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

Posts in category Everyday Life

After The Fifteenth

Jan17
2008
Rob Written by Rob

The writer Harlan Ellison was once asked by a fan how hard it was to “break in” to the writing business. Harlan’s been steadily producing work since the 1950’s – hundreds and hundreds of short stories, articles, columns, you name it – and long has had a reputation for not suffering fools gladly. But in this case he answered the question.

It’s not breaking in that’s hard, he said. Anyone can break in. The hard part is staying in, year after year, even decade after decade. That’s the part that breaks talented spirits.

A lot of days, work as a plumber sounds pretty good. People always need plumbers.

I’ve been doing this freelance writing thing for six years now, since January 2002. It’s been a long, strange road – a long story of insane clients, late night writing sessions, rented-car road trips and youthful idealism smashed into fine paste. And I’m here to tell you, Harlan was right: it’s not starting out that’s tough, it’s keeping going. When you don’t want to anymore. When you’re sick of the whole thing. When you despair of ever seeing yourself in print again. When you’re trying to decide between rent and food. When a magazine tries to shortchange you or a client decides to leave the country for a month during the holidays, leaving behind an unpaid four-digit bill.

Every year since I started, I’ve had to struggle a bit less and less. And it is all worth it, though often I can only see that when the sun comes back up after a bad day. The people you meet. The experiences you have. The ways that your life is enriched, in ways you never imagined possible in the old days. But no matter how many years go by, it’s still yesterday; logically you know that you’ll get paid on that bill, that business will pick up again, that things work in patterns that you’ve gradually learned over time. But no matter how successful you get at doing this, the days of beans and rice always seem like just yesterday.

That client who left the country, leaving a four-digit bill? That happened to us this Christmas, in the midst of my move to California. A good client, too; a long relationship that I was dreading sending to collection. Poor Kristi’s been listening to me rant and neurose over it for the last four weeks, in addition to my usual fretting over finding the next solid client contract.

Hon, she tells me, it’s going to happen. It always happens in the second half of the month, you neurose over not having enough hours early, then after the 15th things get crazy. It’s going to be FINE, babe.

Meanwhile, I’m contemplating brushing off my tech resume. There’s always tech: plumbing for the 21st century.

She tells me that she has faith in me – more faith, probably, than I have in myself.

But that’s not it. What it is, is that she wasn’t there six years ago. She just sees now and knows that everything’s okay. I’m the one who can’t get his head wrapped around the simple fact that I somehow managed to beat the odds, to stay broken in, to avoid being just another dreamer who spent his life fantasizing about being a writer. Simple truth is, she caught me at a point in my life where I’d taken this as far as I could alone. And now she’s volunteering to help take it the rest of the way. I love her for that.

Yesterday – the 16th – we signed our first big job of the year, with a marketing firm in Sacramento. Nice, big healthy money, and a nice deposit check on its way.

Today I finally got the Runaway Client on the phone (he’d gotten back yesterday) and we cleared the air about his bill. Bizarre circumstances, but that should finally be on its way sometime next week.

And we’re still blanketing Northern California with sales letters.

It’s going to be a great year. I’m glad I have Kristi here to remind me of that when I need it. It takes a very special kind of woman to be married to a writer; I’m glad I found one.

Posted in Work

The Gross Out and Assorted News

Jan16
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

Apologies to everyone about the pic of Eugene. Rob wrote the post and I hunted around internet until I found a nasty picture. Eugene was considerably smaller than the photo. As always, we aim to please our friends and family. Considering the amount of cat pee Rob wipes up daily, we’re beyond being grossed out by things we find in the bathroom. Although Tuck still poops when I’m in the shower. I swear he holds it in until I get home.

In other, less bodily function related news, we’ve sent out a large cold letter mailing to drum up business for Rob on the west coast. He’s over the moon today about landing a large project with a marketing firm in Sacramento. So far, so good. He was getting a bit nervous about how things would transition from Florida to California but always the optimist, I knew it would be fine. Someone has to see the glass half full. Lord knows it’s not gonna be him! It drives me mental sometimes but it helps me to focus on what’s going right, what’s good, what’s most important.

I’ve spent the last several days downloading music for the wedding reception. I have eclectic taste in music and at times, Rob winces when I ask him if it’s ok to play Justin Timberlake at the wedding. I can’t help it. I like bad pop music. I blame 2 years of listening to Brit pop. Disa can verify though that while I never bought a Backstreet Boys album, I’ve known all the words to several songs. It’s embarrassing. Well, not really. It just drives Rob to flee the office with his ears covered. On occasion he’s cried for mercy. Everyone has their breaking point. His is Mariah Carey. Just wait until he hears what I’ve burned on CD. He may just start bleeding from the ears when he notices tracks from Moulin Rouge.

I’ve been homesick for London lately. It comes in waves, sometimes when I’ve had a bad day at work but sometimes it comes for no apparent reason at all. I think we’ll return but it’ll be a few years before we’re ready. My mom isn’t excited by the prospect but I think she’s more worried about having a grandbaby living 5800 miles away from her than anything else. I know my entire existence isn’t to be lived in Modesto and I’m grateful that Rob is supportive of me chasing this dream again. I know it won’t be easy for him because I’m temperamental and touchy about the issue when he says we have to wait a bit longer. Professionally, I need to stay put for a while. I’ve been in 3 schools in 3 years and while I don’t talk about teaching in Essex on my resume, it’s still there. I’d like to get more established at my current site so I can move onto bigger and better things. So for now, we’re in Modesto. But I do want the life I had in London. I want that life for us. The adventure. The challenge. The opportunity.

Posted in Work

Cleaning Day At Chez R&K

Jan12
2008
Rob Written by Rob

It’s been about 20 years since I’ve mowed a lawn. Seriously. In Florida, I haven’t lived in a house since the early 90’s; in apartments, I mainly associated lawn care with loud, irritating leaf blowers and tree trimmers at the ungodly hour of 9am.

Today’s Big Cleaning Day around here. Floor mopping, bathroom scrubbing, general disinfecting, and yes, lawn mowing – which is now my job. So I spent a chunk of time this morning out back, hacking my way through the Mayan jungle in search of the ancient temple of Tikal and mulching lots of rotten oranges, dog dumpage and grass on my way there. That’s a lovely combination of smells, I kid you not.

But the real question is.. when do you know it’s love?

I mean, anyone can mow a lawn when its 65 degrees. Or take out the trash. Or wash dishes during the day, or make the bed.

So when do you know it’s love? I think I have an answer to that question:

When you find yourself fishing cold, wet, disgusting clothes (apparently deposited by some kind homeless person) out of the yard waste trash can with a stick, one item at a time, very carefully transferring each to the proper trash can. So that it gets picked up. And so your woman doesn’t have to do it.

That, my friends, is love.

Wait a minute here

Jan09
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

Ok that last post is so not fair!  I did not yell or freak out about the whole computer hijacking thing.  It’s just annoying to have someone take over your computer from their own work station!  I tried to explain to him it’s like someone taking a pen out of your hand and finishing what you’re doing for you.  I HATE THAT.  I know Rob gets all excited about the endless possibilities of melding 2 laptops and 2 desktops into one powerful networking beast.  And yet, I just want to do what I usually do.  Surf the net, type school stuff, download music.  98% of the time when Rob starts in about  network stuff, my eyes glaze over and I simply say, “Yes dear. Do whatever you want as long as you don’t break it.” 

Wise words for starting a marriage.

← 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.