Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
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Cleaning Day At Chez R&K

Jan12
2008
Rob Written by Rob

It’s been about 20 years since I’ve mowed a lawn. Seriously. In Florida, I haven’t lived in a house since the early 90’s; in apartments, I mainly associated lawn care with loud, irritating leaf blowers and tree trimmers at the ungodly hour of 9am.

Today’s Big Cleaning Day around here. Floor mopping, bathroom scrubbing, general disinfecting, and yes, lawn mowing – which is now my job. So I spent a chunk of time this morning out back, hacking my way through the Mayan jungle in search of the ancient temple of Tikal and mulching lots of rotten oranges, dog dumpage and grass on my way there. That’s a lovely combination of smells, I kid you not.

But the real question is.. when do you know it’s love?

I mean, anyone can mow a lawn when its 65 degrees. Or take out the trash. Or wash dishes during the day, or make the bed.

So when do you know it’s love? I think I have an answer to that question:

When you find yourself fishing cold, wet, disgusting clothes (apparently deposited by some kind homeless person) out of the yard waste trash can with a stick, one item at a time, very carefully transferring each to the proper trash can. So that it gets picked up. And so your woman doesn’t have to do it.

That, my friends, is love.

Posted in Everyday Life

Married Moments

Jan08
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Now with the holidays safely behind us, Kristi and I are gradually dredging ourselves back into day-to-day routine. Without a question, the early morning wakeups are the worst – by New Year’s, we were both sleeping until ten in the morning. And I’ve never been an early morning person; left to my own devices, I’ll gradually settle on a noon-to-3am workday. So the last couple of mornings, I’ve slept right through the alarm and didn’t wake up until Kristi turned on the bedroom light and insisted on my consciousness with a hot cup of cinnamon hazelnut.

We can see the patterns forming, how married life is going to be on a day-to-day basis. Lots of quiet at-home evenings on the couch, watching TV or quiet reading; plenty of Sam-walking, dinner-making and laundry-doing, punctuated by the occasional and ever popular Mowing Of The Lawn. Ten years ago I would have been bored out of my mind, but I’m loving every minute.. it’s funny how yesterday’s tedium becomes today’s good life.

The adjustment hasn’t been completely smooth, though. For me, the toughest part has been getting past my own need to be independent. It goes way deep; I’ve been on my own for a very long time. Running my own freelance business over the last six years has further cemented my “I Am An Island” routine.. my first instinct in any challenging situation is to circle the wagons and plot out how to handle the problem myself, without bothering anyone else with it. So both of us have had to work hard to remind me that this isn’t about she and I, but us. Independence is a hard drug to kick – it just tastes so darned good, even when you know it’s killing you.

Kristi’s gradually pounding it through my thick skull that we’re in this all together, breaking me of some old habits. Lately she’s been diving headfirst into the business mailing lists, researching businesses in California for our upcoming first cold mailing run of the year. So in addition to the usual sounds of Dr. Phil, Samson whining to be walked and the fireplace crackling, evenings recently have featured the occasional holler from the office as Kristi wants my opinion on a newly-found business for the list.

This is going to take some getting used to. But I’m getting there, and I’m enjoying it. I do lapse into the occasional setback, however.

When I moved in, I brought a lot of technology with me. I also (with her permission) made a number of significant upgrades to Kristi’s Dell, fully set up the home network with a shared print server, and tweaked a whole lot of other gadgetry in the office. My natural instinct with tech is to assimilate; every so often I add something cool and obscure and then Kristi unwittingly trips over it, and then hilarity ensues.

The other night she got home, sat in the office at her computer and started playing MP3’s. She loaded the mailing list spreadsheet off the server to spend an hour or two digging up business prospects, and at first couldn’t connect with the file – there was some sort of hangup with the file sharing connection, something that was tough to just talk her through. Instead, I sat at my computer and said “Hold on a sec.”

Then suddenly her desktop pointer flew across her computer screen, opened the Network Places window and started selecting network options. Kristi turned around FAST to see me sitting behind her, a replica of her desktop on my screen. I’d taken over her desktop remotely, operating her computer from mine.

“Don’t DO THAT!”, she said. “LEAVE MY DESKTOP ALONE!”

Umm..

“Look,” she said. “I know you just want to see how much you can do with this network, and to get everything on one monitor. BUT NOT WHEN I’M HOME!”

Kinda creepy, I guess, huh?

“No kidding!”, she said.

Eep. I thought it was kinda cool.

“So are you planning to give me my desktop back, or what??”

Double eep. Click – window closed. There you go, hon. Sorry for freaking you out.

I think the chicken’s just about done. Yeah.

I think I’m going to go check on it. Yeah.

Love you, honey.

[ quietly slinks back off to the kitchen ]

Posted in Everyday Life, Romance, Work

Eugene

Dec30
2007
Rob Written by Rob

“Get me my Maglight.”

“Where is it, hon?”

“Basket by the bed, under some books.”

.. padpadpadpad..

“Find it?”

“Yeah, it’s here.”

Click. Lots of peering into the murky depths.

“Man. That’s disgusting.”

“Yeah, I know. This sink’s never drained right.. one more thing we can thank the last owners for. I don’t even want to think about what’s down there.”

The drain plug lever assembly has already been mostly taken out; an accidental slip of the pliers dropped part of the assembly down into the S-pipe. The pipe will have to be pulled to get it back out, but that’s a job for another night.

“Well anyway, the drain plug’s off. Maybe, what? Baking soda and vinegar? Is that what Kim and Aggie would do at this point?”

Quick kiss. He’s been paying attention!

“Guess we could try.”

“I’m going to go Google it. Maybe there’s some sort of exotic combination of ketchup, salt and lemon juice that unclogs a drain.”

“Okay, babe.. go consult the Great God Google.”

.. padpadpadpad ..

“Find anything?”

“Baking soda and vinegar.”

.. padpadpadpad ..

Lots of acids and bases dumped down the drain. Lots of elaborate fizzing action.

“Babe, I’ve got a longer screwdriver than this.. garage, on the workbench?”

“I’ll get it.”

.. padpadpadpad ..

“This it?”

“Yeah. Man, this is disgusting.”

“The vinegar didn’t do anything?”

“I think we just annoyed it.”

“Run some hot water.”

Hot water pools on the sink bottom. It drains very slowly.

“I’m gonna plunge it, hon. This is going to get messy.”

He grabs the toilet plunger and aggressively attacks the drain, sending water spray and bits of black goo everywhere.

“Well, we’re getting some of it.”

“This is disgusting, babe.”

More violent plunging. More black bits come loose, and then a small, hairy goo gob.

“Got some of it, hon. Keep going?”

“Guess so. No, wait.. hold on.”

She starts digging again in the drain with the long screwdriver. She latches onto something.

“Hey – I think I got it.”

“You’re kidding. You got it?”

“I’m telling you, I think I got it.”

It puts up a fight; it doesn’t want to leave. But finally she pulls it up and out of the drain, accompanied by a sickening thhwaacckk sound.

“Hon, that’s disgusting.”

“It’s pretty big, too. And you can’t tell me that it’s all hair. Last owners were real pigs – and is a drain clog supposed to be that color?”

“Let’s call him Eugene, hon.”

“Fine. But I’m not feeding him.”

eugene.jpg

Posted in Everyday Life, The Animals

Hanging Over From The Holidays

Dec29
2007
Rob Written by Rob

The holidays went great, albeit pretty busy – three long days straight of clan get-togethers, cold weather, food, presents, sports and family members brutalizing each other over triple word scores. My back got better, then Kristi got sick, and then I got sick. This morning I’m finally breathing normally again and so for the moment everyone’s healthy around here.

So now the Christmas stuff is down, packed and back in the garage, and we’re both getting ourselves ready for the new year. The business now officially has a Modesto office; I have a mailing list to finish and a few odd jobs to wrap, and then we can launch a new direct mail campaign in January. For the last three years, the first quarter has accounted for over half the revenue I’d see all year – by far, my busiest season. We’re looking forward to another round of the same, this time drawing business from both coasts.

As I’m writing this, I’m sitting at the kitchen table in shorts and a long-sleeved T-shirt, watching Ratatouille on the living room TV and tapping this out on my laptop. Sam’s sleeping on the couch and the cats are nowhere to be found. After I wrap this entry, I’ve got a load of laundry to run and then I’ll spend some time working on the novel outline.

Kristi’s out with her mother for Day 2 of the Great Wedding Dress Shop-a-Thon. It’s going well, but I’ll leave that story for her to tell on the next entry.

Other news bits from the holiday season:

Angie and Clay just found out that they’re pregnant with twins! Angie delivers a week before the wedding, so regrettably (and totally understandably) they won’t be able to participate in the ceremony; we’ve decided not to replace them, instead just cutting back to two grooms attendants and two bridesmaids. Congratulations Clay and Angie!

More congratulations are due to my good friends Jen and Matias – after several years of debating about the right time and place and circumstances, they’re pregnant as well and Jen’s due in June. I’m particularly happy about this news.. they’ve wonderful people, and I can’t think of two people better suited for parenthood. Couldn’t happen for better people.

While it seems that the wedding dress candidates have been narrowed down, no progress has been made on the bridesmaid dresses. The color has also not been chosen yet.

Ruca’s getting more social around the house, Tuck’s running through the shower every morning (much to Kristi’s ongoing shock/amazement), and Sam’s finally mastered the new dog door. We’re both especially happy about Samson – after a great deal of reluctance to shove his body past a heavy, loud swinging slab of plastic, finally we no longer have to let him out. Good boy, Sam.

I think that pretty much wraps current news for the moment. I’ll let Kristi pick it up from here.

Posted in Everyday Life
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