The Peterborough Examiner

Move to Canada didn’t ease this American’s election-induced stress

- NICOLE THOMPSON

OTTAWA — Melanie Gardner moved to Canada to escape Donald Trump’s presidency, but even on the other side of the border she said the stress of the U.S. election is taking a physical toll.

“I just went to the dentist this morning. I’ve been grinding my teeth so much that I’m having vicious pain in my mouth,” she said from Ottawa on Wednesday. “So I have to make a concerted effort to stop that.”

But she can’t unclench her jaw just yet.

Despite Gardner’s Ottawa address, the as-yet-undetermin­ed results of the election are all too real to her, affecting her daughter who remains south of the border, her siblings and cousins, and the homeland for which she still has hope.

Gardner, a retired U.S. government librarian, was among many Americans who pondered crossing the 49th parallel after Trump was elected four yyears ago. Google Trends show the t search “move to Canada” spiked after the 2016 election, and surged again on Tuesday night. But with a Canadian husband, Gardner was in a position to do it.

It took about two years, she said, but she and her husband sold their Maryland house and sought solace in Canada’s capital. And while she said the move felt — and continues to feel — right to her, it didn’t bring the respite she and her loved ones expected.

“Everybody — all my friends and family — said, ‘Oh, well, you know, you’re away from all of it. So you must be calm and everything is good.’ I said, ‘It’s up here. It crosses the border. It’s in the newspapers, it’s on the news. They can’t stop watching because of how horrible it is,’ ”

Gardner said.

She couldn’t stop watching either, and this year began work- ing with Democrats Abroad to ensure Americans overseas know how to vote.

“Many of those people don’t know they actually can vote,” she said.

She’s spent hours every day answering people’s questions in an a effort to get out the vote, while taking Zoom exercise

classes, going for walks and wworking on a quilt in a bid to take care of herself.

But even if her work pays off and Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden wins the presidency, she said she won’t be moving back to the U.S.

She’s set down roots here. “People have asked what most surprised me about Canada and I said the fact that it seemed like home right away,” she said.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Melanie Gardner began working with Democrats Abroad to ensure Americans overseas know how to vote.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Melanie Gardner began working with Democrats Abroad to ensure Americans overseas know how to vote.

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