2012: A Year of Firsts

It’s the last day of 2012. Society practically dictates that you take a look back and reflect on what you’ve seen and done throughout the course of the last 365 days (plus one for a leap). For film critics and other fanatics, this usually takes the form of “best of the year” top ten lists. I suppose I could have written one of those. However, in comparison to years past, I’ve hardly seen anything. Instead, I’ve looked wider and deeper at my life to uncover what I’ve accomplished this year for the first time ever. Don’t get too excited, as the following list still leaves me wanting.

1.) A full-time job. I know, I know. At 26, this should have happened to me earlier in life. But remember, I’ve been in school for about 20 cumulative years, and I only ever worked part-time before. Anyway, I’m still getting used to spending 8-hour-long days, five times a week, on my feet (and decidedly not behind a desk). This is just one of the many reasons why I’m not ideally suited to this particular full-time upright position. Side note: I was also an election judge for the first (and probably the last) time ever.

2.) Experience working with kids (no, I never babysat during my teenage years). More specifically, experience working with ESOL students. As you may already know, I think I want to be a public school teacher whose specialty is English for Speakers of Other Languages. For years, I have been working toward achieving this goal. 2012 was not without its setbacks in this regard, but in response to the first one I received, I chose to volunteer in the ESOL classroom. So far, so good. I’m set to continue my work next year.

3.) A movie-centric blog. I created CINE FEEL YEAH in January and redesigned it several times as its content areas quickly expanded. It took up so much of my time that I have all but quit hosting it. Perhaps next year I will return, with a simpler conceptual framework. Either that or I will start all over again, as I am wont to do.

4.) Compulsive TV-watching. Sure, I have always watched TV. But never before have the hours spent watching TV programs outnumbered the hours spent watching movies. Moving back home, where there is premium cable, at the end of last year pretty much sealed the deal. Some of my favorite programs to watch include Raising Hope, The Mindy Project (which I hate-watch, actually), The Neighbors, Modern Family (way over-hyped, but it’s solid entertainment), NashvilleParks and Recreation (the best comedy on television), Grey’s Anatomy (don’t judge; I hate it as much as you do), Elementary, Rock Center with Brian Williams, Shark Tank (I’ve waxed rhapsodic about this one before), Downton Abbey (before everyone else was hooked!), Girls, True Blood (whose only good season was the first), and Boardwalk Empire, which leads me to the last item on the list…

5.) A crush on Jack Huston. His character on Boardwalk Empire, though a ruthless killer (he trained his sniper rifle on over 60 men during his stint fighting the Great War, which also left his face horribly disfigured, his voice raspy beyond all repair), is the most sympathetic and respectable of the bunch. What can I say? Men in three-piece suits just kill me. I freely admit that my admiration for Huston’s anti-hero has influenced me to see the actor in a special light. I’m not that familiar with his other work, and I suppose that if my crush was more fevered, I’d probably be rushing out to see David Chase’s coming-of-age rock ‘n’ roll story, Not Fade Away. But I’m not.

Here’s to hoping that, starting tomorrow, next year will be filled with even more firsts!

Coincidence at Work

Today was my first day of training for my new job. I am already starting to get the hang of things—I did something very similar while living in New York. Everyone at work is nice, and the customers are more pleasant than their New York counterparts. So far so good.

What’s funny about my new position is that I got word last Monday that I’d been hired. I received that very welcome news exactly one day before the first anniversary of my last day of work. This means I went a full year of being unemployed. Technically speaking, the work I did as an election judge on Nov. 6 fell on the same day as my one year anniversary of being out of work. Strange how it all works out in the end, huh?

The Day I Was an Election Judge

I was so exhausted but also wired when I returned home from the polls last night around 11 pm that I misspoke on the phone with my sister. I said that Tuesday had felt like the longest day of my life. I quickly revised my statement, remembering that the day I journeyed home from my year-long academic sojourn in England in 2007 was much more arduous by virtue of the fact that on that day I was lugging around about 80 pounds of real, physical baggage from bus to train to plane, etc. I wound up in the emergency room, suffering muscle spasms, a day later. No, Election Day, clocking in at 22 hours long, was nowhere near as painful or stressful. But it was close.

Full disclosure: for about a week beforehand, I’d been dreading working the polls as a voting operations election judge. I felt totally unprepared; there are so many systems and procedures to follow, I panicked at the thought that I would never learn to master them in time. Specifically, I worried that I wouldn’t know how to operate the electronic pollbooks we use to check-in voters. Hands-on training was precisely one month ago. I also resented the hours: 6 am (to grant us an hour to set up the site before the polls opened at 7) to an indeterminate hour past the 8 pm closing time. (I wound up staying until just after 10.30 pm.) Everything that I pessimistically and anxiously expected to happen eventually did, and then some.

During the 6 o’clock hour, I proved so competent, organized, and efficient that the chief judges assigned me to the check-in table along with two others. To my surprise, I had almost instant recall of the machines’ functions despite not having touched an electronic pollbook in a month. My teammates insisted that I sit between them so they could learn from my actions. The funny thing is that, despite my knowledge and confidence, I was the one who made mistakes, like forgetting to sign some early Voter Authority Cards before sending checked-in voters on their way to the voting units. A line of voters started to form around 6.30 am and we were inundated with hundreds more until about 11.30 am. Sometimes, I could barely hear or understand what people were saying as they checked in. The noise in the room was loud and distracting, and the voters often mumbled and/or breathlessly spelled their unfamiliar last names. My incomprehension frustrated many. I totally understand: having to repeat your name three times takes its toll on your patience, especially when you are stopping in on your way to work. All this, combined with my embarrassing inability to easily transcribe words and names as they are spelled aloud for me, made for a rather stressful time; I was stationed at check-in for the first four hours. And this all happened as I just knew it would.

I was relieved to switch roles after taking my first of three breaks. Now I greeted checked-in voters waiting in line, escorting them to the voting booths and giving tips on how to use the touchscreen computer along the way. This part, which mainly encompassed ensuring that voters were ready to cast their ballots and alerting them to the machine’s built-in time-out if the screen isn’t touched for two minutes, felt just as scripted as asking for people’s names, month and day of birth, and addresses at the pollbooks. I spoke so much yesterday, whether fulfilling my official duties, organizing tasks with my co-workers, or just shooting the shit, that right now, my throat is sore from overuse, my lips chapped. In any case, I enjoyed this second role more than the first, though I sporadically returned to it throughout the day. It was a welcome change of pace for many reasons. Other than presenting a break from the noise and frustration produced or exhibited by voters waiting to check in, it also got me back on my feet again. I had made the mistake of wearing jeans that were slightly less forgiving around the waist that, when combined with my constant water-drinking to stem the tides of dehydration, made me have to pee all the time. Seriously, I’m not sure I’ve ever peed so much so often in one day.

I wish I could tell you more about working the polls, particularly the official processes we use to count ballots. But I’m pretty sure there’s a gag order on that front. Instead, I’ll overcompensate for this lack by telling you about my now well-honed party affiliation profiling skills (i.e. if you’re wearing a hunting jacket or a stetson, you’re definitely a Republican). And my perception that Republicans were less friendly, Democrats more excited to be there. Yes, in fact, one of the ways that I could differentiate voters by party affiliation—before learning it, of course—was in how they comported themselves. The Republicans seemed to me to be more sluggish, as if resentful that they had to come off their nearby historic farms and walk amongst civilization to vote against initiatives on the ballot, including, in addition to President Obama’s re-election, same-sex marriage and the extension of in-state tuition costs to undocumented immigrants who have lived here almost all their lives. (Of the ten precincts or polling places in my suburban town, I believe I was stationed at the one with the most “rural” population.) Democrats, on the other hand, were more upbeat, probably because, as progressives, they usually value or believe in the voting process more. For instance, the only people who ever gave me lip, either insisting I look at their photo IDs to confirm their identity or complaining that the state’s law not to require photo ID at the polls is unreasonable, were Republicans. Every time I encountered one of these conservatives, I thought to myself, This isn’t Ohio, Pennsylvania, or Florida. Additionally, from my understanding, recruiting Republicans to serve as election judges was itself a difficult task for the county’s board of elections.

By way of conclusion, I would like to attempt a description of what it was like to physically be there. As I now like to repeat, when I went in, it was dark out; when I went home, it was dark out. I couldn’t leave the polling place, not even to step outside for some fresh air, nor could I read, listen, or watch anything. I’ve already mentioned how uncomfortable it was to sit for long periods, but standing around when it got slow—and we only had a trickle of voters come in during the last two and a half hours (when we were anticipating hundreds!)—was just as unbearable. The worst part, however, was not being able to know what was happening across the county, state, or nation. I worried that I would be there so late that I would completely miss the news media’s live coverage of the returns as they came in. That’s always been how I’ve spent Election Night, watching the map of the United States light up as red and (preferably) blue. When the Democratic chief judge expressed concern that Romney was going to win (based on the turnout in our little precinct, it seemed), I thought, C’mon! I started the day believing in a positive outcome, and I didn’t want to hear any negativity. I was more anxious to hear whether or not my fellow Marylanders (and to a lesser extent, voters in Maine, Minnesota, and Washington) were voting to keep legalized same-sex marriage in the state. I cried when I later found out that they did.

So I played my part. Contrary to what I told you about my failings, I excelled at my job. I’ll be getting a check in the mail. But I don’t think I’ll be coming back in two or even four years’ time. I don’t regret choosing to have this experience. It was different, but it was also emotionally and physically draining. And unbelievably boring, especially once the polls closed and there were too many of us to get the small jobs done in their required sequence. But here’s an important lesson for you: voting appreciation. Previously just a voter, being an election judge has renewed my appreciation for the humble, honest folk who make our voting possible. Here’s an illustrated example of how people may take these volunteers for granted while others don’t: When, on their way out, we thanked people for voting, most said, “You’re welcome.” How oblivious, we thought. A few made our hearts soar, though, when they responded, “Thanks for being here.”

To Paraphrase Taylor Swift

I am never ever going to be a voting operations election judge again. (Just look at the list of categories attached to this post for an impressionist explanation.)

As I type this, word has come in that Obama has won the Presidency for a second term, as he has clinched 274 electoral votes. FUCK YEAH!

Success! Application Complete

Well, I did it. I worked on my important application all day and finally submitted it around 7 pm. I persevered through my writer’s block and wound up—rather organically, I have to say—with a pretty good essay. I spent half the day on that and the second on completing the online application questionnaire, which I have to say is poorly designed. What kind of potential employer asks for the details of all your previous work experiences and extracurricular activities without requiring you to enter the dates of your employment or your salary range? What made it most tedious was the form’s insistence on making me report what my primary responsibilities and most significant contribution were for each of my entries. At one point, my sister called (and I took that as an opportunity to walk around the house and exercise for approximately 40 minutes), and the system timed out. I lost some of my work then, too. Ugh! I’m just glad it’s over.

Tomorrow is a long day: I have a job interview in the afternoon, and then I have a meeting in the evening to help step up the voting place for Tuesday morning. Don’t even get me started on what I’ll be doing Tuesday. (You can read about it here, though.) Just do me one thing, OK? Go out and vote!

I Can Be a Judge, Just for One Day

I got a job! Sure, it’s a temporary one, but it’s still a job. Come Tuesday, November 6th, I will serve as a Voting Operations Election Judge. In other words, I am the person who checks in registered voters, giving them directions and providing any further assistance. And when it’s all over (my day will begin at 6 am and end after 8 pm, when the polls close), I will help the team process the results.

As soon as I heard on Tuesday that my county’s Board of Elections was accepting applications, I filled out the form and mailed it. I wasn’t expecting to hear back so soon, but yesterday I received an email welcoming me to the program and with further instructions on how to prepare. Today, I did some reading from the training handbook and then successfully completed a quiz in order to sign up for a training session. Which I’ll be attending tomorrow.

The job may be for just a day, if you don’t include the four-hour training session and the meeting on the Monday night before Election Day (though my term of service retroactively runs from December of last year to April 2014), but I should earn a little cash that will help me pay for the four-day New York City trip I’m taking with my brother and sister later this month. Plus, it should be an interesting learning experience, being on the other side of democracy. In fact, by virtue of having to spend all day at the voting station, I probably won’t be able to vote at one myself! If I am not assigned to work a polling location within my own precinct, I will have to vote by absentee ballot or on any of the early voting days that commence at the end of the month.