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Monkey Update

Mar09
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Well, this morning we received confirmation of something that Kristi has suspected for some time now. Monkey appears to be in heat.

For those of you who weren’t reading R&K then or just don’t remember, we’ve written about Monkey before. She’s the ubersweet little cat who “belongs” to the neighbors two doors down, but who for all rights and purposes is a stray – and slowly, gradually becoming R&K critter number four. Since the last chapter, Monkey’s practically adopted our back yard as her home, spending all day stalking through the tall grass or begging to be let in the garage for some food. She lives under our next door neighbor’s house, squeezing out into our side yard through a broken access grate near their foundation.

Lately Monkey’s been running around with a grey striped tabby. We’ve seen them together often in the back yard, and Kristi’s sworn up and down that Monkey’s in heat. I still had my doubts, as I associate a cat in heat with loud screeching in the middle of the night, and we haven’t heard that from Monkey.

Until this morning. I went into the kitchen at 6am to make coffee while Kristi showered and got ready for work, and even she could hear it: Monkey howling outside. “Babe – WHAT IS THAT??”, she yells over the sound of the running shower. “It’s Monkey,” I answer. “I TOLD YOU!”, she calls triumphantly.

I took the car today; in about an hour and a half, I’m off to the dentist for the last of my deep cleanings/root planings, so I needed the car and we talked about Monkey on the way to Manteca. Completely irresponsible “owners”. They collar and tag her, but let her run around outside even when it gets below freezing. We’re feeding her. God only knows where she’s getting fresh water from. And apparently they haven’t had her fixed. Does Monkey even have her shots? Who knows. It takes more than a $3 brass tag from Petsmart to be a responsible pet owner, you idiots.

We are *that* close now to scooping Monkey up and getting her into a vet. We can’t have her fixed while she’s in heat, and if she gets pregnant, then that’s it – we’re going to have a bunch of little Monkeys coming along. But she’s going to need shots and a medical checkup and ARGH.. why do dumbass people let their animals run around like that? Some freakin’ responsibility please PEOPLE!

We’ll keep you updated. And no, we’re not calling animal control.

In other news, the annoying Scotty dog from across the street.. Samson’s nemesis, the one that was allowed to just run around the neighborhood, pooping and peeing in our front yard.. he’s apparently gone missing. The other day, Kristi found a Craigslist ad from that neighbor saying that obviously someone stole their beloved, gentle little dog from their yard. Riiiiggghht. We’re thinking it’s more likely that someone put a cap in his ass, called the pound, that he fell afoul of foul play.

I swear to God, your honor, we had nothing to do with it. That dog had enemies.

Posted in Everyday Life, The Animals

Lowering Tides

Mar07
2009
Rob Written by Rob

It’s starting to get tough out there. At the moment I’m not losing too much sleep over the business impact from the recession – most of my client base is in industrial sectors unlikely to be hurt too badly, and our overhead is relatively low, and we have a whole continent of businesses to prospect. But even so, everyone’s having to shuffle and adapt to stay afloat.

In past years, this first quarter of the calendar year has been defined for me by big cushy jobs offered up by marketing firms: five grand here, four grand there, usually website jobs. I usually end up making half the year’s cash just in January and February. This year, that’s almost entirely dried up – I spent January calling my marketing company contacts and virtually all of them had guns in their mouths. They count on big Q1 jobs too, and they’re just not happening this year. Businesses are still spending money, but they’re understandably being much more demanding about their ROI. Big website redesigns aren’t easy to justify right now as immediate sales drivers, so those plans have gotten shelved and the marketing firms that do them have gotten pounded.
READ MORE »

Posted in Work

Sad

Mar05
2009
Kristi Written by Kristi

My grandma’s condition seems to be deteriorating.  She was brought back to the hospital on Monday afternoon because she seemed worse.  They thought she’d had another silent heart attack but now it’s looking like she didn’t.  Her heart is functioning only 5% better than it was before her valve replacement and mentally, she’s not there.  She’s confused, sleep deprived, retaining water.  She has moments of lucidity but mostly, she dozes in the middle of conversations and can’t really talk much.  She did tell me she loved me tonight before we left.

Right now, it’s more waiting.  My heart breaks.  So many changes in such a short time.  It’s more than I want to handle.  More than I think I can handle.  Mostly, I’m just sad.  Profoundly sad.

Posted in Family and Friends

Pondering

Mar03
2009
Kristi Written by Kristi

Yesterday, Rob had a dentist appointment in the morning so he drove me to work.  When he came to pick me up, I still had some students in my room for tutoring.  He sat with me while the kids worked and we started looking through all the things I have to bring home.  My podium.  Bookshelf.  Books.  Books. BOOKS.  Art supplies.  Office supplies.  The more we rifled through it, the more annoyed he became.

I started to see my classroom through his eyes.  As an investment of my time and energy, but more of my money over the last 10 years.  I have purchased a DVD player.  A portable stereo.  Paper trays.  Staplers. 3 hole punches.  Carts. Book racks.  Posters.  Construction paper.  Books.  Books.  BOOKS.  A library of videos.  Binders.  Oh man, do I have binders of curriculum.  Sheesh.  Probably 25 that I use for myself, plus the 90+ I purchased at one time for a research paper unit.  My desk chair.  Push pins.  Extension cords.  A CAT5 cable for my computer.

He looked at me and said, “This is what we call a noble profession.  We pay you for shit, you supplement our poor funding by spending what little you make by adding to your classroom and then when it’s all said and done, we expect you to take a pay cut or lay you off.  If you don’t play by the rules we like, which change all the time, we fire you.”

Yep.  Pretty much, that’s teaching.  The noblest profession.

Posted in Work
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