Rob and Kristi
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Posts in category Everyday Life

Sprinklers!

Mar16
2008
Rob Written by Rob

So here’s the story. Once upon a time – about 1940 or so – a little house was built on Santa Ana Avenue and somewhere around 2006, after changing hands a few times, was sold to a young woman named Kristi. The previous owners, in a mad rush to boost its value last-minute, ran around throwing together a lot of poorly conceived, adhoc improvements to the property. One such boondoggle was our sprinkler system.

The guys who put it in really didn’t know what they were doing. The lines are about three times as deep as they should be. All the heads are on pivots rather than fixed and stationary. The heads themselves are all wrong – 360 degree sprays, half of which cover the pebble driveway leading out of the garage. And the lines themselves run in a maze all under the yard.

Before we could do anything useful with the back yard, something had to be done about those things. So today Don and Kathy came by and the four of us attacked the back yard – Don and I replacing the main trouble-child sprinkler line, and Kristi and Kathy powerwashing the fences to prep for painting sometime in the next week or so. And I’m happy to report that at least a good chunk of the yard sprinkler system now works perfectly and actually MAKES SENSE, which means that now we can seriously start thinking of what to plant in that area, while we plan our attack on trouble-child sprinkler line #2. We got the worst one down and done today, though. It really felt good to see that line come on and work just the way we wanted it to.

You know, my sympathy goes out to anyone faced with extensive yard care and landscaping work on their home, especially if they’re doing it alone or just with their spouse. It’s tough work and a lot of it. But it’s so much easier when you can get a gang of family on it – everyone knowing that when the time comes for a returned favor on their own yard, we’re only happy to oblige. Family’s good for that.

Laura: I’ll get some photos up soon. I know it’s been a while; I think the “Eugene” hairball was our last. We’ll get a few good shots of the backyard in progress and get them up here for you guys.

Posted in Family and Friends, House and Yard

Good Day Sunshine!

Mar13
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

I love the spring time.  Especially after a dreary day yesterday and this morning.  The flowers in the yard are blooming.  The new roses are sprouting leaves.  I hope the poppy and bluebell seeds I planted will sprout soon.  There isn’t a better time of the year, except for the last day of school.  As any kid will tell you, that’s the best day of the entire year!

 

Samson got a power walk yesterday while I was off getting my hair cut.  I came home from work with a migraine, AGAIN and when money permits, I’m going to see an accupuncturist.  One of my students has a doctor she likes so I got his card from her.  I’m not a huge fan of the idea but if it works, it’ll be worth it. Im tired of having screaming head pain once a month or so.  Even with the meds I take, I’m still having problems.  I don’t know what else is next, short of seeing a headache specialist or going on seizure medication.  Fun stuff. 

 

School is almost over.  We’re in the downhill slide now.  I have a lot of curriculum to cover still but that’s the story of my life.  I’m hoping not to teach freshmen next year but I have no control over that.  I’ve put in my request, which will most likely be ignored.  Such is the life of a high school teacher in public school. 

 

I’ve finally kicked the last of the lingering cough.  It took almost a month to get over that nasty flu.  Rob is back to his normal self and other than adjusting to the time change, I feel like a human being again.  It’s nice not to have a perpetual frog in my throat and have some energy to do things around the house. 

Springing Forward

Mar12
2008
Rob Written by Rob

I’m having a really good day. The weather here is gorgeous, the sky is a clear blue, cool breezes running via open windows throughout the house. Slept like a rock, got up early as usual to see that Kristi got on the road with breakfast and a packed lunch, and then crashed out for a few more hours. When I woke up at 9am I felt better than I have since before we got sick. Factoring stress into the equation, probably the best I have since the plane landed in December.

16 years ago – God, has it been that long? – I remember driving into work down Kirkman Avenue in Orlando, about this time of morning and this time of the year. I was 19 and worked in an A/P department at Martin Marietta (now Lockheed Martin). With the recession and massive post-Cold War defense cutbacks, 1991 had been a bloodbath year in aerospace. Bad, bad year. By March ’92, I was burnt out. I’d go to the local water park every day after work just to unwind before the painful drive home down I-4. I spent most of my time fantasizing about being anywhere and doing anything other than staring at phone bills for a company that specialized in blowing people up.

So that day, the day I driving on Kirkman, I’d told people that I had a dental appointment. Truth was, I was putting a job application in at Universal. Kirkman ran right alongside the park back then. The money wouldn’t be nearly as good, and I wouldn’t be getting a steady 40 per week, but it’d be fun. And I desperately needed fun at the time. I’d already decided to quit Martin and already had a resignation letter written and in the car. It was just a matter of having somewhere else to go when I left.

I was driving down Kirkman with the windows open and it was early spring just like today and the weather was perfect and I just realized that I couldn’t bear going back to that big grey building full of overweight grey people doing boring grey work where every hallway was decorated with Orwellian security posters. The place full of people who in the fall of ’91 were hoping, praying, desperately dreaming that the Gulf War would turn into a full-region bloodbath – so that they’d keep their jobs. The place where everything was a number and everything was locked behind a security card swipe and everyone pretty much accepted their lots in life and accepted grey as the natural color of the world.

In short, everything that a blue-sky spring morning in Florida – or California, for that matter – isn’t.

I went back to the office, handed in my letter and that was it. I didn’t get the job at Universal; I went back to temping for a while, drove across the country a couple times, ended up working at a Winter Park health food store a few years later. It wasn’t an easy road from there to here, but I never regretted leaving Martin. It was just one of those defining moments that not only set my life in a new direction, but made a big difference in the man I became as well.

The first really stunning morning in spring always makes me think of that morning. It makes me take notice of the colors and the fresh air and everything good in life. And there’s an awful lot of good in life right now. You could say I’m a happy guy; it’s a good day.

Posted in Work

American Beauty

Mar03
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Kristi’s out for the evening; her dad’s in Wisconsin on business, and so she’s covering his class over at Modesto Junior College tonight. I have some client work to catch up on, so while she’s gone I’m plopped down on the couch with the laptop, watching American Beauty. It’s a wonderful film, in my opinion one of the best ever made. I haven’t seen it in a long time and lately I’ve been in the mood for it.

The ending wrecks me every time. As I get older, I just appreciate it on more and more levels.

I’ve got a serious movie addiction, I admit it; maybe it’s my own form of narcissistic vice. That was one of the very early personality conflicts Kristi and I discovered shortly after I moved in. I hadn’t watched TV in years; I watched movies. My collection now sits somewhere around 750 movies, some on DVD and some in DivX files. Kristi, on the other hand, is a TV watcher and will be the first to tell you that she has a one-hour attention span (I think it comes from years and years of living and working in 55 minute chunks), so right around that point in a movie she starts getting restless. I learned to shift my movie watching to daytime while we worked out a TV show routine that we could both enjoy. I also sneak them in while she’s out for an evening.

It’s frustrating for me sometimes because there are so many films that I want to introduce to Kristi, great movies that she’s never seen. Like American Beauty. It’s become almost a running joke around the house – got a great movie, darlin’, you gotta see this one, okay, that’s number 54 on the list and we’ll get to it eventually. Hey, I figure, I can’t help it that there have been so many good stories told in the two-hour celluloid format.

Up until this point, I’ve told her the story that most people get, the basically true but superficial account of how I got the monkey on my back. Back in ’99 I began working weekend shifts at Verizon and would spend 13-hour stints alone at my desk, without much to do until a server caught on fire. I was also making more money than I knew how to spend. I bought one of the first portable DVD players (for $700) and every weekend would pick up three or four DVDs. I’d spend every weekend just running movie marathons until the alarms would go off. I’ve been watching movies while working ever since.

But it actually goes deeper than that. Maybe a bit more pathetic, but sometimes that’s life. Truth is, those days came on the back end of a pretty bad period in my life that left me fairly emotionally exhausted in a lot of ways. Bad relationships, bad scenes, a bad life. By that point, I didn’t really feel much of anything about anything; when I left for Tampa to take the Verizon job, it was at least as much to get away from all that as it was to move forward into something good. Looking back now, I can see that those years working weekend shifts alone at Verizon was my time to isolate myself, think things out and regroup. In a significant way, for me watching good movies gave me the private arena I needed to start feeling things again, to start feeling like a person again.

That’s why we tell stories, I discovered. And why we listen to them and pass them on. They connect us with the human experience and remind us that we’re all part of something that goes back a very long way, and will continue on for a very long time. A comforting continuity that assures us that we’re not alone, that everything has happened before and that human nature is as it always has been. When you understand the role that story plays in life, in many ways you finally understand life.

So that’s why I still obsess over movies like American Beauty. And No Country For Old Men. And Fearless. And even Bubba Hotep. Because they each tap into something deeply emotionally penetrating and they do it in a way that we can talk about later. That form our cultural memory. First we had oral tradition, then we had books, and now we have movies. They’re where the best stories are being told today.

In twenty years, who knows – maybe we’ll tell our stories in interactive holographic recordings piped directly into our brains. Or maybe we’ll be back to oral tradition. You never know. But any way the stories happen, we’ll still be telling them until the last of us turns off the lights.

Posted in Diversions
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