Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
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Quesadilla Tuesday

Sep24
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Just created a new post category here. I don’t know why we didn’t do it before – probably because until recently everything we were busy with revolved around the wedding. But now, three months into our marriage (and doing great) and well into the working year for both of us, talk of matrimony is set aside for a more immediate practical concern: food.

Neither of us did much cooking as single people – we were both fast-food folks. Problem is, that crap’s expensive and not particularly good for you; it’s just convenient and there’s no dishes to wash afterwards. But now that we have lunches to pack in the morning and someone else to cook for and evening assistance at the kitchen sink (not to mention an awesome array of new professional-grade kitchen gadgets), we’ve learned to save money and eat a lot better by nailing down some regular dinner recipes.

Last night – Tuesday – we’re sitting around playing video games with my brother Chris in Orlando. Every Tuesday night we have this activity arranged, usually Grand Theft Auto 4, and usually Kristi and Chris slugging it out online while I’m fixing dinner. We’re all on the phone and using headsets, hanging out and playing and joking for a few hours. And while they’re diligently working together to blast their way through dozens of bad guys to blow up a tanker ship, I’m making quesadillas. They’re simple, delicious, nutritious and easy to eat with your hands. Perfect video game food.

So to inaugurate the new Food section of R&K, here’s the current incarnation of my Tuesday night quesadilla recipe.

Full recipe after the jump.

READ MORE »

Posted in Food

A New Week

Sep15
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Drinking my second cup of coffee of the morning and I’m still barely waking up. 7:30am. Half-watching a movie because the PS3 controller that I forgot to plug in last night was dead this morning, so my usual morning GTA4 ritual has been disrupted a bit. Waiting about a half hour yet before I pop my morning Vicodin and get to work.

It’s been a painful week with recovering from oral surgery, but I’m at least (painfully) eating solid food again, and I am healing. I’ve scaled back from four Vicodin to two per day, and I’ll be off them in the next day or two: there’s only a few left in the bottle and we both agreed not to get it refilled. Switching to Tylenol at that point. Legal narcotics taken under the orders of a licensed doctor for legitimate reasons is a wonderful thing, but I’ll tell you something: I now know how people get hooked on the stuff. Vicodin’s nice.

Probably not helping my jaw to recover, I spent most of last week on the phone. Called about 60 companies and people to drum up some post-Labor Day work (and yes, more than a few of those calls were made stoned out of my head); I need to get my September hours up, and I hadn’t done much of anything the week before except deliver on August drafts and kick out invoices.

It was a productive week. By Friday afternoon, I had four proposals floating around, lined up a half dozen scheduled calls for this week, scheduled out eight or nine billable hours to be worked this week for a regular and reliable client, and nailed down an article deal with Bride Nouveau Magazine. So this week’s going to be a busy week: three people to talk with today, followed by another week of hustling and schmoozing and wheeling and dealing and, occasionally, writing.

Busy days for both of us. Kristi’s firmly buried under her new GATE duties at work while I’m fighting to ramp up business for the fall and early next year. She’s constantly exhausted and I’m sore and on drugs. But you know, strangely enough, we’re both holding it together. It’s a lot easier to take on heavier loads when you have someone you trust there to help keep you from being crushed by it.

Thanks to everyone who called or emailed and asked how I was doing. I do appreciate it.

Posted in Everyday Life, Work

Much Better, A Bit Lighter

Sep09
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Just wanted to let everyone know that I’m doing fine this morning. Slept like a rock and there’s very little pain this morning, probably thanks in large part to Vicodin. That’s the good stuff. Also no swelling so far. Luckily I’m in fairly good health, normal blood pressure, I eat well; my mouth still feels somewhat like someone spent a half hour at it with a scalpel, and I’ll be off the phone today, but I’m okay.

I know yesterday’s oral surgery was a surprise to several people. Sorry about that. My teeth are a real touchy topic with me, and over the last few weeks of dentist visits.. well, let’s just say that it’s been a pretty inner-self-revealing time. Kristi and I have always been pretty good at being able to tell each other anything, to lay ourselves bare emotionally. Talk about sex? No problem. Money? No problem. Family, friends, the past? Sure.

Sitting in a dentist’s office with my new wife, discussing every event in my dental care history (which is pretty extensive) and what we’ll need to do in the next year or two? Painfully soul rending. We came out of that office that first afternoon and I just told her, hon, you’ve got everything now. That’s the toughest of it for me, right there. You’ve got the whole soul.

I was just exhausted. And I knew it was just the start.

In sickness and in health, she reminds me.

So yesterday afternoon she blasted home from school to pick me up for my 3:10 at the oral surgeon. Four teeth had to come out – two on the top that were past recovery and my two lower wisdom teeth. I’d had my upper two pulled about ten years ago and remembered it as a pretty simple thing. Strictly local anesthesia, that one was: a quick jab in the back of my jaw and I didn’t feel a thing. I’d never in my life been under general anesthesia, where they just completely knock you out.

It was different. Sat in the chair while they “secured” my arms to the armrests and put a NO2 mask on my face to “help me relax”. Several minutes of deep breathing and wasn’t really feeling a buzz or anything; I was about to ask if the thing was turned on when the IV line went into my arm and I was told that I’d be out in three or four minutes. The procedure would take about 40 minutes.

And it just gets weird after that. The only comparison I have is watching digital cable and the signal gets a bit scrambled. The frame freezes, then jumps forward, jagged and blitzy, freezes again and then jumps forward again and boom, you’re back in the video feed. That staggered disconnect in the midst of an otherwise seamless experience: you just lose time completely. I remember laying there with the IV drip, then this brief jumble of scenes all out of time sequence, and then I was being brought around. No dark. No sleepy night. Just completely turned off and then turned back on, like a power switch.

I don’t remember much about the trip home. They asked me several times who was taking me home. My wife, I said. She’s in the waiting room. Then I remember brief glimpses of being walked out to the car by Kristi and the nurse, clutching at walls to keep myself steady, mumbling through a mouthful of gauze. The nurse had no idea what I was trying to say.

“He’s saying he likes me,” Kristi said, smiling.

I kept wanting to close my eyes and the nurse kept telling me to keep them open. Very important, she said, to keep my eyes open until I was fully alert again.

Next memory: slowly making our way up the front sidewalk of our house. I have almost no memory of the car ride home. Then Kristi took me to bed, closed the door to keep the animals out, and ran out to get supplies and my meds. Vicodin and amoxicillin. I went to sleep and was still pretty out of it when she returned. It was still a few more hours before I could feel enough of my face to drink Gatorade, a fruit smoothy and pop the painkillers and antibiotics. Most of my face was numb; I didn’t know whether I was thirsty or not. I knew I was hungry. I hadn’t had anything to eat or drink (per doctor’s orders) since 9am.

Slept like a rock. Didn’t wake up in pain.

So today I’m mostly avoiding the phone and getting some work done. Working on the final compilation of wedding photos that we’ve been procrastinating on for months now. There’s really no pain, just a slight ache that the Vicodin’s keeping under control. Kristi just left for work, making sure I had everything I needed before taking off.

I have a first rate wife. I really do. I’m so lucky to have her in my life.

Posted in Everyday Life

Adventures in GPS

Sep02
2008
Rob Written by Rob

And so it came to be that, on Labor Day, Tuck peed on the bed and Samson gutted a bag of garbage all over the back yard and my wife commanded that I go urinate so that we could drive to San Francisco. She’d had enough of life around the house for one day and, as is often in character, needed a road trip.

We’ve been to the city a few times since I first arrived in California. San Francisco’s a beautiful town: breathtaking views, great weather, interesting people, lots to see and do. We’d spent the first night of our honeymoon at Parc 55; when we drive into town, we usually try to find something that we hadn’t seen together before. It’s usually not hard to turn up something.

Anyway, so my new inlaws gave me/us a car GPS system for my birthday – in case you haven’t encountered these before, a GPS system is basically a computerized map. You plug it into the cigarette lighter, slap the suction cup onto inside of the windshield, and let the gadget talk to a satellite and figure out just where in the heck you are. You can then plot a route to wherever you want to go, and as you drive the unit gives you directions there, tracing your trip out in real time on a moving visual map. It’s cool as all hell.

And it was a godsend around here for me. Almost a year on and I still barely know my way around. So when I need to go to the bank and can’t remember the way, I just take the GPS with me – we have our bank bookmarked as a favorite spot. Tap the screen a couple times and off we go.

Of course we took it with us to San Francisco. We were both tired and neither of us felt like navigating and we just wanted to get there already. Shortly after we got onto the freeway, I started setting the waypoints for the city. Kristi recommended Golden Gate Park.

Okay.. set.. points of interest.. city.. San Francisco. There we go. Okay. Category, parks and recreation. Ah, here we are: Golden Gate Park. SET.

Screen flashes off. Unit reboots. Waypoint not set.

Huh? Okay, try again. Reboots a second time.

“Hon, it won’t let me set Golden Gate Park.”

“You’ve got to be doing it wrong,” she says. “Did you set category, points of interest, parks?”

“Yep. It just shut off and rebooted.”

So we try this three more times and it still won’t set the waypoint. Finally Kristi says, “Okay, fine, look up the Museum of Modern Arts. No – it’s called the Palace of Fine Arts. Might be in there as the Exploratorium.”

I check the category listings for San Francisco. “There’s no category here for museums or anything like that. There’s ‘Tourism Points of Interest’.”

“That’s where it’d be. Look there.”

Tap. Boop, beep.

“According to this,” I say, “San Francisco has no tourism points of interest.”

“What?”

“Hey, I’m just reporting what it says.”

“Okay. What other categories are there?”

“Gas. Food. Banks. There’s a ‘General Points of Interest’.”

“Try that.”

Tap. Boop, beep.

“Turns out that San Francisco has an awful lot of auto detailing places, and the GPS thinks it’d be a culturally enlightening experience if we chose to partake in one of their fine services. Oh – and there’s a listing here for 1-800-MATTRESSES.”

“Try Golden Gate Park again.”

“Not going to work.”

“Just do it okay?”

Tap. Boop, beep. Reboot. “There’s a listing for Golden Gate Park, Overlook.”, I say.

“Try that!”

Tap. Boop, beep. “Says we can’t there from here.”

“What??”, she says.

“Says it’s impossible to get to Golden Gate Park from Modesto.”

“And there’s no listings at all for museums?”

“Nope. I never realized that San Francisco was so lacking in cultural attraction. Want to get the car washed and detailed? There’s, like, a zillion places.”

“NO!”

Eep. “So any other ideas?” I’d just about reached my end of patience with the thing.

“Look in the glovebox. Is the San Francisco map still in there?”

Click. “Yep.”

“See if you can find an intersection near the Exploratorium that the GPS recognizes.”

Took me three tries but finally I found a street it knew: Divisidero. Located the intersection of Divisidero and Baker, only a few blocks from the museum, and set the waypoint. By some grace of the divine almighty, the thing didn’t reboot – the robot voice came on. “STAY RIGHT. FOR. SIXTEEN. MILES!”

“Is that voice going to be on for this whole trip?”, Kristi asks.

“I could turn it off, babe. But if I do, how are we going to find mattresses for low, low prices in San Francisco?”

Glare.

“STAY RIGHT. FOR. FIFTEEN. MILES!”

“I do think we should get the car detailed while we’re there.”

“Shut up.”

“STAY RIGHT.. FOR..”

Posted in Travel
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