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LOST Survivors Camp

LOST Survivors Camp

LOTS of Roosters Here, Cock-a-doodling All Day Long

LOTS of Roosters Here, Cock-a-doodling All Day Long

Secret Lava Pools… Not so good for swimming right now!

Secret Lava Pools… Not so good for swimming right now!

Where I was when I learned that Obama would be our next president. I cried. I am filled with pride and joy.

Where I was when I learned that Obama would be our next president. I cried. I am filled with pride and joy.

Our First Hawaiian Sunset

Our First Hawaiian Sunset

Waiting for our flight from Honolulu to Kauai. This outdoor area is right by our gate!

Waiting for our flight from Honolulu to Kauai. This outdoor area is right by our gate!

The Sad Grandpa

The Sad Grandpa

Vacation has started! With ginormous beers of course…

Vacation has started! With ginormous beers of course…

Now I have a confession. Even Brett doesn’t know this. I hope it doesn’t lessen the professional work we’re trying to accomplish in chronicling this historic election on the ground, but if it does, I’ll live with it. There is something stirring in America.

Back at the rally, after the march had left MLK Gardens, I’d gone back for the car while Brett took photos, and I spotted a very old black man in a sharp Sunday suit walking slowly at the very back of the huge march. He hadn’t yet arrived at the voting center, and I decided to find him when I got back.

I wanted to go talk to him, to ask him what this moment meant to him. He was a guy who you take one glance at, and know, that guy’s seen it all. I wanted a quote. I had my journalist hat on. I thought, this will be great.

So when I got back to the voting location with the car, I went to find him in the line. Eventually I spotted him, and was ready to walk up the few feet between us and introduce myself when I stopped in my tracks.

A young black boy, no more than eight years old, walked up to this man, who was at least eighty. The boy offered the man a sticker, probably an “I Voted” sticker, but I couldn’t see. The man took the sticker and paused. Silently, he looked down at the boy, who was looking back up at the man. The man put his hand gently on the boy’s head, and I saw his eyes glisten.

I didn’t ask the man for a quote. I didn’t need to. I walked over by myself, behind the community center, and I sat down on a bench next to the track, and wept.

Sean Quinn of FiveThirtyEight.com.