Tuesday, November 07, 2006

I Voted

So, I got off my butt, got over my excuses, and made it to the polls. Here's the play-by-play:
  • September, 2005: Register to Vote in LA County as a "Permanent Absentee Voter," thinking I will be more likely to vote if I can do it from the comfort of my own home.
  • October 2005: Receive voter registration card. Promptly file it in the "pile of things to be filed" in the corner. Receive absentee ballot for Nov election - thankfully, in English this time.
  • November 2005: Forget to vote. Recycle absentee ballot. Get jealous of people wearing "I voted" stickers, as they remind me I am, occasionally, lazy and irresponsible.
  • October 2006: Get voter's guide and absentee ballot for this year's elections, along with threatening notice that if I don't vote this time, they will stop sending me absentee ballots, as I don't seem to be using them. Put voter guide and ballot on shelf with every intention of eventually reading voter's guide and making informed decisions about Important Things That Affect Society and About Which I Have a Voice.
  • November 5, 2006:
    • 7:30pm - In attempt to procrastinate from reading for class, spend 1.5 hours reading analysis and pro/con content of voter's guide and attempting to understand which choices are the lesser of evils. Try not to be swayed by ARGUMENTS WHICH FEEL THE NEED TO MAKE THEIR POINTS IN ALL. CAPITAL. LETTERS!! Find myself overcome by irritation at the idiocy of a society which wants things (like, say, education, traffic relief, and environmental protection) but is unwilling to pay taxes to fund it, opting instead to insist on issuing bonds, which essentially amounts to taxing our children for things we want to enjoy today (Buy now! Nothing down! No payments until January 2036!). Fear that one day soon we will see Arnold Schwarzenegger on late night TV, riding a donkey in a clown suit, advertising California's Going Out of Business Sale (Closing our doors! Everything must go!).
    • 9:00pm - wish I had a martini. Start working on something easy, like the Sunday crossword.
    • 9:30pm - notice that my absentee ballot was supposed to be in the mail two days ago.
    • 9:31pm - curse. decide to deal with it the next day.
  • November 6, 2006:
    • 8:16am - hear on NPR that absentee ballots can be dropped off at polling locations.
    • 8:17am - hear on NPR that thousands of people do this, causing close races to be undecided for days on end while ballots are counted.
    • 8:18am - decide not to be One of Those People. Decide to find my voting location and vote properly
  • November 7, 2006:
    • 9:52am - leave for class
    • 9:53am - use One Return Rule to go back for absentee ballot
    • 9:54am - use first amendment of the One Return Rule to go back (yes, again) for voter registration card, which no longer appears to be in To Be Filed pile in corner.
    • 9:56am - decide doing my civic duty is more important that being in class on time (which, really I don't seem to do often anyway, today's excuse is just better than usual) and continue searching room until I start over and find voter registration card in the To Be Filed pile, right between the title to my car and my CPR certification card.
    • 3:00pm - pull card out after class. Discover it does not actually tell me where to go vote.
    • 3:05pm - spend 15 minutes online attempting to ascertain the location of my polling place
    • 3:30pm - bike to my polling place. Say hello to the ladies knitting outside the retirement home
    • 3:33pm - spell my name, several times, to the lady behind the table. Offer to show someone, anyone, some ID to prove I am who I say I am. Wonder why no one seems to care that I am who I claim to be. Realize I didn't need my voter registration card. Explain that I want to vote today, even though I'm holding my absentee ballot, all filled out, in my hand. Get quizzical looks. Get directed across the room to another lady. Stand there holding my ballot while they yell back and forth about what to do with my absentee ballot, because apparently ripping it up, throwing it out, or writing VOID are not options. Realize I am not being helpful, and stop giving them suggestions about what to do with absentee ballot.
    • 3:40pm - enter booth with shiny new ballot. Marvel at the wonder of technology that is the InkaVote machine. Try not to mess up. At least not on any of the important ones.
    • 3:45pm - exit booth. Ballot in hand. Feed into SuperSecretVoteGuardingMachine, monitored by Frank. Feel powerful. Feel like I have a voice. Feel, strangely, like watching election results on television all night.
    • 3:46pm - Proudly display my first ever "I Voted" sticker. Wish a good afternoon to the knitting ladies. Resume worrying about society.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nice!
I find myself in a voting situation every voting season (?) because no matter how many times I give them a change of address, they never seem to actually change my address. So I can vote I just have to go to a church in Ballard to do it when I'd rather sit at home and do it by absentee.
This year Mark and I agreed on everything so I just let him vote "for the household". How lazy is that?

Anonymous said...

I went to two places to vote. One didn't have me on their list, the other one had shut down and relocated. I gave up totally starving and exhausted and was fed at my pal's house at the "supposed voting" end of town.

then I made it home. the right guy won. I'll vote next year if I can figure out where.
becky

Anonymous said...

Gosh what a blast! You lead a very exciting day. best part i think is still the knitting ladies and the excpetion to the one return rule... Does this not in fact make it the two return rule?