement about the future becomes entangled with the history of who we were when we started, what we promised each other, and what it means that it came to this.
Not every founding conflict ends the community. Some ruptures, even serious ones, can be worked through — especially if:
These conditions are harder to meet than they sound. The willingness to engage is particularly important: process can only work if people are genuinely willing to be changed by it, not just to be heard.
What typically cannot be repaired: a breach in which one or more founders believe the other has fundamentally betrayed the community's values. This is different from a serious disagreement. It is the judgment that the other person, in something they did or are doing, violated the core of what this community was built on. When that judgment is held, forgiveness may be possible but the working relationship often cannot be restored to what it was — and the community may not be able to survive in its current form.
If you are the person facilitating or mediating a founding conflict, name what you are witnessing without trying to fix it prematurely. Naming it clearly — "This is a founding conflict, and that's a particular kind of crisis" — can itself be a kind of relief. It explains why everything feels so high-stakes. It separates the magnitude of the feeling from pathology.
Before any attempt at resolution, both parties need to be able to say honestly what they are actually asking for. Sometimes what a founder wants is acknowledgment of harm and a changed relationship, not the continuation of the community. Sometimes what they want is the community to continue without them. Sometimes they want both parties to leave so the community can move on without the founding conflict defining it forever. And sometimes — genuinely sometimes — they want to find a way forward together, and they mean it.
The facilitation cannot go forward honestly unless both people have access to what they actually want.
When multiple people leave a community in a compressed period, the instinct is often to explain each departure individually — as if they are separate, unrelated events. Sometimes they are. But a pattern of rapid departure usually signals something systemic.
Individual departures happen for individual reasons. But when multiple people leave in a short period — especially people who were not close to each other, or who were otherwise happy — the departures are usually pointing to the same underlying condition. Something has changed in the community that makes it harder to stay.
Common underlying conditions that produce exodus:
The departures may not happen for the same stated reason. One person says they're leaving for logistics; another says they've just moved on; a third says they're unhappy about something specific. But the timing often tells the real story: something changed, and these people are leaving because of what changed.
Exodus is alarming. But alarm is not the same as certainty. Before concluding that the community cannot survive, ask:
The worst response to exodus is to treat each departure as a loss to be individually managed while ignoring the pattern. This protects the community's self-image but prevents it from learning what it needs to know.
A more honest response has three parts:
First, acknowledge the pattern to the community. "Multiple people have left in a short period. That is unusual and significant. We need to understand what it means." This is uncomfortable. It also creates the possibility of actually understanding what's happening.
Second, genuinely seek the account of those who left. Not to contest it. Not to explain why they were wrong. To hear it. People who leave sometimes carry the clearest view of what is broken, precisely because they are no longer inside the social pressures that prevent people from naming it.
Third, bring the remaining community into the question of what to do. Not with a predetermined answer, but with genuine openness. The departure of a significant number of people changes what the community is. The remaining members deserve to participate in deciding what it becomes — or whether it continues.
The person who holds a community in existential crisis is in a particular kind of difficulty. They are often the one everyone is looking to. They are usually also the one with the least permission to fall apart, the most institutional memory at stake, and the deepest grief.
Holding the question of dissolution with integrity means not collapsing it in either direction prematurely.
One direction is forced continuation: the refusal to let the community end, regardless of whether it's actually viable. This looks like relentless optimism, like refusing to acknowledge that the crisis is serious, like trying to hold the community together through the sheer force of the steward's will. It is understandable. Dissolution means loss, and loss is painful, and the steward often loves this community in a way that makes the prospect of its ending intolerable. But forced continuation also means that the community keeps going past the point where people can honestly be present in it — and that does its own kind of harm.
The other direction is premature surrender: concluding that the community cannot survive before the question has been honestly examined. This looks like withdrawal, like treating the decision as already made, like not bringing the community into the question. It often happens when the steward is exhausted and cannot sustain hope. But premature surrender forecloses possibilities that might have been real, and it robs the community of the chance to decide for itself.
Between these is the harder position: holding the question openly, with honest acknowledgment of how serious the situation is, while allowing the process of deciding to unfold at its own pace.
The steward is not responsible for making sure the community survives. The steward is responsible for creating the conditions under which the community can make an honest decision about its future — and for ensuring that whatever happens, it happens with integrity.
This means being honest about what you see, even when what you see is frightening. It means not protecting people from the truth of the situation. It means bearing the grief of the situation alongside the rest of the community, rather than in isolation.
It also means attending to your own state. A steward who has been holding the community through months of crisis without adequate support will make decisions out of exhaustion rather than clarity. This is not a character flaw; it is a structural problem. Get support from outside the community — a trusted advisor, a peer in another community, or a professional — not because your judgment is untrustworthy but because judgment is easier with rest and witness.
The most common failure in existential crisis is the steward making the decision about continuation — or the decision about dissolution — alone, or in a small inner circle, and then presenting it to the community as settled. Sometimes this happens because the steward is trying to protect people from the weight of the decision. Sometimes it happens because the steward believes they know what the right answer is. Sometimes it happens because the process of deciding together feels too hard to facilitate.
All of these motivations are understandable. None of them serve the community.
The community has a right to participate in the decision about its own existence. Withholding that participation — even to spare people pain — is a form of taking something from them. They will feel the exclusion, even if they don't name it.
When the community has genuinely reached the question — do we continue? — the way that question is held and processed will shape not only the outcome but the community's integrity going forward.
Every person who is actively part of the community has standing in this decision. This includes people who are thinking about leaving; their perspective on what is worth saving is relevant. It does not include people who have already left — though their accounts, shared through whatever means, may be informative to the process.
Founders have standing, but not more standing than other members. The fact that someone built the community does not give them sole authority over its future. Some founders find this hard to accept. The community is not solely theirs; it belongs to everyone who has invested in it.
When the founders are the parties to the conflict: The founding schism creates a particular problem for the decision process — the people with the most institutional memory and informal authority are the same people who cannot be trusted to steward a neutral process. This is a genuine governance failure, not anyone's fault. Name it explicitly rather than hoping the founders can transcend their own stake. When both founders are active parties to a dissolution-level conflict, the decision process needs to be stewarded by someone else: a member who has been present long enough to hold the community's trust but is not centrally involved in the founding conflict, or an outside facilitator brought in specifically for this purpose. One of the founders cannot steward the process that will determine their own standing in the community's future. Asking them to do so produces either a biased process or a depleted founder who is managing both their own grief and everyone else's.
A decision this significant deserves a deliberate process — not a rushed meeting in the middle of crisis, and not a long drawn-out process that allows the community to expire by exhaustion. A reasonable structure:
First: Acknowledge the question formally. A steward or facilitated group says clearly, to the whole community: "We are at a point where we need to decide whether and how to continue. We're going to take [specific timeframe] to do that thoughtfully." This is not a defeat; it is an act of respect for the community and the question.
Second: Create space for honest reflection before deliberation. Before people gather to decide, they need the chance to understand what they actually think and feel. This might be one-on-one conversations, small group gatherings, or structured written reflection. People should be encouraged to think about: What does this community mean to me? What would I need in order to want to stay? What am I willing to let go of? What would feel like betrayal, and what would feel like adaptation?
Third: Gather together. The meeting itself should be facilitated by someone with skill and, if possible, someone who is not deeply personally invested in the outcome (an outside facilitator can be invaluable here). The gathering should create room for:
Fourth: Name what is emerging. This is not a vote. It is a reading of the room — what seems to be true, what seems possible, where people are. The facilitator (or steward) reflects back what they're hearing, including the grief and the disagreement.
Fifth: Make a decision together. If there is genuine consensus, name it. If there is not, the steward or a designated group makes the final decision — but only after the full process has unfolded. The community deserves to know how the decision was made and to have their input genuinely reflected in it.
The most common way communities end is that no one ever decides. People stop showing up. Meetings become increasingly sparse. The shared spaces go quiet. Eventually it becomes clear that the community has ended, but no one ever said so.
Decision by default is one of the hardest things to grieve. It deprives the community of the chance to honor what it was. It leaves people uncertain about whether the ending was a decision or a failure. It forecloses the possibility of a real goodbye.
If the community is dying by default — if the meetings are happening but emptying, if engagement is draining away without acknowledgment — the most honest thing a steward can do is name it: "I think we might be ending, and I'd rather we decide that together than let it happen by attrition."
The instinct to avoid naming it is understandable. But naming it is a form of care.
When a community decides to continue after an existential crisis — a founding schism, a major exodus, a period of severe governance failure — it does not simply resume where it left off. What existed before is gone. What comes next is something new, built on the same foundation but without the same structure. The work of rebuilding requires acknowledging this.
After rupture, the community often cannot answer this question with confidence. The people who left took their part of the identity with them. The conflict that nearly ended the community has changed everyone who was in it. The story the community told about itself may no longer fit.
This is uncomfortable, and it is necessary. Communities that skip the identity work — that try to simply resume operations without asking who they are now — tend to find the question catching up with them in the form of confusion, conflict, or a vague sense of drift.
The identity work involves:
This last point is important. A community that is ashamed of its rupture will hide it — from new members, from itself. But a community that can tell the story of how it nearly ended, and what it learned, and how it changed, is a community with more integrity and more resilience than the one that existed before the crisis.
After rupture, the question of who is in the community requires fresh attention. Some people who were previously committed are now peripheral; some people who were peripheral have stepped into central roles. Some people are not sure whether they're in or not.
Clarity about membership is a gift to everyone. It doesn't have to be rigid, but it should be honest. "We're not sure where you stand; can we have that conversation?" is better than the social ambiguity of people who might be members and might not be.
For people who want to join the rebuilt community, transparency about what happened is important. They should not be protected from the community's history. They should be invited into honest understanding of it. The community that can say "We went through a serious rupture; here's what we learned; here's how we're different now" is a community that new members can trust.
Rebuilding and grieving are not mutually exclusive. Communities that rush to rebuild often defer grief — and grief, deferred, tends to appear later in distorted forms: unexplained resentment, inability to trust, the sudden surfacing of unresolved feeling at moments that seem to have nothing to do with the original loss.
Build time to grieve into the rebuilding. Name what was lost — the relationships, the particular version of the community that existed before, the hope that things would be different. You can do this while also building something new. The two processes are parallel, not sequential.
When the decision is to dissolve, the quality of the ending matters. A community that dissolves poorly — with unresolved conflict, unclear communication, and unaddressed obligations — leaves its members with wounds that take longer to heal and may shape their willingness to trust community again. A community that dissolves well leaves its members with grief, and with honoring, and with their integrity intact.
Communities often have material entanglements that require explicit attention. Shared space, shared finances, shared property, shared obligations. These things do not dissolve automatically when the community decides to end.
The steward or designated small group needs to take an honest inventory:
This work is unglamorous and necessary. If it is left undone, it will create ongoing complications for the people who were in the community, and those complications will extend the pain of ending.
Shared real property requires specific legal attention. When community members co-own physical property — land, a house, a building — the form of that co-ownership determines what dissolution looks like:
Joint tenancy means each owner holds an undivided interest with a right of survivorship; if one owner dies, their interest automatically passes to the remaining owners. Joint tenancy can typically be converted to tenancy in common by any co-owner without others' consent, through a process that varies by state.
Tenancy in common is more flexible and more common in intentional communities: each owner holds a defined percentage share, which they can sell or will independently. Dissolution does not require unanimous agreement — a co-owner who wants out can force a partition proceeding in most jurisdictions, which either physically divides the property or (more commonly) forces a sale at auction. Partition actions are expensive, slow, and often produce worse financial outcomes than a negotiated buyout. They are also destructive to relationships. The threat of partition is real, and communities should understand it as an option of last resort.
Buyout options: When one faction wants to continue and another wants to dissolve, a buyout — one group pays the other for their share — is often the most sustainable path. This requires an honest valuation of the property (ideally by an independent appraiser, not anyone with a stake in the outcome), agreement on terms, and financing from somewhere. A member buying out departing co-owners may need to refinance an existing mortgage or take a new loan; this requires creditworthiness and time. Be realistic about both.
Mortgage compression from financial deadlines: When a community carries a mortgage and the dissolution process takes months, the mortgage payment doesn't pause. Departing members who are still on the mortgage remain legally liable; continuing members who want to assume the loan must qualify. This financial pressure — ongoing payments while the legal and emotional complexity of dissolution unfolds — is real, and it can force the timeline in ways that hurt everyone's ability to make good decisions. Name this pressure early. Factor the financial clock into the process design. Decisions made under mortgage pressure are not the same as decisions made clearly, and a community that is honest about the deadline can plan around it rather than being driven by it.
For communities with significant financial assets or legal structures, legal guidance is important. The legal-literacy skill can help identify when professional legal advice is needed and what questions to ask.
Handle these matters with clarity and fairness. If there is disagreement about how shared resources should be distributed, work through it explicitly rather than allowing the decisions to be made by default or by whoever has the most energy to pursue them.
The community's ending needs to be communicated honestly — to members, to adjacent people who were connected to the community, and to any outside parties who had ongoing relationships with it.
This communication should:
People who hear that the community is ending will have their own grief about it. They deserve a communication that treats them as adults capable of holding that grief, not a spin-managed announcement designed to protect the community's reputation.
The public/private gap in member disclosure: In most communities, a core group knows the dissolution is coming long before the broader community does. This gap is sometimes unavoidable — you cannot make a governance decision with everyone simultaneously — but it creates specific harms when it extends too long.
Members who are not in the inner circle may make decisions (renewing leases, passing up other housing or community opportunities, deepening investments in community projects) based on their belief that the community will continue. When the dissolution is announced and they learn they were among the last to know, the harm is compounded: not just loss, but loss plus the feeling of having been managed rather than trusted.
No clear rule resolves this: some information must be held while decisions are being made. But the principle is to close the gap as quickly as honestly possible. Once a decision to dissolve is made, or even once it is being seriously considered, the community as a whole should be brought into the conversation. The goal is not to make every member carry the full weight of institutional uncertainty, but to treat people as adults who deserve to know what is actually happening in time to respond to it.
The community may end, but the relationships inside it do not automatically end with it. Some of the most important work of dissolution is helping people understand what remains.
Friendships, shared history, mutual care, the bonds formed through doing hard things together — these are not dissolved by the formal ending of the community that held them. They are simply no longer held by that structure. Some relationships will continue without the community. Some will fade once the daily or weekly structure is gone. Neither of these outcomes is a failure.
But the community can name them. It can invite people to say, before the ending: "What do you want to carry forward from this? Who do you want to stay in touch with? What have you learned here that you'll take with you?"
These questions honor the relationships that existed. They also help people identify what the community gave them, which is part of how they will grieve it and eventually integrate the loss.
There is a particular temptation, in communities that end painfully, to retrospectively minimize what was built. "It didn't really work." "We should have known it wouldn't last." "It wasn't as meaningful as we thought." These stories protect against grief by arguing that there wasn't that much to grieve.
They also dishonor everyone who gave something real to the community.
What was built was real. The care people offered each other was real. The relationships, the shared meals, the difficult decisions navigated together, the people who were held through hard times — all of this was real and mattered. The fact that it ended does not unmake it.
A community can honor what it built while also being honest about how it ended. These are not in conflict. "This was meaningful and it is ending" is a more honest — and more healable — position than either "this was a failure" or "this should have lasted forever."
Some communities do not end and do not continue in their original form. They transform — becoming a different kind of community, with a different purpose, structure, or membership. This is a distinct possibility, and it is worth naming separately because the work it requires is its own.
Transformation is not rebranding. It is not changing the name while the same dynamics continue. It is not the community insisting it has changed when it hasn't.
Real transformation involves a genuine shift in what the community is. This might mean:
What these have in common: the community is no longer what it was, and it is being honest about that rather than pretending at continuity.
The specific challenge of transformation is that it involves both loss and continuation. The community is not ending — there is still something — but what existed before is gone. This requires the community to grieve the loss and celebrate (or at least acknowledge) the new thing at the same time.
Some members will grieve more than they celebrate. The transformation may not be the future they wanted. Some will have preferred dissolution to transformation, if dissolution felt more honest than a significant change to something they loved. These feelings are real and deserve acknowledgment.
Some members will feel relief or even excitement. If the transformation addresses something that was genuinely broken, those who were most harmed by the old form may experience the transformation as release.
The community that transforms with integrity makes room for all of these responses. It does not demand that everyone celebrate. It does not demand that everyone grieve. It holds the complexity of people being in different relationships to the same event.
One of the most important acts in transformation is naming it clearly. "We are not the same community we were. We are becoming something different. Here is what we are keeping. Here is what we are releasing. Here is who we are now."
This naming can be done in a gathering, in a document, in a ritual. The form matters less than the fact of it. Communities that transform without naming the transformation tend to carry the ghost of the old form into the new one — the old expectations, the old resentments, the old stories. Naming the transformation is one way of releasing the ghost.
The grief of losing a community is real and it is often not recognized as such, even by the people experiencing it.
Individual grief is the loss of a specific person, relationship, or role. Community grief is the loss of a holding structure — the context within which a certain kind of life was possible. When a community ends, what is lost is:
This is a significant loss. It often goes unrecognized because the culture offers no language for it, because the people you would normally grieve with are the same people who are ending, and because community loss often happens alongside other losses (relationships that fracture, trust that breaks) that can mask the grief over the community itself.
If the community is dissolving and there is genuine affection among members, the dissolution process should include deliberate space for grief. A gathering that is explicitly a farewell — not a problem-solving meeting, not a conflict resolution session, but a space to be together in the ending — is one of the most valuable things a community can offer its members on the way out.
Such a gathering might include:
This gathering will not resolve the grief. It will give people a place to start.
Because community grief is not widely recognized, it often goes disenfranchised — the world does not validate it as a real loss, and the grieving person is left alone with something real that has no social language.
Signs of disenfranchised community grief:
If you are a steward watching members of a dissolving community, notice this. Name it. "What you're feeling is real. This is a loss, and not everyone around you will understand that, but it is."
If you are a person who has lost a community, name it to yourself and to people you trust: I am grieving my community. That grief is legitimate. It deserves time and witness.
A particular form of community grief belongs to the people who decided to end it — the founders, the stewards, the members who advocated for dissolution. They often carry the guilt of having "given up," alongside the grief of the loss.
This guilt is usually not warranted. Deciding to end something that is not viable is not a failure of will or love. It can be the most honest and caring act available. But the guilt comes anyway, and it complicates the grief, because it is hard to grieve something you chose to end.
The permission to grieve what you chose to end is important. You can believe the dissolution was right and still mourn what was lost. These are not contradictory.
Communities end. What they built does not fully end with them.
Every person who was genuinely part of a community carries something from it:
These things persist. They are part of why the community mattered, and they are part of why the community's influence extends beyond its own existence.
Communities also shape the communities that come after them. The people who were part of one community and then join or build another one bring their learning with them — what worked, what failed, what they would do differently. This is how community wisdom travels. The community that ended is, in some sense, present in whatever comes next.
Integration of community loss takes time — often longer than people expect. The model from individual grief applies here too: the loss doesn't shrink, but over time, you grow around it. The community becomes part of your story rather than a wound in the center of your current life.
Some of the integration happens naturally, through time and through the dailiness of building a different life. Some of it requires deliberate attention — returning to the grief when it comes up rather than pushing it away, finding people who share the loss and grieving with them, marking anniversaries in small ways if they matter to you.
The community is over. The fact that it happened is not.
Community dissolution sits at the intersection of several other domains, and stewards navigating it may need to draw on more than one skill.
grief-transition — The grief of losing a community is real grief, and grief-transition provides the full framework for understanding and supporting it. Use it for: supporting individual members through the loss, understanding the difference between acute and integrated grief, holding the long tail of grief after the formal ending, and understanding the specific dynamics of disenfranchised grief in community loss.
organizational-stewardship — Dissolution often follows governance failure, and some of the work of dissolution involves managing the community's governance in the process of ending. Use it for: legitimate decision-making in the dissolution process, role clarity during wind-down, accountability structures for final obligations, and the governance infrastructure of a potential transformed community.
restorative-justice — When harm is part of what is ending the community — when the founding schism or exodus was driven by unaddressed harm to people inside the community — the dissolution process may need to include restorative work. This is not a prerequisite for dissolution; sometimes people need to separate before repair is possible, and sometimes repair is not possible at all. But where it is possible, restorative process can significantly affect how people carry the ending forward. Use it for: naming harm done within the community, creating conditions for accountability, and supporting those who were harmed in the dissolution process.
legal-literacy — The material reality of dissolution — shared finances, legal obligations, property, formal organizational structures — may have legal dimensions that require literacy and sometimes professional help. Use it for: understanding when legal counsel is needed, what questions to ask, how to navigate formal dissolution of any legal entity, and how to handle shared financial obligations responsibly.
Communities are not obligated to last forever. They are obligated to be honest.
When a community faces the possibility of ending, the most important thing is not to save it at any cost. It is to hold the question with clarity and care — to give the people inside it the chance to decide honestly, to protect the relationships that matter, and to honor what was built regardless of what happens to it.
On the decision: A decision to continue, transform, or dissolve is better than a non-decision. Decision by default — the community slowly emptying while no one names what is happening — is one of the hardest endings to grieve and one of the easiest to prevent. Name what you see. Bring the community into the question. Make the decision together, with process that gives people genuine voice.
On the ending: Dissolution can be done with integrity. The materials can be sorted, the obligations met, the goodbyes said, the grief held, the gratitude expressed. Communities that end well leave their members in a better position to eventually trust community again. Communities that end badly leave wounds that take years to understand.
On grief: Mourning a community is legitimate grief. It does not require death to be real. What was lost — the holding structure, the daily access, the particular kind of being-known — was something real. It deserves to be grieved, not explained away.
On what carries forward: The community ends. The people who were in it carry it forward in the ways they live, in the relationships that persist, in the learning they bring to whatever comes next. This is not consolation. It is true.