Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
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Another Day In The Salt Mines (Rob Edition)

Oct31
2008
Rob Written by Rob

Yeah, I work from home. I’ve been self-employed now for almost ten years. And god, when you put it like that, a guy feels old – was 2000 really almost a decade ago? You have got to be kidding me.

So a few days back, Kristi told me about a recent conversation in her classroom. I imagine someone noticed that I was tagging along on the Berkeley trip and wondered just what in the heck Mrs. Warren’s husband did for a living, to be able to just take a day off and ride along on his wife’s field trip.

“He’s a writer,” she said. The next question is usually, “What kind of books does he write?”, as though the only successful writers in the world are book authors. Kristi preempted it: “Mr. Warren writes for businesses – brochures, websites, technical documentation, anything like that they need. Businesses go to him to write that stuff for them.”

“And so your husband just works from home? And he can just take off whenever he wants?”

“Well, not whenever he wants. Sometimes he’s on hard deadline and has to work late getting a big project done. Sometimes he just spends the morning drinking coffee and playing Burnout Paradise or whatever the hell he does when I’m not at home.”

“And he doesn’t have a boss?”

“He works for his clients. But no, he works for himself.”

“How’d he hook up THAT sweet gig??”



Long story, man. Long story.

But then again, once you get to a certain age, isn’t everything a long story?

Truth was, I woke up one day many years ago and looked at my life and said to myself, I’ve had enough of this crap. Think Peter from Office Space. And unpleasant things happened: a friend died of cancer, another old friendship painfully crumbled, and of course, some planes were flown into some buildings and knocked a whole lot of people (including me) out of the complacency of the 1990s. I didn’t really “hook up” anything, much less a sweet gig – I just changed my life one day. Everything else after that was hard work, sacrifice, determination, a few smart decisions and a fair amount of luck.

I just decided to not give up, and that decision hasn’t killed me yet. Everything else was a sidebar.

The writing business – our business, now – has had a down year from 2007 (thanks to practically taking the summer off for the wedding), but we’ve had a great October. That makes the third month straight of record numbers. We just the other day signed on a new client in supply chain logistics; they sell GPS tracking solutions to trucking fleets. I’m really excited about this one – their business just cuts across so many verticals, making them an ideal portfolio job. Every client like them usually leads to a dozen more high quality clients, right behind them. We now have a full docket of high quality clients, boding really well for 2009.

So anyway, today, Halloween, I’m in a lull. Half a dozen clients with open projects, but most of them are on their thumbs for one reason or another; two new clients won’t officially launch until next week. So today I’m mainly sitting here in the home office, rewriting the code on the business website and our back office organizational software, tightening up the organization. I’ve got a movie (Bubba HoTep) playing in one corner of one of my big widescreen computer monitors; I’m keeping an eye on email and generally just drinking coffee and waking up. I might crack open Burnout later if I need a video game break.

Okay. So maybe it is a sweet gig. Most days, at least.

Bad day at the beach is still better than a good day at the office – know what I mean?

Berkeley

Oct24
2008
Rob Written by Rob

I think I’ve mentioned before that things tend to break for the business at around the fifteenth of the month. It’s the weirdest thing: first two weeks, dead. Then we hit the fifteenth and the phone won’t stop ringing, leading into two weeks of crazy-crazy-crazy before dying off again.

Every month, right around the 10th, Kristi has to talk me off the ledge. There’s nothing quite like knowing that the month is almost halfway over, and then looking up at the status board and you’ve got two freakin’ billable hours logged so far for the month. Is that going to be it? Oh crap.

And then the fifteenth rolls around and BOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM it’s all incoming mortars. Within about a week, we had big new projects from my industrial joint client, a New York marketing firm, an orthopaedics practice and my A/V lift designer client, and had a very hot, very solid lead on a client that does GPS tracking systems for trucking fleets. We’re going to end up rounding out the best October the business has seen in – well, looking back now, probably ever. The flipside is that now I’ve got a desk full of work that needs to be done soon if I want to bill it on October billing. So it’s off to the races.

Perfect time to take a day off for a field trip to Berkeley.

It’d been scheduled for over a month, this field trip with Kristi (and fellow EU teachers Brad and Anthony) and about forty gifted students from East Union. And it was fun: we piled up in a charter bus, watched movies there and back, and went out to UC Berkeley for the full campus tour. The kids were great. We adults raided the gift shop for a Berkeley coffee mug, wandered aimlessly up and down Telegraph trying to find someplace to eat that was open before 1pm, and generally soaked in the college experience. By the time we returned, Kristi and I were just exhausted, feet hurting and both of us ready to crash. Luckily we had dinner planned at her parents’ that night, or else God only knows what we would’ve ended up eating. Granola bars, maybe.

Berkeley was fun. I got my mug. The kids got their big-city-college experience. Kristi got photos. And now we both have a LONG day ahead of us. I have three client calls and two big deliveries to get out the door. She has football duty tonight, and so she might not get home until almost 9pm.

Just one of those Fridays where you’re living for Saturday, know what I mean?

PS – Good news. Kristi’s parents have agreed to take care of Samson while we’re in Florida on the weekend of 11/8. That’s a load off: he’s expensive to board and doesn’t take to it very well. It’s one thing for a 10lb cat to dislike boarding, it’s quite another altogether for an energetic 120lb lab. He’s going to be a lot happier that weekend staying at Grandpa and Grandma’s house. Thanks Don and Kathy!

Posted in Travel

Well then..

Oct21
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

Some days I wonder why anything is worth the bother. I get testy, cry at the drop of a hat and I don’t think much is worth doing. I’ve gotten a lot better in my advanced age at holding my tongue when I shouldn’t speak and finding the balance between passion and being a complete ass. I don’t always succeed but I’m getting there.

I took my love, I took it down
Climbed a mountain and I turned around
I saw my reflection in the snow covered hills
till the landslide brought me down

Today was a brutal day at work for a variety of reasons. My students were fine, but there are always other things that make me bite my tongue.

Oh, mirror in the sky
What is love?
Can the child within my heart rise above?
Can I sail thru the changing ocean tides?
Can I handle the seasons of my life?

Well, I’ve been afraid of changing
cause I’ve built my life around you
But time makes you bolder.
Children get older;
Im getting older too.

I took a bit of a risk today and talked about how I’ve felt regarding some things at work. Five years ago, I would’ve kept my trap shut and suffered in silence. But not now. Life is too short. I’m tired of just “putting up and shutting up” to go with the flow. And even though I felt like I was a bit all over the place, especially after lunch, I stood up for my feelings. I didn’t just swallow it down like the desperate 14 year old I’ve felt like of late, desperate for friends, to be liked, to have people talk to me. And while what I’ve said may rock the boat a bit, it was worth it. I’m tired of there being this festering wound.

Oh, take my love, take it down
Climb a mountain and turn around.
If you see my reflection in the snow covered hills,
Well the landslide will bring it down.

And when I come home, my husband is there with a kind word. A hug. Encouragement.  Ice Cream and Fleetwood Mac. He’s smart enough to leave me alone to blast music, to write, to hum to myself, to have a cry and a whinge, to fall into myself.  And then he’s there with a quiet glance, a kiss on the back of the head, restoring my faith in humanity, the kindness of men and the lusciousness of having a soft place to fall each night.

Posted in Everyday Life

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 Everyday Life
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