Gas leak fixed

I got home from work today before Tamika did, and Talisha and her boyfriend were out, so I was home alone. Tamika hadn’t been feeling so great this morning, so we had driven separately, me in our Saturn, her in Talisha’s.

Part of the curb outside our house comes up about half a foot, so I gunned the engine and boosted the rear of the car up in the curb. Our neighbor Troy (the one fixing the Mercury) and I had previously determined that the fuel leak was coming from the rear, and not from the front of the car like I had originally thought.

While I was positioning the car, our neighbor Gary (really good guy) came out and offered me his wheel ramp. I lifted the car up on the ramp, and started feeling around underneath the car.

I hadn’t been under there more than 5 minutes when Troy came by, and without a word, slid under the car with me, and began helping me get it done. Seeing the opportunity; Gary had me regurgitate the car situation to him while Troy and I worked. I’m pretty sure Troy got the drift of the gravity of our car situation, and after Gary left, remarked that he might have some time later on this week to fix the Mercury.

Around this time, Tamika and Talisha both rolled up. Troy and I lowered the gas tank down out of the car, and discovered a puddle of gas sitting in one of the cavities in the tank. We discovered a hairline crack in one of the pipes that was attached to a hose in the top of the tank. We put some tank sealing putty on it, and put it all back together again.

So, here’s hoping!

New Kids and Old Cars

Aloha!

So, at lot is going on, and I owe you all a new post.

In this issue:
We’re having another baby,
What’s going on with our car(s),
and my parent’s car situation.

We’re having another baby!

Tamika is now 15 weeks pregnant with our second child. We don’t know if it’s a boy or a girl yet, but once we find out we’ll let you know. We’re expecting him or her to be born in late December.

Here are some pictures!

2008 Munchkin 2-12008 Munchkin 2-22008 Munchkin 2-32008 Munchkin 2-4

Nya is doing wonderful, here are some pictures for her (so she doesn’t feel left out).

IMG_0873IMG_8461IMG_8465

What’s going on with our car(s).

So, if you read along in the previous entry; you know that I was in an accident.

The insurance company decided it was my fault. When I talked to the agent on the phone, he said he completely understood the situation, and he said it probably really wasn’t my fault, but since no injury or loss of life occurred, it really wasn’t worth it to them (monetarily) to fight it.

Oh well.

A mechanic friend of ours who lives down the street named Troy took a look at the Mercury (the one in the accident) it and discovered that the wheel took most of the impact when I was hit. The frame of the car was intact! He said he could fix it for $200 (parts n’ labour), so we paid him a $100 deposit. He said he’d be able to get it done in 3 days.

He bought the parts, began working on it… and now 3 days has turned into 4 weeks. It’s sitting outside our house up on a block with the front left fender and wheel off of it. I’ve given up pestering him about it. If it’s God’s will, he’ll get it done.

In the meantime, we’ve been trying to drive our Saturn as little as possible. It still has a hole in the exhaust, a burned out front left front bearing and is leaking fuel. We’ve been borrowing Tamika’s sister’s car. But last weekend, while we were driving back from a wedding in South Carolina, her muffler fell off.

So, our car situation isn’t that good.

Come July 22, we’re going to be joining my parents and my sister, and making the trip up to Schefferville. We’re very excited, it will be my first time back in 4 years, and Tamika’s first time visiting the Naskapi tribe.

We’re not sure what God has in store.

My Parent’s car situation.

My parent’s car situation isn’t much better; they had just driven 6 hours to pick up a car that had been donated to them… only to have it die on the way home. 2 rental car trips and lots of gas money later; they had to leave it at the mechanic they had gotten it towed to. Their (current) car has a busted catalytic converter (which makes it fail emissions in Connecticut).

Prayers are much needed for both of us. My parents are working to raise $3000 to buy a (reliable) used minivan. If you’re interested in helping them out, contact me.

That’s all I can think of for now. I’ll send you more if I remember.

Peace & Love!

Hurtin’

View Larger Map

I’m having a rough time right now, I need prayer.

Our Saturn, a 2001 LS, has been dying a slow death. Last summer, rust won it’s slow war on the muffler, and turned our quiet maroon car into a roaring hot rod. The mechanics said on a Saturn the entire muffler assembly is one piece from the head to tail, and costs $3000 used to replace. We we left it.
A short time later, the driver’s side seat adjusters blew, forcing Tamika to use three pillows to reach the pedals.
A month back, I brought it in for it’s 3 month oil change, and the mechanic told me that not only had a n axle bearing gone bad on the right front wheel (making the thing sound like a tank rumbling down the road) but that there was a fuel leak somewhere in between the front passenger seat and the front right tire.
So not only could the car suddenly lose control and/or it’s wheel; but it could also spontaneously catch on fire at any moments. The mechanic made me sign something that said that I understood that it was extremely dangerous to drive. But at $800 just to see if the could fix the problems, there was no way we could afford it.

My parents had a 1986 Mercury Sable sitting in their yard that had been donated to them. A very good family friend of my grandparents had given them the car, it had been bought by the owner brand new in 1986 with every bell and whistle and extra car care package imaginable. He never drove it more than 80,000 miles (under HALF the mileage our car has, which is 15 years younger). The car looked real bad cosmetically because the clear-coat they put on it in the 80’s was never designed to last 20 years, but ran like a dream.

My dad offered to drive it down to us and give it to us if we paid for the title transfer fee.
Tamika and I talked it over, and realized it was probably the best idea.

So, yesterday, my parents drove the Mercury down from Connecticut. This morning, my dad and I put a coat of paint on the wall, and went to get my motorcycle registered at the MVA. We drove up and back in the car, and I really started to like it. It’s beautiful inside.

We worked on the motorcycle most of the afternoon, and I went out to pick up some supplies for the bike.

That’s when it happened.

I was coming down a side street, and came to a stop sign. I stopped; and there was a four-lane road in front of me; two lane in either direction. I had to go all the way across.
Down the street to my right; a light at the next intersection had turned red, and so all the cars had stopped. Once everyone had stopped, a couple cars to my left stopped and motioned me forward (so that they wouldn’t be blocking my intersection, so I came forward
On my right was a big bus that I couldn’t see around, so I stopped and poked my nose out to see if traffic was coming the opposite direction.
I couldn’t see. I stopped. I inched a little further.
Still nothing. Open road. I stopped. I inched out a little further, and

WHAM. A huge Chevy SUV came barreling out of nowhere and hit the front left side of my car full force. Bumper parts when flying. My car spins 90º. In a panic, the drive of the other car hits their gas pedal, and lurches forward again before slamming on their brakes.

The Mercury coughs and dies, a faint odor coming from under the hood; all of it’s dashboard lights flashing haphazerdly.

I dash from the car to see if the other driver was ok (I felt fine). An round elderly woman is sitting in the SUV with her door half open, clutching her cellphone and shaking. I asked her if she was alright. She didn’t say anything. She begins hollering at whoever was at the other end that she had been hit. I asked he if she need anything. She called someone else.

A traffic officer comes over and tells me I should probably get into my vehicle. People are driving all around us, honking their horns, driving between us to get through the intersection I was in. 4 other times, other people almost got hit.

A crowd gathered. A man in a blue shirt approached me and asked me if I was ok. I said I was.

I got out to look at the car. The entire right wheel was bashed in, the fender inverted, the front end in ruins, and bits of broken headlights and parts of my axle strewn about the road. I grabbed a couple semi-intact parts and threw them in the passenger seat.

I took a look at the SUV. She was still hollering in her phone. There was a chip on the left side of her front bumper.

About then, the cop arrived. He suggested I get back in my car.

A paramedic ran towards me, and asked me if I needed an ambulance. I said no.

A BMW pulled up in the intersection across from where I got hit; a man in an orange shirt got out.

“Do you need a tow?” he asked, looking doubtfully at the car.

The police officer appeared at my window. “Can you drive?” he asked.

“I don’t know.” I replied. I started the car. It was running real rough. I put it in gear and it started to sound like a woodchipper. “I don’t think it will” I said.

The officer nodded, asked me what happened. I told him.

“Do you have the registration?” he asked.

“I just got the car today and…”

“Today?” he rubbed his forehead

“…yeah. My dad and I were just at the MVA trying to figure out the transfer of the title.”

“That’s why it has Connecticut plates?”

“Yeah. The registration is back at my house.”

“Ok.” He walked back to his squad car.

“So you want a tow? My truck is right around the corner.” the man in the orange shirt pointed.

I nodded. Another paramedic came over and asked me to sign something telling them I was refusing an ambulance. He commented the axle looked broken. He asked me how long I had had the car. I told him. He was incredulous. “Wow.” he said. I told him about our other car. “Well, it’s like my father used to say,” he said, “‘If it’s not fleas, it’s ticks.'” He said the woman didn’t want an ambulance either.

I called my dad. I asked him if he had the registration. He said he did. I gave my phone to the officer.

I picked up some more pieces.

A white tow truck showed up. I asked him if he was with the man in the orange shirt. He said no. He said he would wait to see if the other guy showed up.

A firetruck pulled up. A couple firemen got out, talked to the officer, and got back in the truck and drove away.

My dad called me, and said he had AAA. He said they would cover any car he had, and tow it for 3 miles for free. I was less than three miles from home. I told him to go ahead and call them. I gave him my location.

A blue tow truck showed up. I asked him if he was with AAA. He said no. He said he would wait to see if he was needed.

The officer drove around behind me to block traffic; I was in the middle of the road.

I prayed.

I went up to the squad car. I asked the officer if had everything he needed. He said he did. I asked him if I should get the other lady’s insurance. He said that would all be in the report he was filing. I thanked him.

One of the tow trucks drove off; I could see the lady who hit me drove off too.

The man in the orange shirt showed up. I told him I didn’t need him, but thanks anyway.

I called Tamika.

My phone died.

I powered it up again and called her again.

It died again.

I called my house. It didn’t die. I told them to call Tamika and let her know what happened. My dad said he would ride with Tamika to come with the AAA card.

The officer came by and asked if I needed a tow. I said AAA was on their way.

I prayed.

A very drunk man came to my door and gave me a card; telling my his friends owned a mechanic shop around the corner “and could fix this thing like that”, and snapped his fingers.

He stood in the middle of the street and directed blocked traffic, yelling at the idiots wary drivers who honked at him. He laid down on the street and looked under my car. A puddle of oil was escaping from the engine. He got up again and laid down on the other side.

He came back to my window and confessed that he knew nothing about cars, but his friends did.

I powered up my phone, and called the house. Tamika had just arrived, they were on their way.

A AAA van pulled up across the street, and a man wearing a flurescent yellow vest and sunglasses came out.

“Are you ok?” he said.

“Yes. But my car is in trouble.” I said.

“I see that. Don’t worry. The truck will be here soon.

I powered up my phone again, and called Tamika.

Nothing.

The truck showed up, and pulled in front of me. A man named Thomas got out, and began hooking cables underneath the car to pull it up on his lift.

“Do you have your AAA card on you?” he asked.

“No I don’t, it’s my parent’s…” I said, “they’ll be here any minute.”

“Ok…” he faltered, “They need to be here.”

“They will be,” I assured him, powering up my phone again.

He shrugged and got back to work.

The puddle underneath the car had gotten bigger, and because the front right tire had been pushed so far into the car; it wouldn’t turn at all. Despite the oil it was tough to drag onto the back of the truck. Thomas stuck a skid underneath the tire.

The man in the AAA van took my keys and steered (as best he could) while Thomas ran the winch.

Thomas came by “You get ahold of them?” he asked, motioning at my phone.

“No, they’re not picking up.”

“Try again.” He drove his truck off to the side of the road.

I ran to the squad car and thanked the officer.

I tried calling again. My phone died. I ran up and told him so.

“Use mine.” he said, tossing me his.

I powered up my phone just long enough to get the number into his phone. I called.

Nothing.

I called again. Tamika picked up. They had broken down on their way over. She was just past the bridge on the Hilton Parkway. She was frantic. My dad was with her, standing in the median trying to slow people down. Two people had almost hit her already.

Thomas was amazed. He began driving. He asked me where they were. I told them.

Tamika was sitting in the car, the blinkers flashing. My dad was waving his arms frantically, watching people thunder around the corner. I traded places with him, and he went to the truck.

People were driving like maniacs. One lady in a Chevy came within inches of Tamika’s bumper, skidding on the pavement.

Dad directed the truck to come up behind Tamika, and I joined them at the Saturn. My dad had the hood open. I told Tamika to try to start it. We all guessed that it was probably gas. Tamika looked at my painfully.

I asked my dad if there was a gas can in the trunk of the Mercury. The one serious problem with the car was the the gauge was sometime finicky. He said it was.

I vaulted onto the truck and got the can out, then ran back to the car. I poured the whole thing in.

Tamika tried to start the car. Nothing.

Thomas asked if he could try. He let it sit for a second, let out the brake, pushed in the clutch and started it right up.

Tamika got in the car, Thomas and my dad got into the truck, and they followed me home.

Thomas dropped the car in as best he could on our street, but then used his lift like a jack and gently eased the car into place so it wasn’t sticking out into traffic.

We thanked him a lot.

Now, I’m not quite sure what to do. The Saturn is officially a death trap.

Since the lady who hit me had the right of way, I’m not sure who is at fault. She was obviously speeding, and the nose of my car was visible for quite some time poking out from behind the bus. But I don’t know. I’m nervous. People on the street, the officer, and Thomas all told me I should go get checked out at the emergency room. But I’m scared. If her insurance company finds me at fault; I’ll have to pay the medical bills. With the economy the way it is, we really can’t afford that right now.

And now this beautiful car is wrecked. And if her insurance company find me at fault…
Tamika said God has plan. And I know that He does. But it’s hard. I just can’t see it right now…

Pray.

Memory and Trains

Aloha!
I’m writing from the Baltimore-New London train. We’re about 2 hours away still. Tamika has her feet across my lap, and Nya is tucked in at my feet sleeping soundly in her car seat.
I love train rides.
The fascination was born into me early; I still remember glimpses of riding with my parents on the Chicago elevated trains when I was little. We lived on Magnet Avenue in Chicago. I recently found out they had made a Google Maps Street View of it and went to take a look; but I wasn’t able to match any of the houses with the faded photograph of me and my dad sitting on the porch.

I remember a lot of when I was little. Comparatively, anyhow… Most people don’t seem to be able to remember much past 3 years old. Some particularly close-minded people don’t remember anything past their 20’s… 🙂 I remember a thunderstorm and my mom & dad bringing me out on the porch to watch. I remember going to a pumpkin field for Halloween. It was sunset, and all the pumpkins were the same colour as the sun… I remember my parents drawing faces on three pumpkins with a Sharpie, (mine was the smallest; the size of an apple) and then scooping out their guts and setting them aglow atop our mantle (or was it an upright piano?)

Certain things escape me. A lot, actually. I remember us living at some pastor’s house at one point. All the “kids stuff” that the house had was a tire swing on a big tree out front.
I remember discovering that not only did the faded green and brick coloured tiles at the top of the creaky wooden stairs on the second floor come up when you picked at them, but they also had about 50 years worth of dust underneath them that was fun to drive my toy cars through.
But I have no idea why we lived there, or when, or for how long.

I think that’s why I like to write journals, so that when I’m 60 or 70 I’ll be able to read them and find out what life was like and remember.

I have a pretty bad memory. If you know me at all, I’ve probably forgotten your birthday. And I’ve probably forgotten it more than once. I’m not a pompous prick, I promise. I actually feel so bad when I forget something; that it completely wrecks whatever mood I’m in when I find out. I feel really awful. I’ve been trying really hard to figure out what to do to help myself out.

I used to be bad at remembering where I put things. My glasses were constantly lost; my keys, my wallet… Anything not permanently attached to my body got lost. So, I started to develop a system. Wallet in left pocket. Glasses case on right. Keys on left belt loop. Change goes on the right. Camera bag goes over left shoulder and sits on right side. Always.
These things keep me from loosing them, because otherwise they’re really gone. I feel like there is something wrong with me mentally when I do it, but I feel like I have no choice.
It’s the same when I come home. If I don’t put my bag, shoes and coat in the exact same place each time, I loose those too.
For birthdays and such, I’ve started to put them in an online calendar. It lets me know when people’s birthdays are, and if I do it right, it alerts me a couple days in advance.
But then… sometimes I forget the alert…

My long term memory is really strong, though. I remember a lot of details about past events.
Journals help with this too.

So; back to today.
We were late for our train. We were initially supposed to take the 10:10am train from Baltimore. But, because of a number of things; we got there at 10:11. I literally was running along side the train as it pulled off; shouting at the conductor to let us on.
He was right; it was safer to wait for the next train with me carrying Nya in her car seat, but it still made me mad. He had signaled to the engineer to pull off even though we were on the platform.
Ah well.
Tamika got us Business Class tickets for the 4:47pm train (the last ones available), and we went back home for a while. It ended up being a good thing, because Tamika had forgotten her phone, and we got to pay Talisha for watching Nya for the past two weeks.
Not only that, but a couple ads in the Philadelphia City Paper I had done for Chosen Dance Company had needed to be resized (or they would have missed the publication deadline), so I was able to do those too.

I’ve been doing a lot of work lately. I’ve been working on a bunch of small projects for the CCFOF, designing a whole new site for Barak Drama, putting the final touches on Brian Mengini’s site, and Chosen Dance Company brought me a new client that they’re doing a program with up in Philly.

Zerflin is growing fast. In a post or two I’m going announce a new employee! We finished up the negotiations and he’s accepted the position; I just have to get his bio from him to put up on the Staff page. Tamika has also been taking on a larger role with managing the projects as well as doing some coding and design work as well.

I am looking forward to this break, though. The most I plan on doing these next 4 days is finishing up a logo, writing some quotes, and a few odds and ends. I just want to sleep. 🙂

Pray that I keep my wits about me through all this, and that I’m able to delegate and hire out to others when I can. It’s hard for me, because I want to both keep doing quality work and also be able to do the occasional pro-bono job (Mixed Chick’s Chat Mixed Roots Film and Literary Festival has been the latest), but still make enough money to help my family out and let the business grow. The quality part is the hard part; making sure that the people I hire do good work. I’ve been burned a couple times in the past; where people have done work for me and did a shoddy job… and I had to go in a do the whole thing all over again.

Time is the one thing I DON’T have, so to go in and clean something up after you trusted someone to handle it is really hard. But that’s growing pains I guess…

Nya is doing wonderfully. She loves being tickled now, and has the cutest laugh known to man. She also likes it when I make funny faces. She is still sleeping through the night, but we’ve been noticing she wakes up early sometimes.

Tamika and I have begun a schedule to help us not feel so frantic in the mornings. Nya goes to bed at 8:30, and we’ve started off by cutting off electronics (me on my computer and her on the TV) at 9:30. By 10 we’re in bed, though we can read and talk until we fall asleep. Then, at 6:00am, we both wake up, help each other out of bed, and then one of us gets to take a shower first, and the other takes care of Nya and fixes breakfast. At 6:30, we switch, and the one not taking a shower gets to eat and clean up, and gets to clean up something (like the pots and pans or empty the dishwasher. Then at 7 Talisha takes over for Nya and we’re out the door; Tamika drives me to the train station and she drives to work.
It helps us both get sleep and breakfast, which has been great for us; and keeps us from rushing too much.
Plus, since Nya wakes up by 6 anyway, it makes sure she gets fed and changed first thing.

Huh. Another ritual. 😀

Funny, though, all this ritual doesn’t keep me from still being a Savage. I still do wild and crazy things like jump off buildings and go exploring in the woods. I think the rituals help me be able to do that stuff, because everything else I’m sure is taken care of.
Who knows.
I’m weird. 🙂

Into the Wild

Just finished watching Into the Wild with Tamika and Talisha.

I don’t think I’ve ever more completely understood a character in a film more than I understood Christopher McCandless. The essence of the story is that he completely snaps all ties with society and adventures out on his own; ending up surviving off the land in an abandoned Alaskan transit bus.

The movie states that he’s essentially running from the violence, anger and abject materialism in his parents home.

And as I sat watching the movie; I couldn’t help but be struck with the thought that I could have been him.

If you know me well enough, you’d probably get the same feeling after watching the film.

Of course, I don’t know what Christopher was really like, or even if the film follows the non-fiction book written about him with any degree of similitude. But the film’s character…

Another thought I was stuck by was how grateful I am for my parents, and how they’re nothing like his parents. I truly couldn’t ask for a more supportive family; and the more people I meet in the States, the more I see how lucky I truly am. If it were not for them; I would probably be following Christopher’s fate.

I love you, Mom & Dad.

Has anyone else seen this movie? I’d love to hear what you thought.

the Split

the split, the divide, the break off, the disaffection, the estrangement, the fissure, riven, the rent, the rift, the rupture, the schism

As was suggested by my noble readers, I have decided to make it a little easier for everyone to pick a Journal Flavour.

As you probably know; RSS Adventures of a Young Savage is comprised of a couple different categories:

Reflections: Stories about me and what’s going on in my life.
Zerflin: Design, Photography & Business.
Artwork: Postings of New Artwork.
Ethnic: Controversial writing about race, equality, and the world.
Naskapi: News about the Naskapi First Nation in Kawawachikamach, Quebec.
Archive: Old Journal Entries pulled from other sources.

I’ve just made it easier for you to pick and choose which ones you subscribe to.

If you are already a subscriber to the site and get these by email; it’s really easy.

1. Log on to your account. (click here, or go to the right hand side of the jounal page and scroll down until you see the control panel. Then click on “Log in“)

Control Panel

2. Enter your username and password. If you don’t remember, select “Lost your Password“.

Login

3. Click on your username on the top right corner.

username

4. Select “Subscriptions”

Subscriptions

5. Click the checkboxes of the categories you’d like, and hit “Update Preferences”. That’s it!

Select Categories

If you subscribe using Google Reader, it’s also pretty easy.

Just click on any of these links, and select the Google Reader button.

RSS Adventures of a Young Savage (all categories)
RSS Reflections
RSS Zerflin
RSS Artwork
RSS Ethnic
RSS Naskapi
RSS Archive

But wait, there’s more!

With our new gallery system, there is now the option to subscribe to the gallery itself!

This means anytime we upload ANYTHING, you get to see it immediately.

RSS Check it out.

Martha Jancewicz (my grandmother) on TV

Who: Martha Jancewicz, 82, of Norwich.

Why you should know her: Jancewicz is the oldest member of the Connecticut Sun’s new Senior Dance Squad, a group of 50-and-older women who will perform during timeouts in five home games this season. The squad is sponsored by the Discover card.

Lucky 13: Thirteen women tried out a few weeks ago for a spot on the squad, and all were taken (one has since dropped out). Jancewicz says there was so much press coverage of the audition that she felt as if she were surrounded by the paparazzi.

Read the full article by Elissa Bass here…

I am tremendously proud of her… in addition to all this, she plays tennis, goes for daily walks and swims in her pool, and plays billiards like a pro.
I miss her, I wish we lived closer… 🙁

Tamika Jancewicz, Lacrosse Coach

Tamika was interviewed by Chay Rao of the Gazette, a Maryland Community Newspaper. He wrote a very nice article about the team, I was impressed to see good journalism done for a Varsity Lacrosse game.

Rockville’s girls lacrosse team thought it had conquered the lapses that caused the inconsistency that plagued its early games. The Rams came out fast in their 12-7 win over Einstein Friday, scoring four goals in eight minutes to take an early lead.

They gave it right back, though, and went into halftime tied and looking at a talking to from their coach, Tamika Jancewicz.

‘‘We needed to get back to the fundamentals,” she said. ‘‘Pass the ball, move and catch. Get the ground balls.”

Read the rest here…

Things just keep getting better

The Great Dissapator

Tamika has the incredible ability to take any frustration I have and completely dissolve it. I’m not entirely sure how, but she’ll say something softly and sweetly, gently listen to me, empathize, and even if it’s been boiling in me all day long, it’s gone within seconds.

I just discovered my boss Dinorah has the same ability. I got a chance to talk with her yesterday about my frustrations with being overloaded, and she very patiently listened to me, apologized for not helping me earlier, and worked with me to figure out ways to reduce the stress. Not only that, but she gave me control over more aspects of various jobs so I can adjust the workload myself.

I know I’ve said this before, but it’s incredible to have a boss that listens so intently to you and takes to heart everything you have to say.
Now, let me clarify; they both don’t just let me do as I wish. They tell me know when I’m being irrational, but because they listened, I trust everything they have to say.

That’s a skill I’ve got to learn at all costs.

4 Jobs

Overloaded?

Tamika pointed out to me yesterday that I have 4 jobs.
That’s a lot, I think.

I have my day job; as a Studio Artist at Merrick Towle.
I was also hired as an instructor at Merrick Towle as well; teaching InDesign for Beginners twice a week.
Then, of course, is Zerflin, which in itself is many many jobs (Accounting, Project Management, Photography, Illustration, Web Coding, Private Classes, etc etc etc). I count that as at LEAST two.

4 jobs.

Tamika works 2 right now, one at the National Fatherhood Initiative, and the other coaching the Rockville Rams Girls Lacrosse Team.
In addition to all this; we’re also raising a kid, and building a wall the basement from scratch (thanks Dad, for your help with that one).

I’ve also got various side projects in there too; like fixing a vintage motorcycle, selling artwork and designing a new social-networking game.

Wow.

I think I’m going to go to bed. 🙂