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CCD Presents: An Object in Motion by Kate M. Carey

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by Kate M. Carey || Winston-Salem Writers

An Object in Motion

The Republican and Democrat conventions spurred me on to action this election season. I joined up just after Labor Day and showed up weekly to call voters. I made calls for Senator Sherrod Brown when I lived in Ohio, so I knew the drill. Show up at Party Headquarters, sit in front of a computer, put on the headset, and let the robo-data provide you with names/numbers and a script. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy.

Except, this was a small county in North Carolina with limited resources and a just-opened headquarters run by some guy from Rhode Island who came down to tell us how to get out the vote. I was shocked when he asked, “Did you bring your phone?”

“We use our own phones?” my voice dripped disbelief.

He offered a shrug, a smile and “We’re supposed to get some phones next week.”

Welcome to Get Out the Vote.

I called folks – 100 plus – each week at my appointed shift. By week four I had a crappy “burner’ flip phone that I barely remembered how to use. Marshall McLuhan said, ‘A typewriter is only a means of transcribing a thought, not expressing it,’ and using the Party’s technology was better than having my person cell phone number show up in someone’s caller ID.

Still, I called and folks answered. Some told me belligerently ‘it ain’t no one’s business’ who they were voting for and others talked about how proud they were to vote for a woman. I zipped through my call list and signed up volunteers for the booth at the county fair or to canvass the neighborhoods. Then I switched from phone calling to calling on, as in showing up unannounced at voters’ homes.

I had always planned to canvass at election time, but life and laziness usually got in the way. I’m a fair-weather outdoor person and fall in Ohio can be endless days of bone-chilling rain. By luck of the draw, I was rewarded with two warm fall afternoons to walk about Lexington. I gathered up the ubiquitous clipboard and reams of paper – neighborhood maps, names and addresses, voter registration information, a slate of candidates – and headed out.

I canvassed in neighborhoods not far from my house. I knew some of the neighborhoods because I drove past them on my way to the Interstate. I found other neighborhoods tucked between falling down factories and forgotten storefronts. I talked to voters in a former hospital repurposed to provide companionship, shelter, and warm, affordable housing. I stopped at homes in the upper $300,000 and some in the lower $30,000. I knocked on the doors of people I knew from my church who invited me to sit and chat about the election.

But in most neighborhoods, I knocked on the doors of strangers. I was invited in before I said my name or gave my spiel. Folks welcomed me, called me “honey,” and offered a seat on their couches. Not every house was inviting. I avoided the house with two pit bulls barking loudly behind a fence that held a sign proclaiming, “Protected by the Second Amendment.” I walked past houses missing paint and shutters, where doors were akimbo, and posted letters declared their lives as dwellings were over. I knocked on doors and watched neighbors across the street sneak into their garages hoping not to be seen. Some folks boldly kept their doors closed to me as I knocked, even though cars were in the driveways and music emanated from inside.

On some streets, large landscaped lots of azaleas, holly, and magnolia trees separated neighbors, while on others, chain link fences kept them apart. Some houses on those landscaped lots proudly proclaimed their occupants’ political learnings with signs for McCrory or Cooper, Trump, or Clinton. Houses in sore need of paint on small postage stamp tracts declared something else. Empty houses stood side by side with houses holding new Americans proud to vote each year, and other houses holding people who said they had not voted…ever. A convicted felon bemoaned his inability to vote and told me that he watched all the debates. He said he chose a candidate because “this year it matters.” Many voters who opened their doors to me said with pride that they voted early at the Board of Elections office. They thanked me for coming by and bid me a blessed day.

Kids and cats were the great equalizers in the neighborhoods. Kids played with balls and rode bikes and skateboards. They would wave, or say ‘hey’ smiling shyly. Cats, being cats, ignored me and kept snoozing in sunbeams warming front porches. Panthers games blared from TVs in small houses and even larger screen TVs in big houses. I saw cars and trucks of all makes, models, and colors. Red and yellow flowers bloomed in tidy gardens next to weedy yards planted with broken furniture. I walked wide, smooth streets reminiscent of ‘ribbons of highway’ and narrow, bumpy, pot-hole afflicted roads tucked between tiny, company store houses.

That great North Carolina author, Thomas Wolfe, is credited with saying you can’t go home again, but I beg to differ. Home for me is rural Ohio where I grew up. It’s mid-city Columbus where I became an adult, a wife, and a mother. It’s Topsail Island where I breathe deeply watching waves take my anxieties and worries out to sea. And now, it’s Lexington — Davidson county, the Piedmont. My exercise tracker counted the steps I walked, but my heart counted the people I met those afternoons with my neighbors in this place I now call home.

 

A previous version of this essay was printed in The Dispatch, Lexington, NC.

 

Kate M Carey writes about the wonderful, crazy and chaotic, and sometimes painful things people do for love. She is married to an Episcopal priest and has children living in Ohio and Florida. Her work has been published in Panoply, The Tishman Review, Savannah Anthology, and Camel City Dispatch.

Founded in 2005, Winston-Salem Writers is a group of writers who write fiction, non-fiction, plays and poetry, and who care about the art and craft of writing. They offer programs, workshops, critique groups, open mic nights, contests and writers’ nights out for both beginning writers and published authors. For more information, click HERE.

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Celebrate Historic Preservation Month with events around the county

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Historic Preservation Month is being observed in May with lectures, walking and trolley tours of historic sites, the unveiling of two new local historic markers and more.

Events began May 2 with the first of four guided “Trail Mix” walking tours in Bethania with a trek along Bethania’s historic Orchard Trail. This trail walk will be repeated May 13 at 9 a.m. Trail walks along the Reuter trail are scheduled for May 16 at 1 p.m. and May 27 at 9 a.m.

The Forsyth County Historic Resources Commission will unveil a historic marker at 3 p.m. May 7 for the Samuel and Sarah Stauber Farm at 6085 Bethania-Tobaccoville Road. A historic marker about the Brothers Spring and the African School in what is now Happy Hill Park will be unveiled at 1 p.m. May 20 at the park. The unveiling will be followed by a tour of the Happy Hill neighborhood by Cheryl Harry, the director of African-American programming for Old Salem.

On May 18, the Commission and the Black History Archives of Winston-Salem will host a trolley tour of the historic residences along East 14th Street. Trolley tours will also be held May 20 along the old streetcar routes in Winston-Salem, and of the expanded Old Salem National Historic Landmark.

And on May 25, the Commission will hold an architectural tour of downtown Winston-Salem at noon, beginning at Mission Pizza Napoletana, 707 N. Trade St.

Also on May 25, Preservation Forsyth will present its 2017 Preservation Awards at 6:30 p.m. at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 520 Summit St. Margaret Smith, a retired Wake Forest University professor, will be the featured speaker.

Also during Historic Preservation Month:

  • Old Salem will hold “lunch and learn” programs at noon on Wednesdays in May in the James A. Gray Auditorium in the Old Salem Visitors Center, 900 Old Salem Road.
  • Historic Preservation Month Event in Clemmons May 6th and 13th from 8:30a.m. – 12 noon at the Clemmons Village Hall (3715 Clemmons Road) Learn about the history of E. T. Clemmons “Hattie Butner” stagecoach at open houses in the village hall (taking place at the same time as the Village of Clemmons Farmer’s Market.)
  • MESDA, 924 S. Main St., will hold a program on the evolving “period” room at 2 p.m. May 12. Admission is $20.
  • The Kernersville Historic Preservation Society will hold a tour of St. Paul’s pre-Civil War black cemetery at 6 p.m. May 15 at 711 S. Main St., Kernersville; and on May 23 Korner’s Folly, 413 S. Main St., Kernersville, will present Benjamin Briggs, the executive director of Preservation Greensboro, speaking on historic preservation at 6:30 p.m. Admission is $5.
  • Soprano Laura Ingram Semilian will sing songs from the 1800s at 6:30 p.m. May 16 at the Walkertown Branch Library, 2969 Main St., Walkertown.
  • Reynolda House Museum of American Art will host a free tour of the Reynolda House grounds and gardens at 2 p.m. May 19.
  • The Rural Hall Historic Train Depot and Railroad Museum will hold an open house and family day from 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 20 at 8170 Depot St., Rural Hall; and the Rural Hall Historical Museum will hold an open house from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 20 at 145 Bethania St., Rural Hall.
  • Bethania will host a lunch and learn on “Bethania: Wachovia’s First Planned Community,” at noon May 31 at the Bethania Visitors Center, 5393 Ham Horton Lane, Bethania.
  • Salem College will host presentations by its historic preservation and public history students at 6 p.m. May 9 in the Club Dining Room of the Refectory, 601 S. Church St.

For more information about Historic Preservation Month events go to CityofWS.org/HRC or contact Michelle McCullough at 336-747-7063.

To view a downloadable calendar of events, click HERE.

Historic Preservation Month activities are presented and coordinated by Preservation Month Partners, a collaboration of the Forsyth County Historic Resources Commission, Old Salem Museums & Gardens, Preservation Forsyth, Reynolda House Museum of American Art and the Town of Bethania.

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CCD Presents: Poetry by Peter Venable

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Winston-Salem Writers||Peter Venable

The Hour Before

At Blackwater Baptist cemetery,

behind the loose-shingled steeple

a massive cedar shades                                

lichen-capped tombstones

bent askew by centuries

of blistering heat and pitiless ice

as I wait beneath, bough-shaded,

 

for the service under a blue tent

some seventy feet away where her body

rests in its wooden cocoon.

 

Dragonflies surf heatwaves

as sweat soaks my collar and tie.

 

Strange

how spacetime curves into that

black hole singularity

under the coffin,

 

and how the vision of her smiling face—

beatific—beams through the tears to come.

 

 

5 a.m.

From the deck

I sense a million tiny eyes probe mine

behind silhouettes of trees and shrubs.

 

The dank air whirls with spirals of light

and a crescent moon blushes

under dawn’s pink ruffles.

 

 

Spooning

Spooning submerged granola

under strawberry yogurt

in a wine glass is like—nothing! 

Any simile profanes.

 

Spooning granola

under strawberry yogurt

is pure metaphor—transporting me,

spoonful after spoonful

 

as I shut my eyelids

 

munching, slurping, tasting, swallowing

 

until I scrape up the last crunch

 

and lick

 

the last

 

pink

 

drop.

 

Peter Venable has written both free and metric verse for over fifty years. He has been published in Prairie Messenger, Torrid Literature Journal, Third Wednesday, Windhover – A Journal of Christian Literature, Flying South 2016, and others. He is a member of the Winston Salem Writers. Visit him at petervenable.com

Founded in 2005, Winston-Salem Writers is a group of writers who write fiction, non-fiction, plays and poetry, and who care about the art and craft of writing. They offer programs, workshops, critique groups, open mic nights, contests and writers’ nights out for both beginning writers and published authors. For more information, click HERE.

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Drinking Beer for a Good Cause at the 4th Annual Arts & Craft Beer Event

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The following was provided for your information by the Sawtooth School for Visual Art

The fourth annual Arts & Craft Beer is on tap for Friday, April 28, 2017 from 5:30 to 9:00 PM at Sawtooth School, located upstairs in the Milton Rhodes Center for the Arts in downtown Winston-Salem. This fundraiser event combines craft beer tasting, art demonstrations, and art making with all proceeds from benefiting the Sawtooth School’s Scholarship Fund.

The area’s best craft brews will be provided by Foothills Brewing, HOOTS Beer Co., Wicked Weed Brewing, Burial Beer Co., Birdsong Brewing Co., Devil’s Backbone Brewing Company, Appalachian Mountain Brewery, and Four Saints.

Guests will be invited to create their own limited-edition screen-printed tote bag, and to make a pair of earrings from beer bottle caps.

Tickets are $20 in advance (below) and $25 at the door. Proof of age is required for entry.

 

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