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

Posts in category Family and Friends

December Goodness

Dec09
2009
Kristi Written by Kristi

The next several weeks are busy around these parts, not including the major website I’ve been working on for a non-profit here.  Today, we did our annual baking at my mom’s where we spend lots of time with sugar, eggs, flour and various types of chocolate.  We didn’t finish so we’ll continue on tomorrow and again on Thursday, when we go up to Sacramento to my sister’s house and then celebrate my birthday that evening.  Sunday is my dad’s family Christmas celebration so much eating and socializing will ensue.

On the 19th, we’ll help do Christmas baskets for the Salvation Army and on the 20th, my mom’s family will have their family shin dig.  On Christmas Eve, we’ll be at my sister’s again and W00t!  CHRIS ARRIVES!!  The Brother will be here for 4 days to celebrate Christmas with us and we are so excited for him to be here.  He hasn’t been to Modesto since the wedding and we’re looking forward to showing him Christmas done the Jepson/Taylor way.  My mom’s already made him a stocking to hang up at their house so he’ll be spoiled with goodies to open on Christmas morning.

This is our third Christmas together and it’s been entertaining to look back over all of them.  In 2007, Rob was fresh off the plane and so completely overwhelmed with this whole family-who-does-Christmas-BIG thing.  He hardly knew anyone and it was such a huge adjustment as he was leaving behind his life to be with me.  And last year was sort of the beginning of a big mess for me at work and December was far from stress-free.  We’ve always managed to turn toward each other when times are tough and this last year has been no exception.  As pleasant as the holidays usually are, I did not enjoy Christmas last year because the spectre of “You might lose your job” was looming over me.

But so far, this December has turned out to be pretty darn good.  We are healthy.  Happy.  Working.    Tucker is still alive.  Samson still drives Rob nuts and Ruca still pukes up her dinner near my side of the bed.  We’re a happy little family.  We’re excited to watch Natalie enjoy her first Christmas, buying her toys she will love that will annoy my sister.   We’re involved at church, making new friends, reconnecting with old friends.  It snowed yesterday but not enough to stick on the ground.  I still have some shopping to do and wrapping of gifts but there’s time for that.

And with that..in the wise words of Dr. Seuss.

“And the Grinch, with his Grinch-feet ice cold in the snow, stood puzzling and puzzling, how could it be so? It came without ribbons. It came without tags. It came without packages, boxes or bags. And he puzzled and puzzled ’till his puzzler was sore. Then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before. What if Christmas, he thought, doesn’t come from a store? What if Christmas, perhaps, means a little bit more?”

May we all remember the true reason of Christmas this year.

Posted in Everyday Life

Community

Nov21
2009
Rob Written by Rob

We were invited to join the Trinity United Presbyterian group attending the Modesto Salvation Army Kettle Kickoff luncheon on Thursday. It’s been a busy few weeks – mainly due to the mammoth redesign effort on the church’s website that’s consumed nearly all our time lately – but we were honored to be invited. Kristi’s grandfather is chairman of the Modesto Salvation Army’s Advisory Board; volunteer philanthropy is a central value in her family. We very much enjoyed sitting with the TUPC folks and helping contribute a bit to this year’s record breaking $227,000 Kettle Kickoff tally.

I know I’ve mentioned this here before, but in the time I’ve lived in Modesto I’ve come to greatly appreciate the community we live in, and its stark contrast to the place that I called home for most of my life. Orlando is a big, busy place. It’s full of self-interested, self-involved people who conscientiously avoid making any investment in the place they live in – a town mainly defined by people who move there, take what they can while they can, and leave. And generally not for the better.

Of course I don’t mean to say that every Orlando resident is a petty, small minded child. A lot of really great people also live there. But what really is lacking there is a sense of community – any sense of community, whatsoever – and that feeds a pervasive culture of anonymity and indifference. The good people are left fighting the overwhelming trends. As our friend Em’s husband pointed out once, there’s an atmosphere of animalistic cruelty in the South and in Florida in particular; nobody really cares, and the result is a collective shoulder shrug that trades true civic pride for the promise of a free T-shirt and a cheap motel room. Welcome to Orlando, Florida.

The longer I’m away, the clearer the picture gets. I still read the Orlando Sentinel regularly and marvel that anyone still wants to live there. I find myself wondering more and more what would happen if the lifeblood of affordable tourist travel was strangled off. What would happen once denial wore thin and the people of Central Florida suddenly had nothing to rely upon but each other. How well that would work, long term. How clearly defined a town’s long term survival chances are, in tough times and without a strong community sense. I think about these things often.

As we’ve been working on the new Trinity United website, my role has been mainly technical. Doing some of the graphics, taking a lot of the photos around the church, handling the server installations, that sort of thing. Kristi has poured every ounce of spare time and energy into this project. I think it shows; the final product, now just a few days from launch, represents a quantum leap forward from their current web presence. The church will suddenly have communications options that they only dreamed of a month ago. I’m proud of that, I’m very proud of her, and I’m excited to see the website take off.

Most of all though, I’ve enjoyed getting to know the people and to be part of a collective group working towards real goals. A real community. I’ve taken photos at choir practices; recently I crashed the pastor’s adult ed study group to take photos. A couple weeks ago we helped out with the church’s annual chili cookoff. Last weekend we spent a day sorting clothing donations at the local homeless mission. Kristi and I have been in or around TUPC campus virtually every day for the last three weeks for one reason or another. I’ve really enjoyed contributing in a way that matters. It fills a hole that I accepted as part of normal life not long ago.

I suppose it’s probably hard to understand, unless you’ve lived in a place that values commercial expediency above all else. The simplicity of pitching in has a grounding effect, an inner anchor in troubled waters. It’s work to be proud of.

Posted in Everyday Life, Work

Home From Oregon

Oct08
2009
Rob Written by Rob

We just rolled in a few hours ago, changed clothes, unloaded the car and went out for dinner.

As much as we enjoy to travel, we love coming home. Home to family, to friends. Home to the bed we carefully selected and purchased together, the Cal King with plenty of room for us to both sleep comfortably (unlike the lumpy motel Queen that meant we slept terribly every night we were up there). Home to our animals, one of which has been kenneled at the vet all week. Home to regular Internet access. Home to our house and our town and all the familiar sights and sounds and comforting details that mean we’ve finally settled in from a week on the road.

Three days of work and Chris is moved into his new Eugene, Oregon apartment. He seems happy with his new digs. There was a bit of drama involving his car (when would it arrive from Orlando – or would it ever?) and his moving pods (“You could have vacuumed some of the cat hair from the futon BEFORE you moved..”) but by Wednesday afternoon it was all moved in and generally sorted out. A few final trips to the grocery and Target to make sure he was stocked on all the basics, and then by very early Thursday morning – 40 degrees and wet, BRRRR – we had the car loaded up and were back on I-5 headed south again towards the California state line.

We hope everything works out for Chris in his newly adopted home. It’s not easy uprooting everything you know, burning the ships to go live thousands of miles away from everything familiar to you. One thing that was immediately apparent to us as soon as we arrived was that Eugene was NOT Orlando; not even close. But we’re sure that he will adapt and make new friends and sort out everything he needs. We wish him luck.

It’s a ten hour drive up, and another ten back. I didn’t take as many photos as I had planned, and a number of the ones I did take came out pretty blurry. I seem to be pretty bad at that lately, we’re not sure why. But if you’d like to see some of the Oregon photos that managed to come out nice, they’re after the jump.

READ MORE »

Posted in Travel

Packin’ and Preppin’

Oct03
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Short update today. Both Chris and his cat made it to Oregon in one piece. He’s currently sitting around an empty apartment, waiting for his stuff to eventually show up and hoping his car ever shows up. But he’s there. We’ve talked to him a few times since landing and he’s tired and ready to just get settled and be done with it already. He’s good.

This week I’ve been a royal pain in the ass to live with. I don’t do vacations – even working vacations – very well. I spend a lot of my time neurosing that I’m missing a deadline, or about to miss a deadline, or won’t be here when a client really needs me to pick up the phone, or won’t be here when that once-every-five-years megaproject calls happen. So I’ve spent a lot of this week fighting to clear my desk and get deliverables out the door, and Kristi’s spent a lot of this week trying to refrain from smothering me with a pillow.

All’s good now, though. Desk clear, email parked, neurosing down to a minimum. Now’s time for pack and prep.

We’ve got a long list of things – some big, most small – to do before we leave. And we’re knocking the list down. We have someone sitting the house, the pets are arranged for, the car’s tuned and oiled and fueled, and supplies are mostly laid in. Early Monday morning, we take Tuck over to the vet for kenneling, and then we hit the road for Oregon for a nine hour drive.

Been a while since we’ve had a really good road trip. We’re both looking forward to getting out of town for a bit and seeing Chris.

We’ll take photos, and if Internet access is to be found, there might be an R&K entry while we’re up there. Stay tuned!

Posted in Travel, Work
← 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.