and descriptions you can receive come from those who have participated and witnessed the event in person. There is no way to know the whole picture without actually being there. Being someone who has experienced and participated in the BMP, I feel that I can write to you a general guide to be able to help you with preparing and experiencing the event. Like I said before, you need to see to believe. But before you go, learning and reading about what you will encounter from someone who has been there will greatly help you prepare yourself for the event. In this guide we will go over subjects such as the community and participation, the culture, identity, and how to help make your journey fun for you and everyone around you.
What Is The Burning Man Project? The BMP is a community that has grown over the years from just a small group of people to upwards of 50,000 people. This massive group gathers in the Black Rock Desert in NW Nevada every year and creates a wonderful community to be celebrated by all for a week. There are no rules on how you should behave, other than the ones that serve to protect the health, safety, and well being of the participants. Hundreds of volunteers come together months before and after to help set up and clean up the event. Art is a big aspect of the event. Many art installations, small to massive, are created and available for all to enjoy. There are also many theme camps that are set up that are part of the interactive core by creating a visual presence and communal space. Everyone participates to have fun, enjoy the company of others, and to experience a completely different life for a week. When it is all said and done, pack out all you brought in, and leave no trace you were ever there. Community and Participation Generally when people think about the BMP they think about a whole lot of people getting together in the desert and throwing a big, out of control party.
While there are festivities happening during the event, the whole concept of the BMP is created upon the idea of community and community effort. The community is built on recognizing all member's unique abilities, whether they big or small. The idea is that everyone there is combining a collective effort to help the community in as many ways possible. In this community, monetary transactions are frowned upon and not welcome. Participants are there to live with each other and help everyone they can, when they can. If someone in the community is in need of something, they will ask their neighbor or go seek it out from the vast population of the community. Usually these needs are small because everyone in community knows that in this event, everyone must be prepared to be self reliant. You need to bring enough shelter, food, water, and any other living provisions to last yourself a week in the desert. The community members are expected to be totally self …show more content…
reliant. Participation is a big part of the community also. Whether your participation or contribution to the BMP is big or small, collectively, everyone works together to make the event happen successfully. Many participate by installing art in all forms for the public to enjoy for free. You could also participate by volunteering you time to help with the big art installations, helping set up theme camps, and helping with cleanup efforts after the event is over. Even just by being there you are participating. Cleaning up after yourself and others is a big contribution. The concept of leave no trace is heavily valued and all are expected to bring out everything they brought in. Even picking up after a mess that isn't your mess is a big contribution. Be ready to participate.
Burning Man Culture As the size of the BMP has increased over the years, a culture has formed around the event. Because it the BMP is so unique, the culture within is very different from standard American culture. The BMP culture values community, sharing, openness, love, acceptance, art, imagination, and celebration of life. The BMP can be considered a low context culture because this is group that only comes together for a short period of time and has only been around for about fifteen years. Communication is very implicit because you are dealing with unfamiliar people in your surroundings. Being open to everyone will help you better experience the culture. Expected behaviors, minimal as they are, have to be made clear to participants so they know what to expect and how to conduct themselves to ensure a successful event. Be aware that the BMP is a high contact culture. You should be ready to hug everyone you meet, pay attention to what people have to say to you, maintain good eye contact, and let your personal space bubble shrink down. You should almost be ready to treat almost all you meet as family. For some people, culture shock can occur when you a newcomer to the BMP. Just seeing the magnitude of the size of the event can be scary and disorienting to what you are usually used to in your regular life and culture. Don't worry though. Even I went through a little culture shock. I was able to shake it off within a few hours by interacting with my neighbors and trying to embrace the new experience. Just make sure to keep your mind and your eyes open for anything that comes your way.
Identity
This is an area of the BMP that I can not stress enough the importance. The reason I stress identity as being so important is because it flows a lot different from most societies and cultures you have dealt with in the past. Identity at the BMP is completely avowed. This means that you say, show, and express who you are and what your identity is. No one is ascribing, or giving, an identity to you and thinking of you in manner that you don't project. You are who you are. There are going to be upwards to fifty thousand people attending the next BMP. You have to realize that this event would not work if everyone were ascribing identities by the way they were dressed, gender, sexual orientation, affiliations, or anything else. You will have to encompass the most open mind possible and try to understand the identity that each person is avowing to themselves. The funny thing is that the identities that people are ascribing to themselves can be, and are most often, very far from what they would ascribe in their regular life.
This is an environment where you don't have to be afraid or embarrassed of who you really are and how you feel. You can check in your normal, culturally influenced and defined identity at the gate, and decide later whether or not you will pick it up on the way out. No one is judging you here. There is nothing but open minds and good people to help you freely express your identity. I feel that most regular BMP community members have an identity just for the event. They have salience, meaning that they have more than one identity that are important to them and can have the ability to shift between them. They save this identity for this event and when they participate, they show their BMP identity intensely over their regular one. Also vice versa in their regular lives. They may hide their BMP identity and be more intense in showing their regular life identity. So be ready to create or embrace a new identity that you may save for you next trip down to Black Rock City.
Afterthoughts Hopefully now that you have read this explanatory guide to the BMP, you will feel more confident in you decision to go, and more prepared when you arrive. This can be a great life experience for anyone who attends as long as you remember the ideas presented here. Have an open mind, respect all around and what they stand for, communicate, and be a participative part of this wonderful community. Have Fun.