Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
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The House of Fate

Feb10
2008
Rob Written by Rob

“But these shocks and ruins are less destructive to us, than the stealthy power of other laws which act upon us daily. An expense of ends to means is fact; — organization tyrannizing over character. The menegerie, of forms and powers of the spine, is a book of fate: the bill of the bird, the skull of the snake, determines tyrannically its limits. So is the scale of races, of temperaments; so is sex; so is climate; so is the reaction of talents imprisoning the vital power in certain directions. Every spirit makes its house; but afterwards the house confines the spirit.”

– Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Fate”, 1860



“There is no way this winter is ever going to end, as long as that groundhog keeps seeing his shadow. I don’t see any way out of it. He’s got to be stopped. And I have to stop him.”

– Phil Connors (played by Bill Murray), “Groundhog Day”, 1993

Posted in Everyday Life

Family Circles

Feb07
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Sorry we haven’t updated in the last week. It was my turn and I kept promising Kristi I’d do it soon, and one by one the days slipped away.

Things are going well. We got the tuxes sorted out and taken care of. Her veil arrived today and sits waiting to be picked up. We’ve chosen the rings and are preparing to buy them in the next week or so. Business is picking up; it’s only the sixth and I’ve already logged two-thirds of my hour quota for the month (we love paying contracts around here). Slowly the big stress hairball that was December is receding and we’re settling into a comfortable, peaceful domestic life.

The weekend was busy, but a good busy. Saturday we made good on a promise to Kristi’s parents and drove over to the local Salvation Army Child Development Center. They had eight or nine computers in unknown working order, scattered in disarray around the building; Kristi and I went over, checked them out and cleaned them up and got them working again for the preschool there. Luckily they were all very salvagable, most having nothing at all wrong with them – they’d just suffered some neglect over time, but nothing that couldn’t be quickly mended.

On Sunday we went over to the Jepsons’ house for their Super Bowl party. It was a blast – lots of great food, a dozen of the Jepson’s best friends eating, joking, laughing at commercials, venting at political ads, and trying to mentally will a football up and down an Arizona astroturf. And as you probably know, it was a great game. It was just a great way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

Driving home that evening, Kristi and I were talking about family. Namely, our families. She has a huge circle of family both biological and extended – three generations of relatives in the same town, many in the same church, and a wide circle of friends that includes many who have known Kristi all her life. It’s a circle that to my eyes just seems to widen and widen, and there’s something awfully comforting in that: there’s this vast support structure here that is utterly unlike anything I knew in my own life before meeting her. Don and Kathy and everyone else in that circle have gone out of their way to welcome me into their midst, and I appreciate that. It’s calm and peaceful and stable and sane, and I’m getting to really like it a lot.

Sometimes it seems like my own family circle, rather than spreading out, just keeps going round and round. Over the same territories, over the same bumps, over the same pointless nonsense, never even noticing that it’s not actually getting anywhere. The contrast between the two family experiences is jarring for both of us; it’s forced us both to examine our own lives a bit more objectively and to better assess what we each underappreciate and overindulge. And brought us each to ask how much of either family experience we want to bring into our new marriage, not to mention the lives of our future children.

That’s been a particular issue this week as a simmering situation in the greater Warren clan has threatened to explode into a full-blown drama down in Florida. Pointless nonsense. The same round-and-rounds. The same trip around the same circle for the same reasons and heading to the same places, and it doesn’t need to be but it will anyway. Because that’s what my family does: they go round in circles, never leaving nor arriving, probably until the end of time. It’s all just such a waste, because it doesn’t have to be that way. It can stop. But people have to be willing to stop it, and they’re not. And so they take another trip around.

I told Kristi the other night, as we discussed and reflected on the situation, that more than anything that’s why I came here. Why I asked her to marry me. Why I love her. In addition to all her wonderful qualities – and she has many – Kristi offered me something that no one had credibly offered before: hope. Hope that marriage and children and family and friends could all be happy and healthy things. Hope that people can be who they appear to be, and can be honest and caring without some sort of ulterior motive behind it. Hope that there was a real way off the endless roundabout.

That hope is a fragile thing. A sacred thing. A thing worth working, fighting and sacrificing greatly to protect. For some reason Kristi saw fit to entrust it to my care. I’m deeply honored by that, and intend to live up to that honor best I can.

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

Being Walked

Jan28
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Sam likes walks. He likes walks a lot.

Cats don’t get walks. They sit around a lot and then go blasting around the house in the middle of the night. So dog walking as a firsthand concept is fairly new for me; before I adopted the cats a few years back, I’d never had pets. So Sam – all 120 lbs of him – is my first hard experience in regular day-to-day dog caretaking.

Most of it is actually easier than cats. Food and water and ear scratches, and the rest of it is energy management. Sam gets wound up, and when a dog his size gets charged to full, he tends to be the center of attention. So lately I’ve been doing a lot of preemptive walking, just to keep his battery from overcranking.

We’ve got the route mapped out. It’s about two miles around the neighborhood, up and down a couple hills, through a park and past Scott Peterson’s house and past the crazy old lady who runs out of her house screaming “cat sanctuary” whenever we walk by, trekking down Hit-and-Run Avenue and finally turning the corner back towards Santa Ana. It’s a nice hike, but lately I’ve been noticing that our energy management plan is backfiring.

We failed to consider that all the exercise might make Sam a fitter dog.

Kristi’s noticed that his waist is returning. So has his stamina. Usually Sam starts knocking out about halfway through the walk; yesterday he didn’t tire out at all. Instead he virtually dragged me along behind him for two miles. By the time we got back home, I was soaked in sweat and was tired and my feet hurt and Sam was looking to me and Kristi with a look that said, “So when we doing the REAL workout??”

So who knows, maybe Sam will take me for a walk again this afternoon. Lord knows I could use the exercise.

Posted in Everyday Life, The Animals

After The Fifteenth

Jan17
2008
Rob Written by Rob

The writer Harlan Ellison was once asked by a fan how hard it was to “break in” to the writing business. Harlan’s been steadily producing work since the 1950’s – hundreds and hundreds of short stories, articles, columns, you name it – and long has had a reputation for not suffering fools gladly. But in this case he answered the question.

It’s not breaking in that’s hard, he said. Anyone can break in. The hard part is staying in, year after year, even decade after decade. That’s the part that breaks talented spirits.

A lot of days, work as a plumber sounds pretty good. People always need plumbers.

I’ve been doing this freelance writing thing for six years now, since January 2002. It’s been a long, strange road – a long story of insane clients, late night writing sessions, rented-car road trips and youthful idealism smashed into fine paste. And I’m here to tell you, Harlan was right: it’s not starting out that’s tough, it’s keeping going. When you don’t want to anymore. When you’re sick of the whole thing. When you despair of ever seeing yourself in print again. When you’re trying to decide between rent and food. When a magazine tries to shortchange you or a client decides to leave the country for a month during the holidays, leaving behind an unpaid four-digit bill.

Every year since I started, I’ve had to struggle a bit less and less. And it is all worth it, though often I can only see that when the sun comes back up after a bad day. The people you meet. The experiences you have. The ways that your life is enriched, in ways you never imagined possible in the old days. But no matter how many years go by, it’s still yesterday; logically you know that you’ll get paid on that bill, that business will pick up again, that things work in patterns that you’ve gradually learned over time. But no matter how successful you get at doing this, the days of beans and rice always seem like just yesterday.

That client who left the country, leaving a four-digit bill? That happened to us this Christmas, in the midst of my move to California. A good client, too; a long relationship that I was dreading sending to collection. Poor Kristi’s been listening to me rant and neurose over it for the last four weeks, in addition to my usual fretting over finding the next solid client contract.

Hon, she tells me, it’s going to happen. It always happens in the second half of the month, you neurose over not having enough hours early, then after the 15th things get crazy. It’s going to be FINE, babe.

Meanwhile, I’m contemplating brushing off my tech resume. There’s always tech: plumbing for the 21st century.

She tells me that she has faith in me – more faith, probably, than I have in myself.

But that’s not it. What it is, is that she wasn’t there six years ago. She just sees now and knows that everything’s okay. I’m the one who can’t get his head wrapped around the simple fact that I somehow managed to beat the odds, to stay broken in, to avoid being just another dreamer who spent his life fantasizing about being a writer. Simple truth is, she caught me at a point in my life where I’d taken this as far as I could alone. And now she’s volunteering to help take it the rest of the way. I love her for that.

Yesterday – the 16th – we signed our first big job of the year, with a marketing firm in Sacramento. Nice, big healthy money, and a nice deposit check on its way.

Today I finally got the Runaway Client on the phone (he’d gotten back yesterday) and we cleared the air about his bill. Bizarre circumstances, but that should finally be on its way sometime next week.

And we’re still blanketing Northern California with sales letters.

It’s going to be a great year. I’m glad I have Kristi here to remind me of that when I need it. It takes a very special kind of woman to be married to a writer; I’m glad I found one.

Posted in Everyday Life, Work
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