LuAnn Buechler hugged her way around the Trump rally.
She hugged the Trump supporters in line. She hugged the protesters in the street. She hugged until her sweatshirt was as soaked with rainwater as they were.
She was trying, she said, to change the energy in a space where thousands of people were bristling with anger on opposite sides of police barricades.
A stranger with a "FREE HUGS" sign is a tough sell in a state where many people are uncomfortable making eye contact until they've known you for at least a year. But Buechler, a motivational speaker from Byron, Minn., and author of a book about the manifold benefits of hugging, found plenty of people willing to take her up on the offer.
As they bent down to give the 4-foot-11 Buechler a hug, some of them whispered in her ear.
"Go talk to those other people," they told her, nodding to the crowd on the other side of the Trump divide. "They're the ones who are angry."
Buechler hugged hundreds, dispensed "ihug" stickers and FREE HUGS signs, then hit the road back to Byron as the rally started. She considers herself nonpolitical and doesn't like the way the debate over this polarizing president has unraveled relationships in her tightknit family.
"What I want," she said, "is for people to stop fighting."