Rob and Kristi
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The China Cabinet

Oct19
2008
Rob Written by Rob

They say that in every successful marriage, one person is the spender and the other is the saver. It’s not that I’m cheap per se – or at least, I don’t think I am – it’s just that of the two of us, I’m the one more likely to flinch at a price tag. Part of it comes from upbringing. A lot of it comes from working as a freelance writer for almost ten years, never knowing exactly what my income will look like from one month to the next. My natural instinct is to squirrel away nuts for the winter.

The flip side to that equation is that Kristi likes nice things and is a lot more willing to test the financial waters in the name of something nice and old that she found at the local antique shop.

When we first began sorting our wedding registry – even before I moved to California – one of the very first selections we settled on was the china. True to nature, my wife to be informed me that we were registering for nice china, whether or not anyone actually bought us the stuff. It wasn’t a hard fight for her to win; we both felt that once we’d passed the thirty mark, our days of fine Target kitchenware had been numbered anyway. So we registered for Wedgwood china, which runs retail for about $225 a setting, but can be obtained for about half that when it goes on sale.

We were pleasantly surprised to have actually received several settings for our wedding in July, as well as for holiday and birthday gifts. Between those, gift cards and some last minute MAJOR scores on end-of-summer sales, we’ve recently rounded out a full ten place settings.

(And I’m telling you, we seriously scored: three settings at $100/each at Macy’s. If we buy or receive two more through Macy’s now, they give us about $150 of free and very nice stuff. Ah, the holidays..)

So these ten boxes of china have gradually accumulated in the kitchen cabinets because we had nowhere else to put them. And since about March, Kristi’s been jonsing to buy a china cabinet for the dining room. Every so often she’d find one she liked at the local antique shop, would come home and broach the subject of plunking down X dollars and I’d balk. Can’t do it, babe. We’re slammed on wedding bills, and besides, the world’s probably coming to an end next week and so let’s settle for something flat pack from Target. And then she’d fix me with that cold stare of death that she slings out whenever the subject of flat pack furniture ever seriously enters a house conversation.

The business had a good week this week. Ended Friday with a newly signed contract, a deposit check on its way, two other solid prospects in negotiation and several clients scheduling out billable hours for October. We were both tired after a long week but upbeat and generally in a good mood. So we decided to get out of the house on Saturday and drive up into the mountains, up around the small Calaveras mining towns like Angel’s Camp and Murphys. It’s nice and relaxing to just spend an afternoon up in the Sierras, browsing the little local shops and playing tourists and enjoying a winding mountain drive among the big redwoods. We ended up at a little shop in Arnold full of odds and ends and bits and pieces, some inexpensive, some not.

And there we finally found a china cabinet that we both liked. It was the right design, size and feel for our dining room. It cost slightly more than the antique shop one we disagreed on back in April. And it took several moments for Kristi to pick her jaw up off the floor when she pointed at it, said “I’d like that” in her I-know-I’m-not-gonna-get-it way, and I simply said okay, I’ll go pay for it – let’s figure out how to get it in the truck. I think she still doesn’t believe it.

Our new china cabinet, in its new home and full of Wedgwood china:

china_cabinet_20081019.jpg

I like surprising my wife sometimes. It’s fun.

Posted in Family and Friends, Gift Ideas

The City Beautiful

Oct12
2008
Rob Written by Rob

We’re having a really nice morning here today. A cold night turned into a cool bundled-up morning. We slept in. Kristi had coffee going before I got up, and then after a shower I got breakfast started – french toast with sliced banana and strawberry, orange juice. Now we’re watching TV while I putz around on the Internet and Kristi cross-stiches her latest project: an elaborate Christmas stocking for me. (Wow.) Later this afternoon we’re heading out for a family get-together celebrating her grandfather’s birthday.

As I write this, I’m drinking coffee from my Orlando Starbucks mug. That was one of the last things I did before leaving Florida – driving to the corner Starbucks in Winter Park and buying a big mug emblazoned with the skyline of downtown Orlando, Florida (“The City Beautiful” proudly proclaimed under it). We have two of those Starbucks city mugs here now: one from Orlando, the other from San Francisco. We bought the latter at a Starbucks in the city on Powell Street, near Union Square.

We’re planning to visit San Francisco again this December, as the holidays are coming in. You can really feel it here now – the nights are getting down into the 40’s, we’re starting to run the fireplace again, Christmas plans are coming together. Pretty soon the leaves will start falling. It’s quiet and peaceful and you can just feel winter coming in the air. We’re still hoping to get together with our friends Jen and Matias to see the city right at Christmastime. I’m looking forward to that a lot.

I love northern California. A year ago at this time, I first visited Modesto to spend a week with Kristi. It was my first exposure to northern California; it really is amazing how, over the last year, I’ve grown accustomed to so many wonderous things that back then weren’t even imagined possibilities. Great people. Beautiful places. Different ways of thinking and living. Just a much better life all around. I’m a pretty happy guy.

I still read the Orlando Sentinel online, keeping tabs on the happenings back where I came from. It helps to remind me of the life I left. And when an article shows up like today’s front page story, it just makes me appreciate northern California that much more:

Many of America’s best-armed criminals call Orlando and the rest of Florida home.

AK-47s, other military-style assault weapons and expensive handguns have become so common that cops across the state routinely encounter suspects equipped for urban warfare, complete with 75-shot magazines and bulletproof vests.

In Orange County alone, the number of crime guns seized last year — 3,333 — was only 500 weapons fewer than the total seized in all five boroughs of New York City, which has eight times the population.

…

The killers of two men slain in Pine Hills last week fired 58 rounds from two AK-47s during a furious gunbattle, detectives said. Investigators still are tracking a shotgun, a revolver and a stolen pistol found at the scene.

I went to elementary school in Pine Hills.

Last year at Universal Studios in Orlando, security guards found a 9 mm pistol, two 30-shot magazines, two 16-shot magazines and 69 bullets in a patron’s backpack outside the City Walk nightclub complex.

The patron, an electrician from South Florida, didn’t feel comfortable walking unarmed in the crowd of thousands. His choice cost him two days in the county jail, but a plea bargain let him go home without a criminal record for carrying a concealed weapon.

My parents work at Universal Studios.

In Orlando, officers seized seven AK-47s and similarly high-powered AR-15s in 2003. Orange County deputies seized eight that year. Four years later, those numbers jumped more than 400 percent — 31 in Orlando, 48 in the county. Total for the five years: 321.

…

The five-year total includes AK-47s, AR-15s and Tec-9 machine pistols but does not include 72 SKS carbines seized by the two agencies. Those weapons fire the same bullet as the AK-47 but were not included in the federal ban.

On New Year’s Eve in 2005, a bullet fired from an SKS killed an Orlando man more than a mile away.

The City Beautiful, indeed. And, apparently, one big free fire zone. Glad I’m out of it; wish my family and friends weren’t in it.

Posted in Family and Friends

Overheard Part 3

Oct09
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

At school today..

 “Layne, what do you think women most desire?”

“Compliance.”

 

 

Posted in Gift Ideas

I’m Feeling Much Better Now, Dave

Sep29
2008
Rob Written by Rob

One of the funny things that happens around our house is that technology tends to take over how we do things, and coming from a technology background myself I always get a kick out of being able to introduce new toys and gadgets and stupid things and that sort of stuff into our lives. And that occasionally freaks Kristi out. Well, this episode of R&K has the rare distinction of not having been typed – at least in first draft – at a keyboard. I’m actually using a software package called Dragon NaturallySpeaking to dictate it instead. It took a total of about a minute, talking into a microphone at the computer while my words come up on the screen. Of course, being a writer, I will go back and edit it slightly and insist that I actually said it that way the first time.. but my GOD does this have the potential for making my life easier. Or at least fundamentally lazier.

Dragon takes probably about an hour to get set up. You have to train it to your voice, which means mainly sitting down and reading long passages out of preset texts that came already set up in the software. But once the program has had a chance to analyze your voice patterns, it actually does a pretty good job of transcribing. You’re going to have to correct it every so often, but once it figures things out, you can mostly just sit down and rattle off whatever random nonsense happens to float through your head. There really is a fine line between laziness and creativity; with Dragon NaturallySpeaking, I think I might have crossed that Rubicon. No turning back now.

What I find interesting about doing voice dictation like this is that it does seem to save time. But what happens is eventually you find yourself watching the words on the screen, and being a writer (and so thinking about words visually first) you find yourself thinking more about what you’re saying, talking in paragraphs and processing your verbal skills according to visual dictates. Neither talking, nor writing, but a third thing entirely – a strange feeling. Jack Kerouac used to sit down and write pretty much off the top of his head, and someone once asked Truman Capote what he thought about that. Caputo famously replied, “That’s not writing – that’s typing!”

By that measure, I don’t know if this is writing or just talking. But what I do know is that I could easily get used to writing first drafts this way, at least until the computer systems here at the house decide to lock the pod bay doors and start complaining about failing transmitters. Then I might have to reconsider and go back to pen and paper.

Posted in Work
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