Hoodwinked.

Frustrated.

Cheated.

Screwed.

Sixty days out from one of the most important elections in modern history, in a crushingly divisive political climate, with two candidates who are historically detested—and third-party options, lest we forget, consisting of a starry-eyed Miss America contestant and someone who doesn’t know what Aleppo is—7 percent of voters still don’t know what they’re going to do come Election Day.

What they are sure of, however, is how the choice between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump—which should really be called “blackmail,” one voter told me—makes them feel.

The Noun Project

In a recent focus group of Wisconsinites who have voted for both a Democrat and a Republican for president, one voter described the predicament with a kind of avant-garde poetry: If the 2016 campaign had a smell, the voter said, it would be that of a presumably putrid “skunk’s fart.” Others cited manure, rotting eggs, and just plain garbage.

So what could ever compel them to don a gas mask and vote for one of a slate of insufferable, noxious candidates? What could possibly make up their minds? Four undecided voters explain what they’re waiting for.

Kyle Wilmot, 49, senior recruiter in Erie, Colorado

On one hand, Hillary Clinton has obviously a very solid political background, very established within that realm. But what I don’t want to see is the same establishment, the same-old, same-old, to put it succinctly. There’s a good chance we would get the same-old, same-old if she is elected. With Donald Trump, it's just, with the way that he talks, it's very scary to me. I like the fact that he's not been within the political establishment. But a lot of his ideas, and what I've heard, and the way he talks, is just very much—scares me.

I think I’d have to hear a lot more specifics, really, about what he wants to do, how he’s going to do it. From what I’ve heard, he’s kind of hitting the fringes of a lot of things, and not getting too specific.

With [Clinton], it's more about how can she bring the parties together to gather a consensus to get some of this stuff moving along, instead of always being tied up, nothing ever being able to get pushed through.

I’m a registered independent. I voted for Obama. I voted for George Bush. I've voted across both sides, both parties. I'm really for who I think will be the best person at the time. I want somebody that is going to be able to bring D.C. together and the political establishment together, and be able to do what's right for the country, regardless of the political affiliation.

These debates will definitely be very important to me. Hopefully, they will be more specific about what they’re going to do, how they’re going to do things. What they're going to try to do to make this country better. All of those things.

Politics reporter, 42, Washington, D.C.

I've struggled with this the entire election season. Some days I'm really tortured by it, and some days it's, like, laughable. But I've never really felt this way as an adult human. And it's really—it's messing with me.

I cannot stomach Hillary Clinton. I just can't get with her. Maybe because I know too much. I find so much of her world hypocritical, reprehensible. I think the rest of the country sort of gives her a pass, like, "Oh, she's always been attacked by Republicans, it's not that big a deal, email shmemail!" But I'm like, "WHAT! This is a huge deal."