Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
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Posts in category Family and Friends

Brothers

Feb07
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

When I was in high school, I always wanted a brother.  I wanted someone who would stick up for me, who would protect me when I needed it, who would want to pal around with me.  Obviously, the brother thing never worked out for me.  I’ve had close male friends for a long time, some more reliable than others.  But now, I have Chris.

One of the things I love about Rob is his relationship with his brother, Chris.  Chris is funny, loyal, generous and he and I both love Rob to bits.  It makes it easy to get along with him.  We had a great dinner out with him when I was in Florida for Veteran’s Day weekend last fall.  I understand Chris in that “we’re both the youngest child” way that Rob doesn’t quite get and they connect on this deep level that I will never be able to wrap my head around.  I’m happy to call Chris my brother-in-law. 

I’m so glad Chris is going to be Rob’s best man.  He really is the right person for the job. 

Posted in Wedding

Blah

Feb07
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

People who have known me for a long time know that I used to be big into drama.  I created it when I could, I loved being in the midst of some overblown angst.  And then I turned 16.  I’m not saying I’ve never been in the middle of some serious drama over the years because I really, really have.  Some my own making, some just circumstances I wouldn’t get myself out of.  But now?  I hate drama.  Maybe it’s years of teaching teenagers or just dealing with some of the day in, day out goings on as an expat when I was in London. 

If I learned anything when I lived in England it was how to deal with stress and how NOT to deal with stress.  Being friends with Laura helped me with that because even in the middle of an intense storm, she’s peaceful.  Part of that is her faith, part of that is her marriage.  But drama is not something Laura does, which is one of the reasons I value her advice and opinion so highly.  But I digress.

 The last few days have been a lot of drama with family.  As Rob said, it’s ridiculous and now it’s become a burden that we have to extricate ourselves from.  I hate having to put distance between us and family because my family is one of the most important parts of my life.  However, my mental stability and our relationship are higher priorities for both of us than making sure people don’t get their feelings hurt.  That may sound selfish but right now, it feels like self-preservation. 

Still missing London.

“Why, Sir, you find no man, at all intellectual, who is willing to leave London. No, Sir, when a man is tired of London, he is tired of life; for there is in London all that life can afford.”

-Samuel Johnson

 

 

Posted in Everyday Life

Family Circles

Feb07
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Sorry we haven’t updated in the last week. It was my turn and I kept promising Kristi I’d do it soon, and one by one the days slipped away.

Things are going well. We got the tuxes sorted out and taken care of. Her veil arrived today and sits waiting to be picked up. We’ve chosen the rings and are preparing to buy them in the next week or so. Business is picking up; it’s only the sixth and I’ve already logged two-thirds of my hour quota for the month (we love paying contracts around here). Slowly the big stress hairball that was December is receding and we’re settling into a comfortable, peaceful domestic life.

The weekend was busy, but a good busy. Saturday we made good on a promise to Kristi’s parents and drove over to the local Salvation Army Child Development Center. They had eight or nine computers in unknown working order, scattered in disarray around the building; Kristi and I went over, checked them out and cleaned them up and got them working again for the preschool there. Luckily they were all very salvagable, most having nothing at all wrong with them – they’d just suffered some neglect over time, but nothing that couldn’t be quickly mended.

On Sunday we went over to the Jepsons’ house for their Super Bowl party. It was a blast – lots of great food, a dozen of the Jepson’s best friends eating, joking, laughing at commercials, venting at political ads, and trying to mentally will a football up and down an Arizona astroturf. And as you probably know, it was a great game. It was just a great way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

Driving home that evening, Kristi and I were talking about family. Namely, our families. She has a huge circle of family both biological and extended – three generations of relatives in the same town, many in the same church, and a wide circle of friends that includes many who have known Kristi all her life. It’s a circle that to my eyes just seems to widen and widen, and there’s something awfully comforting in that: there’s this vast support structure here that is utterly unlike anything I knew in my own life before meeting her. Don and Kathy and everyone else in that circle have gone out of their way to welcome me into their midst, and I appreciate that. It’s calm and peaceful and stable and sane, and I’m getting to really like it a lot.

Sometimes it seems like my own family circle, rather than spreading out, just keeps going round and round. Over the same territories, over the same bumps, over the same pointless nonsense, never even noticing that it’s not actually getting anywhere. The contrast between the two family experiences is jarring for both of us; it’s forced us both to examine our own lives a bit more objectively and to better assess what we each underappreciate and overindulge. And brought us each to ask how much of either family experience we want to bring into our new marriage, not to mention the lives of our future children.

That’s been a particular issue this week as a simmering situation in the greater Warren clan has threatened to explode into a full-blown drama down in Florida. Pointless nonsense. The same round-and-rounds. The same trip around the same circle for the same reasons and heading to the same places, and it doesn’t need to be but it will anyway. Because that’s what my family does: they go round in circles, never leaving nor arriving, probably until the end of time. It’s all just such a waste, because it doesn’t have to be that way. It can stop. But people have to be willing to stop it, and they’re not. And so they take another trip around.

I told Kristi the other night, as we discussed and reflected on the situation, that more than anything that’s why I came here. Why I asked her to marry me. Why I love her. In addition to all her wonderful qualities – and she has many – Kristi offered me something that no one had credibly offered before: hope. Hope that marriage and children and family and friends could all be happy and healthy things. Hope that people can be who they appear to be, and can be honest and caring without some sort of ulterior motive behind it. Hope that there was a real way off the endless roundabout.

That hope is a fragile thing. A sacred thing. A thing worth working, fighting and sacrificing greatly to protect. For some reason Kristi saw fit to entrust it to my care. I’m deeply honored by that, and intend to live up to that honor best I can.

Posted in Everyday Life, Wedding, Work

Last Night In Orlando

Dec08
2007
Rob Written by Rob

Like I said in the last post, my family and friends really stepped up on this move. Really above and beyond, too. That I lived in a second-floor apartment didn’t help matters; my brother Chris nearly busted himself helping me lug heavy furniture downstairs and to the storage unit. And my parents threw themselves completely into that last Thursday, helping me get out of the apartment and to leave it clean enough to hopefully preserve a little of my security deposit. They also loaned me some couch space to sleep on the half of the week, after Salvation Army had come to take away my bed.

By Thursday night my parents and I were all just totally wrecked, and the early morning airport trip was coming in less than twelve hours, and I really wanted to take my parents out for dinner. We went to China Buffet near Fashion Square in Orlando; it’s a local fixture, been there as long as I can remember. I’ve eaten there since high school. They’d never been. Wanted to go one last time before leaving and also wanted to show my folks that I appreciated them and everything they’ve done this week to help make this move work.

So we had a good dinner, commiserating about back and knee pain, joking and laughing and talking family stuff and enjoying decent Chinese food. Towards the end, the waitress put down the bill with three fortune cookies.

I grabbed one and broke it first. It read, “You will have a fine capacity for the enjoyment of life.”

Mom broke hers. It read something like, “You have a talent for intuiting and understanding deeper truth.”

Dad broke his and there was nothing inside.

In all these years of eating Chinese, I’ve never once seen a fortune cookie break open without any fortune whatsoever inside. I guess that that great fountain of ancient Chinese wisdom, the Walton Company of Monroe, Georgia, is of the opinion that if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all. It was a funny moment.

Leaving the restaurant, Dad offhandedly commented that he wasn’t sure about the shortest and best route for driving home.

I humbly suggested that we take whatever route would allow him to drive 20 miles per hour and that involved no other cars whatsoever.

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