Rob and Kristi
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Sick

Dec20
2007
Kristi Written by Kristi

I have a cold.  Runny nose, scratchy throat, totally exhausted.  Perfect for finals and Christmas.  At least the shopping and wrapping are done. 

Posted in Everyday Life

Sam’s New Boo

Dec19
2007
Rob Written by Rob

Sam’s been having it rough lately. Two weeks ago, it was just him and Mom – all the love he wanted (at least, when she was at home), no contests over territory, free run of the house, and a dog door that he liked. Now he’s locked out of the office most of the time. And neither cat likes him, even though he tries hard to be friendly. And the new dog door is just weird.

But the other day, things picked up for Samson. He got a new boo.

It’s plush, about two feet long, purple, shaped like a long wiener dog, and makes noise if he bites it just the right way. My friends Emily (who is now “Aunt Emily” around here) and Jason sent it in a box of Christmas presents for us and the animals, and Sam just absolutely adores it. For the last two days he’s been walking around the house with the toy in his jaws, shaking it and occasionally trying to rip its ears off. He takes it to bed with him. He’s protective; with everything that’s gone on here lately, something’s finally gone his way. Cats forgotten for the moment.. Sam now has much higher priorities than trying to score a pittance of feline appreciation.

Unfortunately, we had to take the boo away from him last night – he’s an “aggressive chewer” (as Kristi puts it) and was starting to do real damage to it. I distracted Sam while Kristi scooped it up and tucked it on top of the fridge. Sam then spent the next hour or so scouring the house for it, desperately trying to figure out where he mislaid it.

We’ll give him the boo back tonight, when we can supervise him while eating dinner and watching TV. Hopefully that’ll stretch out the poor wiener dog’s lifespan by at least a day or two. That’d be nice.

Thanks Aunt Em!

Sam and Boo 1

Sam and Boo 2

Tuck had his, too. Em packed a couple catnip mice in the box and we got them out and put away fast.. the cats will have those on Christmas. But Tuck knew that smell. He knew there had to be catnip in there!

Tuck In Box

Posted in Everyday Life, Gift Ideas, The Animals

Yawning

Dec17
2007
Kristi Written by Kristi

The last several days have been busy.  Rob hurt his back again while bringing in firewood.  He spent most of the weekend curled up on the couch with the heating pad.  I felt bad that he was so miserable and moving around like an 80 year old man.  I didn’t sleep well all weekend and kept waking up on Saturday.  The one day I have to sleep in and I was awake at 7am!

One positive thing in all of this?  I learned how to do Tuck’s meds.  Tuck has always had this “I barely tolerate you” thing with me, especially when I would visit Orlando.  But now, Tuck thinks I’m pretty fun.  Who knew?  Maybe he’s got bigger fish to fry with the dog around but right now, he hasn’t hissed, scratched or given me his attitudinal tail swish.  With Rob not able to get down on the floor, I had to do the meds.  I spent the better part of October and November slightly freaked out at the prospect of giving that cat medication.  Rob kept assuring me it was easy, Tuck cooperated, etc.  Yeah, I always thought, that cat worships the ground you walk on.  I am the interloper.  But Tuck did cooperate, didn’t scratch me and yeah, it was easy.  I guess it helps that he’s done medication 2 times a day for 3 years.  He’s a pro. 

The love-hate relationship between the cats and Samson continues.  I think Sam has been a bit neglected the last week or so.  He’s definitely feeling a loss of his place as the number one guy in the house.  Tuck hisses at him daily, Ruca disappears when he comes within 10 feet of her and the whole office being a cat sanctuary?  Yeah, he’s not having that.  At least he’s not being destructo dog. 

Posted in Everyday Life, The Animals

More About Rob – By Rob

Dec12
2007
Rob Written by Rob

Since I’ve arrived here at my new home, I’ve gotten two questions more than any other: How do I like Modesto so far? And just who the heck am I, anyway?

I guess the best way to say it is that I’m a child of technology. I grew up in Central Florida, a region that was almost impossible to comfortably live in before the invention of air conditioning. When I was very young, my father bought the family a home computer (1982 or so), which set me on the 25-year path of computer geekdom that brought me to this point in my life.. and in fact brought Kristi and I together and made the move to Modesto possible.

So I’m basically a humble acolyte of A/C electricity.

My original background, dating back to the early 1990’s, is in computer technology. I’ve been programming computers since I was ten, and started my professional life doing database and web development at Lockheed. That took me to UNIX systems and network administration at Verizon and other places, several years of working weekends in Tampa patiently waiting for computers to catch on fire (and watching DVDs the rest of the time). It was pretty good money and pretty easy work. The only problem was, I was miserable doing it.

Not long after I turned 30 in 2001, I made the hardest decision of my life: I walked away from my tech career to do what I’d always wanted to do, write professionally. It’d been my dream since high school; in over a decade, I’d accomplished exactly nothing towards achieving it, and enough was enough. So I took the leap, spent a year doing volunteer PR work for the American Red Cross, occasionally writing for magazines and building the foundation of a freelance marketing and copywriting business.

I’ve kept my tech skills sharp – they prove extremely useful as a writer, since so very few writers have technical backgrounds. I built my own websites, wrote my own client invoicing and contact management software, and have gotten the business to a point where I can – and in recent weeks have – run the whole operation from a laptop.

It’s been hard work through a lot of tough times, but this year I made more than I did as a Lockheed programmer, and very near what I was making in my first year as a UNIX admin. Not bad when you figure that statistically, only a very few percent of working writers make more than $20,000 a year.

So now I sit at home at my new desk and do pretty much what I did in 2001: work hard (and bill hard) when the situation calls for it, and watch movies most of the rest of the time. Only now, I’m running the occasional load of laundry and enjoying the company of the woman I love at the same time. Really not a bad deal when you think about it.

That takes me to the second question: how do I like Modesto so far?

Right now I’m enjoying it a lot. Orlando is overcrowded, noisy and massively congested; it takes an hour to get anywhere from anywhere, and I promise you won’t enjoy the trip. Working portably from home with clients across North America lets me enjoy all the upsides of small town life without most of the downsides. So again, a life of technology.. thanks to the Internet, email, cell phones and unlimited long distance plans, I can run my circus from just about anywhere in America with very little interruption.

In the end, though, I’m happy in Modesto because Kristi’s happy here. She makes the town a new home for me.

Posted in Everyday Life
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