I came to Pitt County, in eastern North Carolina, to ask questions of folks who hadn’t yet voted.

“What are the top issues on your mind and heart, heading into this election? Tell me more about that.”
“Do you agree that the economy works better when everyone has access to opportunity?”

In four days of canvassing, I had probably 75 doorstep conversations: most short; some dispiriting, more uplifting. But in the process, I came to feel that my home state was actually canvassing me…ringing my doorbell, asking me these questions.
“What does it mean to be from a place?”
“How much of a Southerner are you, really?”

I combined this canvassing trip to NC with visiting my parents and my three high school besties, in Durham—the wealthier, more educated center of the state. But once I said goodbye to my dear ones, I was 100% in the zone with my blue-state teammates from Common Power (if you want to get involved w/ them yourself, now’s the time! Click here) in flat, cotton-fielded Greenville—a place as new to me as it was to my non-Southern team.

Common Power’s model is to team with local organizations and become their worker bees. Our org was Advance Carolina,

…and our liaison was Ms. Danisha.

We rotated carloads of door-knocking teams each day. Here’s mine from my second day, taking our lunch break:

Even though we were talking mostly to registered Democrats, we ran into some bummers. Bummer #1: Donald Trump came to town, to rally at Eastern Carolina U.

His merch tables were all over town.

Bummer #2: young Black men who told us, A) I don’t believe voting matters; B) God’s in charge anyhow, so whatever happens will be His will; C) some combination of A & B (which I personally took to mean, C): I don’t wanna vote for a woman, I just don’t want to say so).

But after a day or so, I got good at turning those interactions into real conversations–by pushing back a little, with humor; by asking more questions; by remembering the mantra “Every conversation an invitation.” And every one of those men hung out and talked with me, so open, so friendly…like we were visitin’ on their front steps.
Because of those conversations, I’m 100% sure I “moved the needle” a little with at least one male voter per day. Multiply that by the # of volunteers out there, and there’s our “margin of effort”: the thing that will make the difference in this election.

When Team NC packed up and left, I volunteered to stay an extra day and a half to make up for joining late (because of my family/friends visit). And that’s when the tables turned a little.
Advance Carolina sent me even further east, to Bertie County, a place I knew only because I’ve ordered raw peanuts from this place:

There, in the tiny town of Windsor, I was supposed to be a poll watcher, not a canvasser. Only problem: there was nothing to watch.
In fact, I had a good long wait before we even went to the polling place…so I took myself for a walk along their cool swamp boardwalk.

Then, when we finally got to the polls, it was just a bunch of folks sittin’ and visitin’. No scary MAGA pickup trucks circling the block. Locals of both races were greeted, most by name, as they arrived, and thanked for voting as they left.
[not pictured: the polling place; I didn’t care to violate folks’ privacy. But imagine the shade of a nice, big magnolia tree.]

Me? I was as useful as a fly on the wall. At first I was frustrated. I drove all this way to get WORK done! I could be out there pounding the pavement, chalking up more doors! What a waste of time! Etc.
But as I drove back to Greenville, I considered: those folks were modeling exactly what I had found to be the most effective political work. They were visitin’. Telling stories. Asking how so-and-so was doing. Teasing, laughing. Doing community.
What’s your all-fired hurry? the Bertie County folks seemed to be asking (not that they were paying me any attention). What’s with all the checklists & efficiency? Can’t you see this is how we’ve survived all these decades, here of all places?

Ten years ago, after driving across the country to NC, I wrote a song about my complicated relationship with the South. Most of the lyrics are on the dark side:
Gone to Carolina in my mind, but my heart’s gone mute
One look at a poplar tree and I’m thinking of strange fruit.
This red clay was my stompin’ ground—hardly a boast
When every cotton field is haunted by sharecropper ghosts.
Chorus:
Yeah, it’s another song about the South, y’all,
Just trying to sort my feelings out once and for all.
How can someone feel so in and out of place?
That sweet sunny south where I first saw the light,
If she’s my ol’ mama, I’m a teenager in flight.
Do I want to hug her neck…or slap her face?

But now, as I head home to my blue state, filled with new thoughts about my old red—no, purple!—one, this verse feels more appropriate:
The woods are thick with poison ivy and trumpet vine
More tangled up and twisted than this loyalty of mine
For a countryside that’s suffered more hardship per square mile
Than any place I know—sucked up with sweet tea and a smile.
I still doubt Kamala Harris will win North Carolina, even after all the efforts made here. But I do think she will be elected. And if that happens, I’m going to summon all my powers of visitin’ to help get us through the next steps.

Wow, Gretchen. i continue to follow your ventures with interest–and
envy. I so admire your strength, self-assurance, and being so willing to
step into the fray. Your time as a poll watcher reminded me of my
own–finally old enough to vote (age 21, then), and a “green” college
student in La Grande, Oregon. There were no instructions, no advice, no
partners. Just do it! I’m so glad to finally understand what “it” was.
Thanks to you, my friend, for stepping out of time and place to assure
me that what I did in small town Oregon, so long ago, was what needed to
be done. It’s been a mystery to me!
Also, I wish you a Happy Belated Birthday. Keep celebrating. I will
write a note to WWSS soon to update. In the meantime, wishing you happy
travels and a safe landing.
Sending you love,
Rita
Hahaha, Rita, I’m glad it wasn’t just me! It’s funny to me that poll watching was a “thing” even back when our country wasn’t so polarized. Maybe there have always been shenanigans!
Sending love back, my friend!