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

Posts in category Everyday Life

Saturday Night Unplugged

Dec08
2008
Rob Written by Rob

You know, sometimes it’s easy to forget how crowded our senses are in the modern world, between TV and the Internet and all the other electronic windows that we use to keep a grip on our lives. It’s only when all that stuff gets turned off that you really hear it for the first time – the quiet, the peaceful silences – and appreciate what exactly you’ve given up for the sake of having 24-hour, non-stop, in-depth coverage of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes and all their goings on.

So Saturday night we just unplugged. Kristi returned from her sister’s baby shower – I’d been spending most of the day playing Metal Gear Solid 4 (which by the way, I would love for Christmas, just sayin’) – and at about 5pm we just shut it all off. TV. PS3. Laptops. Email. Cell phones. The works. We only left on music, our wedding soundtrack streamed from the house server. Everything else: down.

We started a fire in the fireplace and broke out Risk.

Kristi had never in her life played Risk before. I hadn’t played since I was a kid, but still had fond memories of playing it in childhood with my younger brother. Kristi remembered her father playing it all the time with family friends and telling her, “You don’t want to play this.”, which just made her more want to abandon her adventures in Candyland and to discover more about global domination. When we first bought the game last week, she mentioned that the rules seemed complicated; I insisted it was just a badly written rulebook. It took a little coaxing to get her to play.

And then she proceeded to roundly kick my ass. Up one side. Down the other. Brutally. Without mercy. And all I can say there is.. I may have lost, but dammit, I made Peru a damned expensive territory to win and hold. Those Peruvians don’t take kindly to Venezuelan aggression, even when hopelessly outnumbered.

But then again, neither do Mongolians – as my Japanese forces learned the hard way.

We fixed a candlelight dinner – shrimp scampi over linguini, caesar salad and bread – and just enjoyed the unwinding quiet of a cold Saturday evening by the fire. Then we broke out the Scrabble game and went to war again, a long bloodmatch that resulted in an exhausted, last-punch-from-the-mat draw. By then, it was about 10pm and we were getting tired; we went to bed and read together until Kristi fell asleep. Then I read a little while longer, turned off the light and turned in.

We’re going to start doing this on a weekly basis. It’s a great way to unwind and reconnect after a long, stressful week – for me (as I told Kristi the other day), it reminds me of driving to Cocoa Beach on Friday nights, before we met. Especially during really stressful times, I needed that once-a-week getaway, an hour or so to walk a quiet, warm beach at sunset, talking to the fishermen and marching my feet through the summer surf, and then driving home listening to Friday Night Eighties on a local station and maybe stopping for a coffee at Barnes and Noble on the way. I used to do that just to stay sane; by the time I got in the car to start the drive home, I’d be so completely unwound I might as well have been stoned.

Saturday Night Unplugged reminded me of that, only better because now I can share an unwind night with my wife. So yeah, I’m glad we’re going to keep doing it. I’d highly recommend it to anyone.




NEWS UPDATE: WE BOUGHT THE BED! I’ll let Kristi tell that story, but as I write this I’m waiting for the delivery guys to show up. The mattress was expensive, but we found the one we wanted, and especially the one we needed: a Simmons BeautyRest, California King size, we both just fell in love with it. And we got a good deal on both the mattress and a new headboard/box set to house it.

By the time Kristi comes home from work, the guest room bed will be GONE. And thank God. We both hate that cheap, mushy thing, and I’m looking WAY forward to relegating our current bed to guest room status and then getting a good nights sleep tonight.

Lord oh lord: free at last, thank God almighty, we are free at last.

Posted in Diversions, House and Yard, Romance

Simplify

Dec06
2008
Rob Written by Rob

“I learned this, at least, by my experiment; that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours. He will put some things behind, will pass an invisible boundary; new, universal, and more liberal laws will begin to establish themselves around and within him; or the old laws be expanded, and interpreted in his favor in a more liberal sense, and he will live with the license of a higher order of beings. In proportion as he simplifies his life, the laws of the universe will appear less complex, and solitude will not be solitude, nor poverty poverty, nor weakness weakness. If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.”
– Henry David Thoreau (“Walden”, 1854)


“Nothing can bring you peace but yourself. Nothing can bring you peace but the triumph of principles.”
– Ralph Waldo Emerson (“Self Reliance”, 1841)

Posted in Current Events, Family and Friends, Work

FREEZING

Dec05
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

Good grief it’s cold today.  The fog settled in overnight and I drove to work in an overcast that delayed the district’s busses by 2 hours.  Kids have straggled in all day and it’s been bone-chillingly cold.  This will be a nice weekend though.  My sister’s baby shower is tomorrow and when I get home, we’re going shopping for a new bed.  I’m quite happy to keep the bed we have now because I’ve had it for a while but it’s not that conducive to 2 people sleeping on it, especially one who has insomnia and RLS.  So Rob’s insisting and I’m not putting up much of a fight.  The fun part is looking for new headboards. 

Now, if I could just get my fingers and toes to unclench a bit, I could actually function properly today.  Because I take meds for my migraines that slow my circulatory system, I am easily ice cold, even when it’s hot outside.  I don’t mind it in the summer but in winter, I’m dying.  I can lay in bed under 5 blankets and still have freezing cold feet.    Today, I didn’t even think about putting socks on because of the shoes I’m wearing.  One quick trip to the office to turn in a cell phone and my toes are like ice.  Typing is keeping my hands warmed up but I keep making mistakes and deleting. 

It’s been a quiet Friday so far.  Even my most obnoxious class was pretty good.  Why can’t my classroom have a fireplace?

Posted in Work

Bedtime

Dec04
2008
Rob Written by Rob

It’s been freakin’ cold here this week, cold and wet and generally miserable. Upshot, we’re running fireplace a lot and the flannel sheets are snugly on the bed. Sleeping on a cold night is so much more tolerable when you’re sleeping on flannel.

I think we may finally be getting a handle on this sleep situation. The breakthrough – if that’s what it is – came about earlier this week after a particularly bad night of restless leg syndrome, tossing and turning, irritable skulking to the uncomfortably mushy guest room bed and yet another rough night of broken sleep for both of us. We’d both had enough of this crap and got to talking hard about solving the problem once and for all. And then I made a mental connection to a client project I did over Thanksgiving week.

One of my regular clients is a company that produces expansion joints for large industrial boiler systems; I’ve recently been researching and writing reams of material on steel bellows, how they’re made, what they do and why they’re necessary. That took me into topics like thermal expansions and how multi-ply steel construction impacts joint elasticity.. and about how steel springs (which is basically what a metal expansion joint is made of) can conduct unwanted vibrations over ductwork. Basically, when you buy an expansion joint, you want one that will not transmit vibrations, absorbing them instead of passing them on to connected components.

And then it hit me: vibration isolation. Steel springs. Vibration isolation. Twitchy feet. Mattress springs. VIBRATION ISOLATION!!

Manic research ensued.

It’s the damned mattress! I nicknamed it the Oak Slab not long after I first came here. It’s very firm – hard, actually – and takes some practice to get comfortable sleeping on. And it transmits vibrations like we’re sleeping on a snare drum. Every move, every turn, every twitch, every time the cat shifts position.. you feel it across the whole bed. We’ve known for a long time that we need a king size bed. Now we also know that we need one with a high enough coil count to absorb movement stresses and vibration. And we need to start shopping for it SOON.

It’s bizarre sometimes, when client work dovetails with regular life like that. But I’m not complaining.

Posted in House and Yard
← 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.