Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
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Morning in Modesto

Dec08
2007
Rob Written by Rob

As I write this, it’s about ten in the morning California time, Saturday. My back still hurts but it’ll be okay in another day or two; the cats are gradually getting settled into their new home and I’ve just gotten the first bits of my technology hooked up and working in the new office.

God, what a long week. This morning I feel like I’ve just survived a combat zone.. and as tough as it was to get everything packed, crated, shipped, stored, turned off, turned on, and finally flown, it would have been so much tougher had it not been for the help of my parents, brother and friends. I really expected it to be a lot worse.

The flight wasn’t bad. I scored a last-second, back-row aisle seat for the OIA-LAX leg, meaning that although I was pretty much the last to board and the last to leave (with two very heavy carryons in tow), at least I didn’t have to get other people to move to get to the restroom. Accidentally killed my MP3 headphones at one point by getting up to fast and ripping the audio plug off the cable. The inflight movie was really good (Stardust), and since I used my own headphones – until I destroyed them, anyway – I could actually hear the whole thing in stereo for a change.

The cats had a bad day. It took almost forty-five minutes to get them checked in at OIA; I saw them being transferred to the connecting flight in LA. When they landed in the baggage claim area in Modesto, Tuck looked like he’d just woken from a long nap. Ruca, on the other hand, had burrowed herself under the kennel mats. In all the years I’ve had her, I’ve never seen her that freaked out.

So now, this Saturday morning, I’m unpacking my stuff and Kristi’s getting ready for this holiday fair thing that’s about the descend on our neighborhood today. I feel guilty about sitting here tapping at a keyboard while she’s outside mowing the lawn and clearing it of Samson apples, but I really need to take it easy on the back today. It hasn’t been like this in a long time.. and it was fine coming off the airplane. I think it was lugging four 50-pound crates into the house last night that pushed me over again. So not much bending-lifting on the books for Rob today.

All I can say is, I do love this woman.. every step of the way since I got here, she’s been two steps ahead of me with coffee, food, Icy Hot for my back, kind works and gentle care. The moment the thought crosses my mind, she’s right there with it in hand. Makes every moment of this week worth it.

Posted in Everyday Life, Travel

The Chair

Dec03
2007
Rob Written by Rob

It’s weird, the kind of objects that we lug around with us, the stuff that we get attached to.

In this move, I’ve dumped about three-quarters of my stuff. Most of it is no great loss – old, cheap junk, bought a decade ago and always intended to be temporary, simply not worth the cost of shipping across the country. Some items ended up in the hands of my parents, still others are sitting in a local storage unit until Kristi and I can afford to ship it. A bunch of other stuff is currently in UPS transit, scheduled to arrive the same day that I do.

And then there’s the chair.

It’s not a comfortable chair, not at all. I sort of adopted it about fifteen years ago when I lived in a little rented studio apartment, not much more than a rented room in the home of a watercolor artist living in Maitland (an Orlando suburb). She was.. unique. She was in her early sixties at the time, a bit of a snob, could always be expected to say random things that make you go, “huh” and quickly change the subject. That was B.

I also learned fairly quickly that B, for whatever reasons of her own, was very concerned that people with high skin melanin might move into her neighborhood.

Anyway, the “apartment” had been sparsely furnished with Goodwill specials, including a small student writing desk and this chair, both painted in the same godawful shade of pale sickly orange. When I first moved in and she showed me around, she pointed out the desk and said:

“Oh, I love that desk and chair.. they’re such a nice [*racial epithet*] color.”

Err.. oo-kay.. Moving on.

When I finally moved out, several years later, I left the desk but took the chair with me. It’s a good chair, very sturdy. Not comfortable at all, but an excellent standing-on chair. And now with most of my furniture either gone or going this week, I’m sitting at my current little writing desk with my laptop, sitting on the nice [*racial epithet*] colored chair.

To this day, I can’t help but think of this ugly little thing as the nice [*racial epithet*] colored chair. The line was just so stupid, so idiotically out of left field at the time, that after all these years it remains psychologically branded to this chair in my life.

It’ll get shipped with the rest of the storage unit stuff, and Kristi says we’ll repaint it. After fifteen years, the poor thing will be given back some shred of dignity. But I doubt I’ll ever look at it as anything else than the nice [*racial epithet*] colored chair.. again, it’s weird, the stuff that makes up a life.

Posted in Everyday Life

Tired and Far Away

Dec03
2007
Rob Written by Rob

Courtesy of XKCD:

Posted in Everyday Life, Romance, Travel

Five Days

Dec02
2007
Rob Written by Rob

And almost half a year of eight-hour phone calls, webcams, flying back and forth, Internet forumness, blogging and beach trips comes down to these final five days.

After some typical confusion with UPS Dispatch, a whole lot of crated stuff – computers and books, mainly, packed in clothes and other fabric odds and ends from around my home – went out Friday with the Big Brown Truck. My brother and I are picking up the U-Haul tomorrow to haul several large furniture pieces to the storage unit, to be shipped to Modesto in a few months but tucked away until then. Other pieces tomorrow are going to my parents, and still others are being retired.

It’s going to be a long week, though I expect it’ll go by fast. So much to do, so little time.. and all while maintaining a client workload. Sometime this week I strongly suspect that I’ll be conducting a client conference call from my living room floor, the room adorned only by a laptop and office phone sitting atop an upturned plastic crate. The thought itself leaves me exhausted.

There’s definitely a crash coming next Friday. I can feel it; I’ve warned Kristi about it. I’m going to get off that plane, set the cats loose in the house, carefully steer around the large UPS packing crates that arrived earlier that day, and just go pass out on the bed.

One day at a time. Five times. The main thing holding me together at this point – other than caffeine – is the certain knowledge that the plane ticket is paid for, the plane will be taking off at 7:15am Friday from Orlando International, that I’ll be on it.

Everything else now is just getting from here to there. With coffee.

Posted in Everyday Life
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