Rob and Kristi
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Perspectives

Apr30
2008
Rob Written by Rob

It’s interesting to stop and reflect on what you’re willing to accept in life, what you’re not, and how life can radically change the balance between the two. We’ve both had to reevaluate our lives and everything in them over the last year; there are just some things you’re willing to put up with as a single person that you aren’t – can’t, won’t – with someone else in the equation and more to lose.

This morning I finally told a certain business prospect to go take a hike. For two weeks now we’d been going round and round on a possible copywriting project – their business website – while they niggled and henpecked and hemhawed and played out every bent, faded, word card from Negotiation Poker 101. Please: like I haven’t read those books, too. Don’t insult me.

After complaining about price (they wanted their project for half market value), delivery terms and timeline, it seemed that we’d come to an understanding and I offered to send them a contract. No need, they said, because they have their own.

That’s nice, I said. We’re not using it, but that’s nice.

And so then started a whole new round of quibbling and anal retentive paranoia. I have a clean contract; I’ve been doing this a long time, and you don’t survive long in this business without protecting yourself and at the same time being fair to your clients. Turned out, that wasn’t good enough for them. When we really got down to the bedrock of their issue, it came down to a clause in their “standard” contract – keep in mind, this is a startup, not IBM – that stated that the contractor (in this case, me) would indemnify them for any damages or costs that may arise from the work we do together.

Uh, no. That’s not going to happen, and here’s why: I’m a writer. I’m depending on the guidance and background information provided by the client to do my job; if there’s a problem, the worst I can contribute to it is a grammar slipup. If they provide me with plagiarized materials or anything like that, and I don’t know about it, and they get sued, I’m supposed to pay their legal bills? Give me a break, guys – when you stop huffing White Out and get serious, let me know.

Don’t get me wrong: I never would have signed that. But I probably would have spent at least another week arguing with them about it, instead of simply cutting them off and moving on. Too many risks. Too many warning signs. I can deal with making a bad client decision and taking the rap for it, but with Kristi involved, there’s suddenly a whole level of risk I’m not willing to play. Perhaps it’s just that “growing up” thing I’ve heard so darned much about over the years.

(On the other hand, we’ve recently picked up Grand Theft Auto 4. So what do I know?)

Back from the depths

Apr10
2008
Kristi Written by Kristi

Fresno was busy.  So busy that I didn’t even get a chance to tell my aunt I was in town for 3 days.  I was a member of a visiting committee for WASC and the school we visited is in seriously bad shape.  I have never seen such horrible teaching and lack of preparation for an evaluative visit.  Kids not paying attention in class and teachers allowing it to happen WHILE THEY CONTINUED TO TEACH.  Unprepared students in virtually every classroom.  To say I was annoyed would be a major understatement.  I love my job most of the time and I cannot imagine allowing students to get away with sitting there with no paper out, no book, i-pod in their ears, sleeping in class.  No way.  Needless to say, we didn’t have a lot of nice things to say. 

I got home on Tuesday night and yesterday, I hit the ground running to get caught up.  I discovered that 2 of my staplers that I’ve had for a million years had the springs removed while I was gone.  Ooooh I was pissed off.  So, I put every art and office supply away.  No staplers.  No tape.  No 3 hole punch.  No more selling pencils or notebooks.  Done.  I’ve never had kids in the US intentionally break stuff.  BUT, I found out who was responsible thanks to overhearing a conversation between 2 students.  I confronted both of them, told them I would have to replace the equipment they broke and bill their parents.  LO AND BEHOLD the springs were in both of their lockers and reappeared today.  They both repented and after almost an hour of wrangling, I have 2 fully operational staplers again and 2 very sheepish freshmen boys who apologized.  Guilt is a wonderful thing. 

Kristi’s Away Being Critical

Apr08
2008
Rob Written by Rob

No, not of me. 🙂

It’s her turn to post, but she’s in Fresno right now participating in a WASC school visitation. Basically, she was asked to take part in a school’s accreditation evaluation, and so she’s currently away turning over teachers and leaving no child behind as she and the other team members decide whether to let a school in trouble keep its creds. The plus side is that WASC is feeding her and putting her up at the Fresno Ramada Inn. You can’t ask for more than that.

Working Vacations

Mar25
2008
Rob Written by Rob

So early tomorrow morning, we hit the road for San Diego; we’re heading down to meet Kristi’s cousin Andy, who will be conducting our ceremony in July. It’s going to take most of the day for us to drive down there, a long road trip down most of California. We’ve both been busy today trying to square everything away for the trip.

Kristi’s been on break since Friday. For her, it’s Spring Break – a solid week off, nothing hugely gigantically pressing, a big block of time to relax and recreate before having to go back to work.

The last two days have been interesting around here, because even though she’s home and I’m home and at first glance it seems like we’re home together, the truth is I’m still working. That’s one of the tougher parts of working for yourself in a home office: you’re never entirely at work, and you’re never entirely at home. And you’re never, ever entirely on vacation. And that’s hard on the people around you, because you’re always lugging work along, no matter where you go. The flip side is hard as well – having to remind people that, just because you happen to not be sitting at an office desk, you’re not on a forever vacation.

This lifestyle has posed problems in the past for me in relationships. It’s a hard routine to ask a woman to adapt to, because there’s no clear line for me between my life and my work. One blurs right into the other. Add to that all the other cute little aspects of freelance life – PITA clients, collection issues, fluctuating income, obsessive and often insecure work-related moods, and seasonal workflows – and you end up with a steep curve to get around. It takes a patient, loving, and about all understanding woman to be willing to adapt to that kind of life. You can never simply hop in the car and go home at five; you’re both working and not working all day, every day, every waking minute.

I have to hand it to her. It took me several years to adapt to the life, myself.. and it wasn’t the smoothest of life transitions, I can tell you. Kristi’s mastered much of it in only a few months. We’re both still human beings, which means running into a snag here and there when personal lifestyles collide and one of us needs to be reminded by the other that the name of the game is compromise. But man oh man, it could be so much worse. I’m very grateful that Kristi’s that special kind of woman who can cope with being married to a freelance writer. There aren’t many like her around.

So today I’ve been closed off in the office all day, talking to clients and working to get the last remaining deliverables off my desk. Today it was a call with a Florida coffee company, and finishing up website copy for a company that does financial market forecasting for investors – done and done, it’s all finally off my desk and everything parked until Monday. So now I’m on vacation.

Vacation.

Well, as soon as I check my email again.

And tweak that copy again.

And roll today’s coffee company call to an MP3 file for server storage.

And sort the week’s files on my desk.

And update my client records to reflect this week’s hourly billing.

And do some coding updates on my client management system.

And check email again.

And maybe tweak some copy again.

And.. check email. Again.

(*Kristi stomps in and yanks a fistful of power cables out of the wall*)

Posted in Everyday Life, Romance
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