Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
  • Home
  • About R&K
  • Books We’ve Read

Posts in category Everyday Life

Tuck Update

Mar30
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Oh, quick update. Tuck’s still alive, and if anything, he’s in much better condition than he was a week ago. He’s eating regularly again, talking again, jumping on counters again. So who the hell knows. Most cats have nine lives; this one’s always had ninety-nine. And he’s beaten death sentences before.

We’ve got him on a high octane vitamin mix now along with his normal meds, and we’re still taking it day by day with him. But today he’s still trucking.

Much thanks to everyone who asked and offered sympathies. We appreciate it. 🙂

Posted in The Animals

The Studio

Mar30
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Kristi and I met just a few days before my 36th birthday. I was living in Winter Park, Florida, having a decent year in the business, but I was feeling a general sense of fatigue. Both professional and in my life in general. I was tired. And the one thing I decided to do with my birthday was to pack up my laptop, drive down to the corner Starbucks, park myself and try my best to write a damned short story. While I’ve started over twenty stories (and buried them in the bottom of a file cabinet) since embarking on full time writing, it’d been over five years since I actually completed one. And even of the ones I did finish in 2002, only two did I ever feel was worth a damn.

This was heavy on my mind that day for some reason; probably it was just the sense of escaping time and wondering if I’d already wasted the best opportunities life would offer me. I’d started down this long, weird road many years ago because I wanted to write fiction for a living, and business copywriting was the pragmatic stepping stone towards that goal – a practical way to pay the bills writing professionally while I worked on the longer dream. I’ve done well by it. But I never intended to be copywriting for the rest of my life.

I didn’t get a story written that day, instead sitting in front of the laptop for three hours daydreaming and reworking the same three paragraphs over and over again. I found myself increasingly more focused on the words themselves. Sentence flows. Marriage of verb and subject, action and reaction, transition and narration. And ended up wondering if basically eight years as a copywriter had ruined me for writing anything longer than 100 words.

I never in my wildest imagination could have considered on that 36th birthday that I’d just met my wife. Or that very shortly every assumption, every plan, every consideration, every ambition, every priority and every value I possessed would shortly be rocked. Or that less than two years later I’d be sitting with my lovely wife on a secluded rock shelf, feet dangling over the edge, watching otters playing in the Pacific – and reflecting on how often the big obstacles in life aren’t what they appear to be. That when you climb over and past the stone rock face that chases away the tourists, something better and rarer and more significant may lay beyond.

Anyway. In the last six months or so, since liberating my manual typewriter from Florida, I’ve felt a pull back towards those keys. It was on that typewriter I wrote and finished those short stories years ago. I’ve never had writers block on a manual typewriter – it’s always been the ideal creative instrument for me. The problem is, it makes noise and drives the pets and the lovely wife insane, so I can’t do anything with it in the house. Over these recent months, my mind has drawn more and more frequently to the garage.

After making damned sure that Kristi didn’t mind, I set up shop last week, with a makeshift desk (made from wooden planks laid over Sam’s dog crate) and some cobbled bric-a-brac and a swivel chair stolen from the office. And so lately I’ve been sneaking away to this little studio when I need to unplug for a bit and just be creative, without the impulse to check email or worry about the monthly billables or be focused on this marketing campaign or that month’s email newsletter project.

I’m just very grateful to have such an understanding wife. I know she doesn’t really get why a manual typewriter has the pull it does on me (“Why don’t you just write with a quill pen and an inkwell?”) but she’s content to indulge me.

At least most of the time. She does get annoyed when I’m out editing a manuscript when I’m supposed to be helping with the laundry.

The studio:

garage_studio.jpg

Posted in Projects / DIY, Work

Ob-la-di, ob-la-da, life goes on

Mar23
2009
Kristi Written by Kristi

We spent the weekend with my family in Carmel.  It was peaceful, mostly when we were out of the house.  After dropping the zoo off at the kennel and a long drive, it was nice to sit with family and watch basketball.  But the real highlight was walking on Saturday morning.

We drove down to Asilomar and pulled off the road to a long jetty.  From the road, it looked like the rocks ended at a large ice plant covered nesting area with Canadian geese.  We climbed around, looking in tide pools and decided to climb over the rocks, past the nesting area.  The rocks extended out even further and we were totally alone.  The other tourist types hadn’t ventured as far out as we did and we were treated to a lovely display of waves crashing on the rocks.  Several otters swam close by us and the water had this deep blue sapphire gleam.  It was absolutely breathtaking.   We sat for close to an hour, just listening to the crash of the waves on the rocks, the seagulls shrieking nearby and basking in the warm sun.

We both desperately needed the break, the time to go away from everyone and just refresh ourselves.  The last 2 months have been a strain, emotionally, physically, spiritually.  There isn’t an easy way to recover from loss, from death, from all that we’ve been through.  There is only time to ease the pain and for now, there hasn’t been nearly enough time to have perspective or healing.  It will come, just not yet.

Posted in Family and Friends, Travel

Bad

Mar10
2009
Kristi Written by Kristi

So we woke up late this morning.  Like rolled out of bed at 6:15am (45 minutes late!).  We’re both wiped out from the time change and the stress of the last few months is really catching up with us.  I’ve had some minor health things going on, my grandma was back in the hospital last week and this weekend was moved back to the rehab hospital where she is making slow improvement.  S-L-O-W.

But this morning?  Yeah.  I was bustling around my classroom before school and I always have kids in the room with me.  And the conversation went something like this.

“Uh, Mrs. Warren?”

“Yeah?”

“Did you know you’re wearing 2 different shoes?”

Um. NO.

“Oh. My. GOD!”

And that’s how I discovered that in my rushing around this morning I managed to put on 2 completely different colored ballet flats.  One herringbone, the other appliqued.  I AM A DITZ.

← Older Entries Newer Entries →

Recent Posts

  • From The Kitchen: Quick Hummus
  • Hab Life, and Catching Up
  • Life Gets in the Way
  • And, We’re Back!
  • Valleys and Farms

Categories

Archives

Blogroll

  • Our Marketing Business

Time Wasters

  • Instructables
  • LOLCats
  • Must. Have. Cute.
  • People of Walmart
  • The Oatmeal
  • There I Fixed It
  • You Suck At Photoshop
  • Zen Pencils

Pages

  • About R&K
  • Books We’ve Read

© 2012 Robert and Kristi Warren. All Rights Reserved.