It's In My Blood
I have memories of standing in elementary school parking lots on that early November day off from school with handfuls of leaflets and stickers up and down my shirt. Checks pink from cold but also from excitement; from energy and enthusiasm pulsing through my veins. Slyly sliding up to adults walking from their cars into the school gym where they would punch their ballots. I’d talk to them; lay out the issues in a way that only a precarious 12 year old who was sure she knew everything about everything could do.
This countdown has been running on my mother's phone for months. |
I grew up in a political family. Not like, Kennedy style, but in my-entire-living-room-is-full-of-sample-ballots-and-i-just-want-somewhere-to-sit-and-do-homework style. My parents worked campaigns and my mom worked for politicians; talk over dinner about bumper stickers and polling places was as familiar to me as breathing. Politics runs in my blood.
And I loved it. I loved the thrill and the rush and the dedication. I loved the passion. I loved the fight.
I still do. .
It’s 9:30 at night and I’ve been home from teaching Hebrew school for maybe 30 minutes. My backpack is on the floor next to me, my laptop is on my lap and MSNBC is on the TV. Twitter is up, and the Vox and Al Jezera liveblogs are open in browser windows. I’m switching back and forth, trying to keep up with all of the news coming in.
It’s incredible to watch, in real time, democracy happen. It’s a privilege that I appreciate, and I hope I never take it for granted
I take my ability to vote very seriously. Though I’ve yet to actually vote in person, through a mix of early voting and absentee, I haven’t missed an election since I turned 18.
I’ve never really understood not caring about politics. How can you not care about the world around you? How can you not care about the people who are going to make the decision that impact your life? Real things get decided in the small elections, when people aren’t paying attention. Tonight people across America voted on everything from school budgets to minimum wage to abortion access.
I see a lot of people my age outraged at the government. Mad at the politicians. Mad at the political climate.
My brother is wearing a bib that says "Future Democrat" because of course he is. |
Here’s what you should do if you’re angry; vote.. Rally your friends. Pass out some fliers. Register students on a college campus. The great thing about living in a democracy is that the people have to power to change it.
I love walking down my street and seeing coats adorned with stickers proudly proclaiming “I voted! Yo votè!” I love seeing pictures of my friends proudly sending off their absentee ballots. I love reading tweet after tweet of my friends—enraged and engaged—caring in a way that people think my generation never could be.
Election night 2012 in Ohio. In a room that cheered as each result came in. |
Even as I sit here, watching the senate turn red, I feel a small tinge of hopefulness. Not because I think anything will get accomplished with a Republican senate (or at least, anything I’d want to get accomplished….) but because I get to watch my friends kicking butt and making change.
So, like every year, I’m camped out in front of the TV. Fist pumping to Rachel Maddow’s one liners and biting my nails down to stubs. I know we’ll lose some races, but we’re going to win some too.
So here’s to election nights. The ones I spent in local bars at age 13, weaving my way through crowds of politicians waiting on the phone call telling them how their next few years would go. The ones I spent in Ohio and Chicago, away from home, but obsessively caring, watching the results roll in slowly then quickly, from everywhere at once. The one I’m spending, here, tonight, in New York. The one’s I’ll spend some day, somewhere I don’t know, but still caring. Still paying attention.
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