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Down To The Wire

Sep08
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Latest word is that Saturday is the last day of the packing season at the cannery. That means that we have just a handful of days before Kristi’s back home, we’re sleeping on the same shift again, and we can just collapse and regroup for the fall. And thank God for it. We’re both just completely burned out and exhausted, and are ready for this to be over.

Fired a client this morning. That’s always fun. Nice guy, too – he owns a business making expensive, high quality components for high end audio equipment. He mainly caters to audio modification pros, the guys that hardcore audiophile geeks send their old amps and receivers to get “modded”, i.e. upgraded with hyperimproved parts. This guy makes some of those parts.

First red flag I got was at the very start of the relationship, when he told me that he was “kind of a copywriter himself”. Lord save us; it always astounds me when a client fancies himself (they’re almost always male) a writer, and still they decide to go hire a writer. Anyway, the writer-wannabe-clients always end up rolling the same way, niggling and nitpicking, insisting that the way they’ve been doing it for years is the proper way it is supposed to be done (they why the frak are you hiring me to replace it??).. basically playing the role of micromanaging editor and second guessing every single detail. Because he’s kinda a writer too, you know.

Sigh. We went around and around a bit this morning over email about the latest batch of copy he was unhappy with, and he finally said that he’d probably just write it himself and have me edit it. I wrote back and said, hey, we’re at the back end of your deposit and I don’t want to go into billing with a client who’s unhappy with my work. So let’s just call it a day.

Having a smart and loving wife who understands this business makes all the difference in the world. A couple years ago, I would have fought to keep this guy in billing, and then eventually we’d reach the end of the project and he’d refuse to pay. Kristi and I talked this morning, before she went on to bed, about all this. “It’s not worth it,” she said. And she was right.

Meanwhile, later this morning I sold a newsletter job and signed some website copy work with a previous client, a commercial retail outfit in Denver. I did a brochure for them a few months back. Also need to work on a Powerpoint presentation this afternoon for another regular. So I’m happy to keep my desk full of people who like me and let me do my job.

Welcome back from Labor Day weekend, all.

Posted in Work

The Crazies That Walk Among Us

Sep01
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Years ago George Carlin once commented on how many raving loonies were walking around in society. He said, and I quote, “There are an awful lot of people walking around – not all there! And I don’t mean the helpless or the homeless. I don’t mean people who have been kicked out without their medications and stuff. I’m talking about fuckers with jobs!“.

(I’d pardon my language, but I’m quoting The Man, and there’s something deeply sacrilegious about apologizing for George Carlin’s use of language. I just can’t bring myself to dishonor a dead man that way.)

That line comes to my mind a lot in my work. I’m basically a technical marketer who specializes in written communications; another way of looking at it is that I’m a technical writer who sells stuff. I write websites, brochures, white papers, you name it, mainly for high tech or industrial manufacturers on a per-project basis. These are not crazies: they’re engineers and/or successful businesspeople. Which is why I continue to be perplexed, mostly amused, sometimes irritated by the number of Carlin’s “fuckers with jobs” who contact me.

Usually they’re independent business owners, people who quit their job to start a business at their kitchen table. These guys can usually be identified by their lack of budget, lack of discipline, and completely asinine excuse for a business plan. My favorite one of those to date was the former prostitute – this was back in ’05 – who wanted to market instructional DVDs to teach young women how to success in “the business”. I kid you not; that’s an actual example of the kind of people who find me. (Up until a few years ago I actually made an effort to follow up with these guys, figuring, you never know. Stopped doing that after the gig with the meditation CD idiot who insisted that we claim on his website that his mediation programs cured cancer.)

But without a question, beyond a doubt, hands down the absolute, positively most bizarre nutjobs are – BY FAR – the folks searching for ghostwriters. I “ghostwrite” technical materials. Maybe a magazine article here and there. But I do show up on Google as a “ghostwriter”, which means I get every manner of lonely unmedicated misanthrope desperate to get their story out. Mostly they’re wannabe novelists. Once, a couple years ago, I once got several calls from a woman who wanted me to help her write a children’s book about her childhood rape.

Lately it’s been Jerome. This summer I’ve gotten several voice mails from Jerome; he lives over on the Space Coast of Florida. He’s been trying to enlist me to help him write his IMPORTANT new age book. Like Deepak Chopra but more IMPORTANT. Can’t stress enough to me how IMPORTANT this treatise is. He’s called me a total of three times now, the latest one yesterday, and each time the calls get weirder.

Yesterday he dropped the new age book altogether and spent his full voice mail time stressing to me that he is a storyteller. A STORYTELLER. Like, a STORYTELLER, for reals. He must have used the word “storyteller” fifteen times. Now he wants to write a crime drama, desperately impressing upon me his need for help to get the story born from his natural-storyteller chest and out into the world.

Sigh. They’re everywhere. And they’re all working on books. I’ve decided to start saving these things for posterity.

But if you want to read about the all time winner, the number one raving looney that beats all these guys, click through the jump. You’ll love this guy.
READ MORE »

Posted in Diversions, Everyday Life, Work

Mornings

Aug30
2009
Rob Written by Rob

We’ve gotten some good news in recent days. My brother Chris got his job transfer locked down, and so is now in those final few frantic weeks of planning and executing a move to Eugene, Oregon. We’re told that his plane leaves Florida on 9/30 on a one-way ticket, and he’s still wrapping up the movers and getting his car from one coast to the other. The cool part is that he’ll be just an eight hour drive (or a one hour flight) from us; we’re hoping to visit him up there soon, as well as entice him down here possibly for Christmas.

The other bit of good news is that the cannery is starting to wind down the season. Latest word is that 9/12 could be the last day, and then all the seasonal people get sent home and the pack is done for the year. We’re both looking forward to wrapping up this seven-day-a-week night shift stuff, and we now can start to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

You adapt to circumstance. Work things out however you can. One of our adaptations is this ritual we do in the mornings: Kristi comes home about 6am, eats breakfast, changes clothes, comes to bed and wakes me up about 6:30. Then I slowly wake up while she tells me about her night. As I wake up, she winds down, until finally I’m awake enough to pick up a book and read her to sleep. Then I get up, usher the dog out of the bedroom, close up the room and get my own day started. We’ve been doing this every day now for months.

Anyway, this morning Kristi wakes me up and says, “Hey babe. I got an idea. Feel like taking your wife out for breakfast?”

And you know what? Indeed I did. So I jumped in the shower, dressed, and we hit up a local place called Huckleberrys. It used to be the local Perko’s chain; for you Florida readers, it’s very similar to Perkins. Only Perko’s had worse food and the new Huckleberrys has better (including fresh squeezed orange juice!).

So we had our first breakfast together in a really long time this morning. And it was beyond fine. This summer’s been hard, but I think it’s made us both appreciate the little things – the random foot rub, breakfast together, clean and warm towels, falling asleep together at night, weekends with someone fun to hit Barnes and Noble with. The things you miss most when they’re suddenly not there, and the things you might take for granted on a normal day. These days, those things are new and sparkling each time.

Glad summer’s almost over. Ready for the fall to start – and also ready for Kristi to resume R&K writing duties. 🙂

Posted in Everyday Life, Family and Friends, Romance, Work

The August March

Aug22
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Not dead. Just have our hands full these days.

I hate August. When I was a kid, August meant that summer vacation is almost over and it’s time to drag ass back into a classroom. These days, August means that we’re at the height of the worst of the summer. Hot. Back in Florida, the peak of the hurricane season. The dead zone for the business: it seems that every client is either on vacation, going on vacation, coming back from vacation, or otherwise sitting on their thumbs until Labor Day.

Luckily, the business is still pretty consistently busy this month (albeit not as much so as in July), mostly due to ongoing projects. This August, though, is made harder with Kristi’s night shift job at Seneca and her absolute lack of any downtime whatsoever. The grind is getting bad now; knowing that the season ends in just a few weeks almost makes the grind worse. I’m ready to have my wife back, and she’s ready to hit the second week of September and just dropping like a rock.

Today I’m looking out the window and it’s overcast and cloudy this afternoon. And it just suddenly makes me ache for winter. Cold and wet, running the fire, eating cold night food and bundling up with my wife. We’re both ready for summer to be over. More than ready.

By the way – loving congratulations to Robin and Andrew from both of us. We’re seriously psyched for you guys. Have fun!

Posted in Everyday Life, Family and Friends, Work
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