the family vote

I have always liked the excitement of voting on election day. It’s political junkie Christmas. This year, with the college freshman voting for the first time, it just seemed wise to be early voters. As always, we loaded up the entire family to visit the polls. “Why do we ALL have to go?” “Because it’s important.” The grandparents called and joking tried to discourage us from canceling out their votes. “The lines are HUGE. You’ll be there for hours. You should wait and vote Tuesday night after 5 pm.” They sincerely offered to watch the two youngest children while we voted. I decided that taking feral child to the polls was more for me than for him, so the children played with their grandparents while the rest of us voted. Well, Doug, Tommy and I voted while Noah looked bored and Sarah complained.

Doug asked for a demo machine that Tommy could practice on despite the fact that Tommy went into the curtain and got a lengthy lecture from me while I voted last year. “Anytime you have a question, you stop touching the machine and ask for help.” There was no practice machine and Doug was further irked when they said the machine directions were printed and taped to a table in the back of the room. I am over it, but still annoyed that high school students don’t use the machines for student body elections. I even asked the high school if a sample machine could be brought in for all the special ed students to see, but that idea was rejected. We’re beyond that now. Tommy calmly walked off and voted without any assistance.

Noah went with Doug and Sarah went with me. Sarah did her very best to play by the 15-y-o girl rulebook. She acted bored, complained a lot and argued with everything I said. I tried to distract her game and told her to work the machine for me. “Turn the knob to put the numbers in the machine.” Sarah was horrified. She tapped all over the screen, determined to prove to me that the machine couldn’t possibly be so archaic as to have an old knob instead of a cursor or touch screen. I tried to be nonchalant while mentally having a mini panic attack. “Oh no! I tried to engage my daughter in the political process and she thinks I’ve taken her to a primitive campsite where you have to rub sticks together to make fire.” She worked her way through the ballot until we reached the review screen which I always stare at and read several times. Then, she pushed the big button. I stepped away from the machine with a nervous buzz. Did I follow the directions exactly? Will this machine be one of the machines that eats votes? Sarah went right back to her ‘this is totally pointless and boring’ behavior.

We celebrated Tommy’s first vote with frozen yogurt because I’m not creative enough to come up with an appropriately symbolic way to celebrate. The next day, we found out that his peers hadn’t registered so they could vote this year. I knew their birthdays. I should have sent them voter registration cards. I wonder if things would be different if Tennessee high schools required civics classes. The high school students did have a mock election yesterday. Obama was the students’ choice. Maybe he was their parents’ choice and they were just voting whatever they’ve heard their parents say. Either way, even though the win was uncomfortably close, it’s still a good sign in this very Republican part of the country. While driving Sarah and her friend to Winter Guard practice at another high school, the friend let it slip that the sign in our yard has been a source of annoyance for another parent. I smiled quietly when the friend asked if I had early voted and Sarah answered for me. “We all went and I voted FOR my mom.”

The elementary school is having a mock election on Monday. Amy woke me up at 7 a.m. this morning asking me to help her make a sign to wave at the elementary school election. Since I had been awake past 2 a.m. fetching the high schooler from a bonfire party and packing for the middle schooler to go camping this morning, I begged for more sleep. When I came upstairs, I found a piece of poster board bigger than Amy decorated with clouds, birds and the words “Obama” and “Biden.”

9 thoughts on “the family vote

  1. Our girl is driving with an Obama magnet on her car to the most conservative Republican school in Knoxville, and she’s proud of it. Our niece wore her Obama Girl Tee that I got for her in DC to school in Sevier county. She was ridiculed but that’s her first lesson in democracy and standing up for what you believe in. It’s American and sometimes it’s difficult.

  2. Our 18 year old voted with us in early vote. So, tell your parents there is hope, that your three votes were canceled allowing their votes to count. LOL.

    Isn’t it scary that our oldest are ADULTS.

  3. I’m down in Lewisburg (found ya via twitter) and I am waiting until tomorrow. My election day polling place is at my 12 year old daughters school. I am going to vote and then have lunch with her. Should be fun, and a BIG CHANGE! Watch out, Tennessee may not be as McCain as the country thinks!

  4. Didn’t take my kids to vote, but the 13yo dragged me to BOTH McCain and Obama rallies last week. I didn’t want to go to either, but I’m glad I let him talk me into it. I am also glad I saw both. The contrast between the two is striking, and I don’t just mean the candidates, but the supporters as well.
    My 13yo’s school had mock elections last week. He told everyone to write in “Giant Douche”. Possibly because that’s his tag on NG BBS. He was out on suspension that day, but a few people still tried to do the write-in. Sadly, the school bulletin only had McCain and Obama on it, and no place to write in your candidate. Sad day for giant douches across the country; but, seriously, isn’t the purpose of mock elections to train the kids for the real ones? How come the bulletin is not even close to the real deal? I’m just asking because I don’t really know what mock elections are for.
    The majority of our area is for Obama, but the majority of my friends are not. So we’ve had our share of both fitting in and sticking out like a sore thumb.

  5. Our high school’s mock election allowed write-ins AND they read the names out loud over the intercom. “and one vote for ___.”

  6. Wow that’d have been awesome. Especially given that the culprit is out for a 3-day suspension. Too bad ours didn’t do it like that.

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