Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
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Hanging With The Father-in-Law

Jun02
2008
Rob Written by Rob

We’re down to the last five weeks, and things are coming together. We’ve gotten solid RSVP’s from a little over half our invitation list. Our out-of-town wedding party members have all confirmed, have their clothes together and are all ready to get on the planes. Now we’re down to details and to pulling it all together.

This weekend was Kristi’s second bridal shower, leaving both me and my soon-to-be father-in-law Don with not a whole lot to do. So he and I decided to head out to the local movie theater to see the new Indiana Jones movie while our wives ate cookies, gave and opened presents, and talked about tablecloth prints.

The new Indy flick’s not a bad movie. Not nearly as good as Raiders, much better than Temple of Doom. Probably not as good as Last Crusade, but still pretty watchable once you stop noticing the overuse of CGI and convince yourself not to be bothered by the “you gotta be kidding me” credulity-stretching moments peppered throughout the film. Which, I must say, isn’t easy when the guy you’re hanging with is a Ph.D. and you know they’re making him chuckle at least as much as you.

I consider myself pretty lucky. You know all the jokes about terrible inlaws, rocky relationships with the inlaws, all the punchlines from all the sitcoms about not getting along your spouse’s parents? I’m happy to report that I hit it off with Kristi’s family, pretty much from the day I met them. A wonderful group of people that I’m honored to call family, who have shown me absolutely nothing but complete hospitality since I came into their lives. It made the transition to my new life enormously easier.

I can’t even imagine what the engagement would have been like without the kind support and graciousness of the Jepson clan. Certainly not as smooth, that’s for sure. I’m really looking forward to my brother Chris arriving here for the wedding in July. We’ve started lobbying him to consider getting out of Florida and moving out here; both Kristi and I are going to enjoy introducing him to the all new branch of his family.

Posted in Everyday Life, Family and Friends, Wedding

Vernacular of the Peasantry

May22
2008
Rob Written by Rob

I kind of judge misery by the innovations we make in everyday language.

Back in August ’04, we in Florida got pummeled pretty hard by a series of hurricanes in short succession. While we in Orlando were spared the direct hit devestation of these storms, as the center crossroads of the state we had the distinction of being in the path of several storms in a row; while other areas were smacked hard (but once) at Cat 3, 4 or even 5 levels, we were repeatedly pounded at Cat 1 and 2 levels until we were whimpering for mercy.

Orlando wasn’t ready for it at all. It had been many years since we’d been hit, and being so landlocked, Central Florida is almost guaranteed not to get a serious lashing at Category 3 or up – even the worst Cat 5 storm would weaken to 2 or 3 after crossing the land to Orlando. So few took hurricane prep seriously, and the end result in ’04 was about a month without power in the height of the humid, hot Florida summer. Eating cold beans out of cans, living by candlelight, fixing coffee on barbeque grilles, selling family members for the mere promise of ice or gas, and then getting the lights back on just in time for the next hurricane to take them out again. It wasn’t exactly the most enjoyable way to spend a month in Florida. But I like to think that we as a society in the process discovered at least several new uses for vernacular interjectives, and thereby enriching us all.

So it’s been a windy week here and unseasonably cool for late May. Tonight it’s supposed to get down into the high 40s, and the wind is running at a steady 20-30mph clip. We’ve had to close up the porch umbrella, bring lawn items into the garage. A big tree branch out front came crashing down last night, and the city of Modesto has been busy running around cleaning them up from the street. We had to get Direct TV out on Monday to realign our dish, which had been knocked off axis by the wind.

The running gag around here has been, “It’s almost like a hurricane!”

It’s a joke, you see, because as annoying as 30mph winds are, 125mph winds are downright irritating.

But for everything that happened in the summer of ’04, for all the damage, all the stress, all the abject misery and all the seething hatred aimed at the neighbor down the street with his [*vernacular gerund*] porch light on because the little [*vernacular noun*] just happens to be on a separate [*vernacular gerund*] street grid and so those [*vernacular gerund*] [*vernacular noun*] Progress Energy [*plural vernacular noun*] are running around absolutely [*vernacular gerund*] at random fixing the [*vernacular gerund*] power lines and that’s why you and your neighbors are fixing to go down there and kick that guy’s [*vernacular noun*].. but for all of that, there was one thing we never had to deal with. A single scourge, a blight that – had we been forced to contend with it as well – would have driven the citizens of Central Florida into a truly psychopathic, devestating mob frenzy.

That blight, my friends, is the styrofoam peanut.

With Kristi’s first wedding shower last weekend and the wedding itself coming up really soon, the registry gifts are starting to arrive. We’re very, very grateful – the love and generosity of our friends and family has been a bit overwhelming; for several days in a row this week, big boxes would arrive in the evening via UPS and we’d spend part of the evening carefully removing dinner plates, salad bowls and commercial grade baking equipment out of small lakes of styrofoam packing peanuts. We’d then put the boxes out back, to be taken to the curb for pickup on Monday.

Well, the winds decided that our collection of foam nuts was much more aesthetically pleasing when assuming a relaxed, stretched-out posture across the back yard.

Just to be clear, it’s a [*vernacular gerund*] lot of styrofoam peanuts.

So while Kristi is at work today dealing with bored, uncooperative freshmen and pedantic, control freak situations, I’ve been out back harvesting the fertile soil for a ripe bounty of polystyrene nuggets. Mostly, one at a time. With every gust of wind, having to chase them across the yard. Sam, amused, mostly not helping. Little bits of white plastic dancing playfully across the grass, mocking the hands that chase after them, knowing that there’s only so much a guy can do when his left slipper keeps slipping off and he’s too dumb to go inside and get his real shoes on.

I can deal with hurricanes. Hurricanes just happen; you stay in the path or get out of the way, but it’s not personal.

But little styrofoam leprechauns taunting me with their momentary alliance with the gods of thermal air pressure?

[*vernacular gerund*] [*vernacular noun*]. Give me a [*vernacular adjective*] hurricane any day.

Posted in Everyday Life, House and Yard, Wedding

Heading Into Summer

May16
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Well, after six months of living in Modesto, I am officially no longer in possession of a valid Florida’s drivers license. We put it off and off and off and off, but finally this morning I went down to the DMV, filled out the forms and took the test. So now I’m formally a California driver.

This whole “summer” concept is going to take me some getting used to. Cool weather all the way up to about a week ago, and then suddenly BOOM, a hundred degrees. But even at 100+ degrees, it just doesn’t feel hot to me, because I associate heat with not breathing. 95 degrees in Florida is August, and it’s not hot: it’s a humid, muggy, swampy hell. Bugs. Sweating and not cooling off. Hot muggy 24 hours a day. And then, after you’ve managed to survive yet another year of sweltering misery, you get to goosestep your way through hurricane season.

So I know it’s the beginning of summer here, and I can look around and see all the signs of summer, but the desert air is throwing my body’s thermostat completely off.

Work is slowing down for both of us. For me, business generally slows down in the summer and then picks up hard right after Labor Day; I can see summer starting to set in. Kristi meanwhile has another couple of weeks left before she’s on summer break, and (not even including her back pains) she’s got some serious school fatigue going. So we’re both getting ready for a slow, lazy summer of sleeping in, goofing off, occasionally doing client work and of course getting married.

I can already guess one favorite summer activity this year: the Playstation 3.

I do love this gadget; it’s an impressive piece of engineering, not just as a game system but as a central multimedia hub for the whole house. We got it to play Grand Theft Auto 4, and we’re both hopelessly addicted to blowing the crap out of other online players in Liberty City. (Kristi’s not-so-secret joy is knowing that most of the people she’s running over with virtual fire trucks happen to be the same 14-year-olds that drive her crazy at work. Little do they know that not only are they fighting a girl, but they’re fighting an adult woman, and they’re fighting an adult woman high school English teacher. And now that my brother Chris has the game, the two of them are enjoying tagteaming online enemies in running street firefights.)

Meanwhile, my inner geek is still looking for new ways to exploit the PS3 beyond its role as a game system. Recently I managed to get it talking to the other machines on our home network, and to stream video and music from the office server. So it’s now a game system, stereo, MP3 player, DVD player and video jukebox and ties all our house multimedia tech together into a single A/V delivery system.

So I’m sure we’ll find something to keep us amused on those slow, lazy, hot but not humid summer afternoons.

Posted in Everyday Life, Gift Ideas

Picking Up Speed

May09
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Well, we’re down to the last two months now. It’s all coming together.

The big news recently is that yesterday, Kristi and I went down to the Modesto courthouse and got our marriage license. That was a story in itself.. we got there just before they closed, filled out all the paperwork, swore an oath (right hands raised and everything) that we weren’t already married to anyone else, then I whipped out my debit card only to be met with a defeated expression from the clerk. “We only take cash or check.”

Oh, you have got to be kidding. This is 2008. What government office today doesn’t take electronic payment?

Well, apparently the Modesto one. And since the paperwork had already been filled out and put into the computer, and neither of us had our checkbooks, we all collectively had a problem: we either had to get the fee to them in the 10 minutes before the office closed, or else I would have to come down to the office right when they opened this morning at 8 with payment. Or else the clerk would be unhappy or something; we didn’t get too many details about what tragic misfortune would fall upon us all if an unpaid marriage license ended up stranded in the computer. But since we didn’t want to risk facing that potential cataclysm, and since I sure didn’t want to hike downtown early this morning, we made a mad dash to the bank. Two blocks away, around the corner and down the street.

You wouldn’t think that two blocks could be so frustrating, but this was at 4pm. Both red lights. Slow traffic. Tick tock, tick tock: minutes passing on the car dashboard. Finally we pull into the bank and get cut off at the drive-thru ATM by a woman in a white Suburban who takes her !@&#!@&! sweet time working out her deposit and getting out of the car and figuring out how the ATM machine worked and then making her deposit and then getting back into her car and then taking her sweet time figuring out how her car worked. She slowly pulls out, we zip in, grab the money and go.

We’re barrelling down the street towards the courthouse. “Okay,” I say, “Just drop me at the corner and I’ll dash.”

“I hope they’re not locking up.” Clock reads 3:59.

And I’m thinking, I swear to God if there’s some mid-level government clerk locking that freakin’ door when I get up there, I’m going to keep banging on that glass and making an ass of myself until they either call the cops or someone recognizes me and lets me pay for this marriage license. For the sake of a couple minutes, there is just no way I’m coming back in the morning for this.

So she pulls up, I jump from the car and dash up the steps and throw the door open, cash in hand and trying to hunt down the clerk who helped us before. I find her and have the final paperwork going as Kristi comes in. We get the official California-endorsed papers in a nice, clean little manila envelope and formally have the blessing of the state to get hitched sometime in the next 90 days.

In other news..

We’ve been getting regular RSVPs, a handful every day, from the invitations that went out last week. And nearly everyone has accepted! If this keeps up, we’re going to have a full house. We’ve been getting consistent compliments on the invitations, people continue to buy us gifts off our registries, and we’re both just very grateful to being surrounded by such wonderful family and friends. We’re very happy with how things are shaping up for July.

Dress and rings are bought and paid for. Venue is sorted out. The pastor’s engaged. Engagement photos done and prints ordered. Beautiful invitations out and RSVPs coming back. And now we have our license. We still need to do a million small tasks between now and the event, but I really feel like we have the most important things done now. We’re ready to get this show going.

Posted in Wedding
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