• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Crushing Krisis

Comic Books, Drag Race, & Life in New Zealand

  • DC Guides
    • DC Events
    • DC New 52
    • DC Rebirth
    • Batman Guide
    • The Sandman Universe
  • Marvel Guides
    • Marvel Events
    • Captain America Guide
    • Iron Man Guide
    • Spider-Man Guide (1963-2018)
    • Spider-Man Guide (2018-Present)
    • Thor Guide
    • X-Men Reading Order
  • Indie & Licensed Comics
    • Spawn
    • Star Wars Guide
      • Expanded Universe Comics (2015 – present)
      • Legends Comics (1977 – 2014)
    • Valiant Guides
  • Drag
    • Canada’s Drag Race
    • Drag Race Belgique
    • Drag Race Down Under
    • Drag Race Sverige (Sweden)
    • Drag Race France
    • Drag Race Philippines
    • Dragula
    • RuPaul’s Drag Race
    • RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars
  • Contact!

topics

Why I haven’t written about #startupparenthood (and why I’m starting now)

September 9, 2015 by krisis

Despite being a parent for two years now and working at a startup a bit longer than that, I don’t think the idea of “Start-Up Parenthood” really hit me until earlier this summer. That’s despite my colleague Anita Andrews doing some very compelling and data-driven writing about the concept both on her own blog and our RJMetrics blog, The Data Point all this year.

I’ve learned there are two sides to the Start-Up Parenthood concept. One is the commiseration side – being able to discuss the ups and downs of parenting while also making a company profitable for the first time with your peers. That’s the same as it is for anyone in any unique industry.

The other side of the coin is the non-traditional, highly-flexible, very transparent world of start-up culture, and how that world accommodates your life events (or doesn’t).

The first week of July an avalanche of positive life events toppled onto the people close to me all once. They are not all my stories to tell, which is why this post is coming to you two months after the fact, but the upshot was that both our child care and E were suddenly unavailable to hang out with that toddler while I was in the middle of one of the busiest and most high-difficultly months of my career to date.

The answer? I left the office for a week with hardly any notice. Effectively, the least important aspect of my positive life equation was me physically being in an office from 9-to-5, or even working within those hours. From the CEO down to people reporting one manager below me, everyone at RJMetrics was okay with that. As a result, I got to spend an unadulterated week with my little girl, working during naps and in the evenings. It’s the most time I’ve spent with her in any one week since she was born. We had so much fun. I also did a lot of work. The thing that probably suffered most was my sleep.

My startup let me do that – it’s one of the many opportunities that come with the challenges of startup parenthood, an insane circus act of juggling chainsaws while swinging from a trapeze waiting to be caught midair in the mouth of a lion.

(And, I have the added bonus of my spouse, E, working in the same trapeze act – sometimes we’re bodies flying past each other through the air, others being the net that catches the other when we fall.)

Here’s the thing: I don’t think any of that exclusively has to do with me being a parent, or being married, or working at a startup.

I’ve seen these crisis weeks before. The week we bought our house. The month I was writing the first draft of my erstwhile book. The week E was recording and mixing an album with her collegiate acappella group. Some of my non-parental colleagues have had these weeks when they adopted a new pet, refurbished their house, or hosted family traveling from abroad.

It doesn’t take a baby to be busy, and it doesn’t take working for a startup for every second of every workday to contribute to the compounding future value of a business. Anyone can have a demanding job and everyone has a passion or a responsibility outside of work – and some of them can be as 24/7 and all-consuming as having a child.

I haven’t written about Start-Up Parenthood in so many words because I don’t want it to be a conversation just about a protected class of parents in exclusive unicorn jobs. It’s a conversation for everyone about flexibility and that the fiction of home/life balance is that you can separate the two from each other.

When we frame the conversation about a need for balance primarily around parenthood, it hurts everyone – parents, too. It makes it easy to turn the world into parents vs. not. I’ve never been interested in that world. My professional life was challenging and rewarding for a decade before having a baby, and it’s going to be just a vibrant for the following decade and beyond. I wanted flexibility pre-baby and never had enough of it, and now that I have it post-baby I am not going to hoard it from my colleagues who want the balance but not the baby.

Parents who work at startups are people who by definition have two unrelenting duties, plus many others. We can share and cope with each other while we give aspiring parents a glimpse into our lives. But we can also model what balance can look like for anyone – no matter their job or their family life. We can inspire anyone to find a way to do what they love in every waking hour and leave little time wasted.

I am going to start writing and talking about my own Start-Up Parenthood, and when I do I want you to know that it is a story about you, too, even if your hashtag would be #CorporatePolyamory or #ArtisticSingledom.

We all want love, success, happiness, flexibility, and balance, and #StartUpParenthood is just one model of having all of that and more.

Filed Under: thoughts

into the toddler groove

September 6, 2015 by krisis

EV is getting better every day at communicating with words, but her primary language seems to be the language of music and dance.

Last night she did a lot of sly smiling and edging around Liz and Patrick while they were over for dinner. That is, up until I asked if she wanted met to put the music on.

“Shake It Off?” EV queried?

“Really, do you want to use your one daily listen to ‘Shake It Off’ right now?”

“Michael Jackson?”

“Sure!” I replied.

She proceeded to boogie down to “Bad,” and then her second-favorite song, “Shut Up and Dance With Me.” After that, she was more like her normal, chatty self. It was the same when Gina paid us a visit last month. EV was all coy shyness until we had a dance party. Then, full silliness and reciting the periodic table of elements.

I never really understood how toddler shyness worked before. I’d meet a shy toddler, and her or his parent would say, “Oh, s/he’s just being shy,” and I’d kinda just shrug my shoulders and think, “Well, yeah, I’m a big loud stranger, that make sense.” I had never been on the other side of a toddler – the side where they are completely comfortable and at their most chatty and performative. I think I assumed those things were a polite fiction or exaggeration.

(Common Theme Alert: Getting older and being a parent has made me realize a lot of my flip judgments of people aren’t really fair. Maybe the J in my Myers-Briggs is finally ready to flip back to a P?)

Then I met EV. EV who speaks in whole sentences and sings entire songs when she’s in the house with E and I, and then clams up when a new person comes over to visit right up until we break out the music. It makes a certain amount of sense, I guess, since the friends of ours she knows best are Ashley, Jake, and Zina, because they come over to play music almost every week.

I guess she just associates trust with seeing people move their bodies to sound.

I can’t even begin to express how satisfying this is to me. I’m passing down one of the most important things my parents gave me, which is that unabashed, unfiltered, sometimes unhinged love of music. I spent so many hours rocking in a rocking chair singing along to Glass Houses and The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, and desperately trying to ape my mom’s moves as she broke it down to Michael Jackson and Rufus & Chaka Khan.

Hhere I am, doing the same with EV, to a lot of the same music, plus music I’ve grown up with, and even Taylor Swift, who I suppose is going to be her Michael Jackson.

That’s another post entirely.

Filed Under: thoughts

no time to be broken, no time to get fixed

September 5, 2015 by krisis

I can’t decide if my age is beginning to show through my experience with electronics or if everything is now cheap and has terrible user experience design. Maybe both.

Around this time last year I got my first phone without a physical keyboard. I told myself, “All the kids are doing it – you have to live in the future sometime.” I’ve survived with it, and I can write emails with it in a pinch, but there’s no instance where I think to myself – “oh, let’s write for pleasure by swipe-typing.” That’s not a thing. If for some reason I do come up with an idea for a song while I’m on the go, I desperately paw through my belongings searching for a pencil. That I could commit the words to the screen with my fingertips rarely occurs to me.

I sit on the El with my laptop out and I realize I am now that demographic of older professionals with their outsized laptops on the train. Of course, I’m one of the only ones with blue hair, but that’s only a surface-level difference. I used to be the only person in all creation with a laptop on public transit, and that was my teeny netbook of old.

I felt that way today in the Verizon store. That phone with no keyboard has been gradually declining to accept a charge for its battery, and yesterday it finally gave up. “0% 0% 0%,” it flashes at me hopefully when I plug it in. That’s it.

That lead to longer than I like to spend in a retail environment spent on a physical, corded handset in the Verizon store, because no one at the store could even troubleshoot a one-year-old handset that won’t charge. It was sort of embarrassing – I felt like I was being punished. EV came with me, and she could not understand how I could be on the phone and need to stand in one place. After three levels of support, they decided I was telling the truth about it not charging no matter what I tried.

I remember some point in the past where I would hear about other people with their randomly-crashing computers and iPods that weren’t up-to-date and phones with bad charging ports and laugh a little laugh to myself. “They’re not using their stuff correctly,” I’d think, “or they just aren’t willing to understand how to fix them.”

Yet, here I am.Everything’s broken – blue screen of death on one laptop, deadly whirring on my MacBook, iPod won’t play songs all the way through, phone won’t charge. I expect my things to be pretty durable, but I’m not careless. I’m not the guy with cracked screens and missing keys (except that one EV pulled off my last MacBook – rookie parenting error, that). My relative care doesn’t seem to matter – I’ve gone from constantly connected and in-control to constantly on the risk of going completely incommunicado and at the whim of a bunch of circuit-boards.

All of that feels troubleshootable. If I had more hours and more time to try clever solutions I feel like I could fix half of those things, maybe more. But troubleshooting is a younger man’s game. Or, at least, a less busy man’s game. I don’t have time for that, and I don’t actually have time for any of these things to be broken, either.

I’m just afraid it’s going to make me that guy, who keeps buying the newest gadgets so he never has to deal with having an older one. It’s not my style. I’m a creature of habit and comfort. I don’t even like typing on a screen. I just want things to be as reliable as they were five or ten or fifteen years ago when I’d use them until they were just too slow to bear before upgrading.

Maybe I’m that guy already.

Filed Under: thoughts

Are my eyeballs really only worth $4 to you?

September 3, 2015 by krisis

I hate commercials.

Every since 2004 when we gave up live television and I purchased my first iPod I have been completely removed from the concept of advertising you are forced to consume. Sure, I still use the internet and read magazines, but the ads can be ignored or the page turned. I will never wait through a pre-roll ad to watch a video – I either give up, or silence it and come back a minute later. Every time some great new streaming service pops up and it has ads, I skip it. If I’m going to consume advertising it will be by choice, and I’ll stop when I feel like it.

My one weak spot is Hulu. Hulu saves me from needing live TV, but it comes with the necessary evil of a handful of commercials. During the regular TV season, we typically have a scant 2-3 shows we keep up on each week, but that exposes us to 10-20 minutes of commercials. That’s not to mention season-long binges of their Drag Race archive.

At first I thought my armor was unbreakable – after a decade going without, they would just bounce off of me brain ineffectually. Plus, I had spent a lot of that time being a marketer, so now I can dissect a message easily. They’d have no effect on me.

I was a little bit right for a little while, but then I noticed they were starting to wear me down. Despite picking apart each ad spot, I actually found myself having opinions about car brands and laundry detergents! It heavily disincentivized me from using our Hulu subscription, even if it meant paying three times as much to watch the same show ad-free on Amazon or iTunes.

Then, earlier today, I saw this:

Introducing #hulu‘s new commercial-free option. Limited Commercials or No Commercials… It’s up to you. https://t.co/KNzleEhx0I

— hulu (@hulu) September 2, 2015

And I responded like this:

Yes. Bought. Charge my card right now. This tweet gives you authorization. Go. #NoCommercialsHousehold https://t.co/fSFd6Up4Uz — Peter Marinari (@krisis) September 2, 2015

I immediately steered my browser to Hulu and steeled myself for the potential charge. I figured the cost of renting my eyeballs for 10-20 minutes a week plus binges would be high, but I told myself it would be worth it to free myself from the yoke of forced advertising.

It turned out we were talking about a difference of four dollars. I was so livid I stopped dead in the middle of updating my subscription. All of that time sending advertising across my eyeballs and into my brain, time I’d rather spend watching another episode or writing or sleeping, was only worth four fucking dollars. For a mere $36 a year I could have stayed ad-free – that’s a week of cheap lunch in Center City! Of course I would pay that!

It was one of those moments where I really considered the massive capitalist machine in which we are all mere cogs with no say in our fates. If it only cost $4 to escape ads on Hulu – a rare network that can quantify its exact amount of impressions and demographics, how cheap might it be to get away from them elsewhere? How much could I pay to live my life completely free of the spectre of advertising in a CPC environment where I’ve already proven myself to be a non-clicker, like on YouTube, Facebook, or Google? How much to get an ad-free version of Rolling Stone or ride on a bus with no advertising? I suddenly have the feeling that for all of this passive junk my eyes and ears are bombarded with I could just empty my change jar and make it all go away.

(It reminds me of early in the life of CK when Blogger was free and always broken, and I would send screeds across the internet to Ev begging to pay him anything it would take to get just slightly better service.)

You might say, “You’re crazy! You’re privileged! You’re volunteering to give your money away!” But, let me ask you something – what is crazier? Paying the actual cost of a thing I want to consume and then consuming it, or constantly having my content diluted and my time wasted in exchange for spending nominally less money? Say, four dollars. Which in turn reminds me of this crude comic, which speaks an ultimate amount of truth to all of these things we think we get “for free.”

I refer to this constantly at work. Constantly.

I refer to this constantly at work. Constantly.

If you’re willing to give all that control away for $4, I hope you spend it on something you really need.

Me? I updated my subscription.

Filed Under: essays, Year 16

persistence

September 2, 2015 by krisis

lindsay, erika, and peter 2015 crop)“It’s Miss Lindsay!”

EV yells this at me almost every time she catches me browsing Facebook, and it always surprises me. No, it’s not because Lindsay is omnipresent in my feed – she’s too busy parenting and adventuring for that! It’s because of my profile photo. Not the postage-stamp sized square on my profile page, mind you, but the teeny 20ish pixel persistant image in the header to reminder you that you are surfing as you.

Mine is a photo of Lindsay, Erika, and I (with EV just off-camera, dangling from my arm) standing in a lake in New Jersey during a rare roommate reunion day over a month ago on a very sunny Friday – one of the rare days in over two years where I have done zero start-up-ing for an entire waking period.

(Alright, that’s a wee lie, I did check my email for 15 minutes in a parked care while EV dozed in the back seat, but that’s practically nothing.)

It’s not surprising that EV could recognize the picture in its minuscule size. That’s just recognizing a pattern of an image – even easier than recognizing the actual faces. She is good at playing the game Memory even though she doesn’t know what all the cards are.

The thing that’s surprising is that EV recognizes it and instead of just saying it’s a picture of me (which she does with frequency) she remembers Miss Lindsay, who she has met just three times in her life. She remembers lots of things about Lindsay. Her daughter’s name, her doggie, and how we picked blueberries and then went swimming.

Our outing with Lindsay and Erika was the first time I witnessed EV have a specific, persistent sense of time and recall. As we approached the date she understood we would see Lindsay and Erika tomorrow, and then she remembered we saw Lindsay and Erika yesterday. But then she kept remembering it, mentioning it, telling stories about it, and asking about when we’ll do it again.

Today on a walk with a co-worker I was relating this story and I realized that Lindsay sticks out so specifically to EV not because she’s so awesome (EV will learn that in due time), but because our day together was memorable. In fact, I’m now sure it is among her first persistent memories. Yes, she recalls trips to the market, times down the slide, lyrics to songs, and hugging her aunt Jenny, but none of those refer to a specific incident that she recalls with detail.

That’s amazing.

The other night she turned to me solemnly after dinner and said, “Take a picture, send it to Miss Lindsay.” We had an impromptu photo shoot and sent Lindsay the results, to which she texted back, “I love her!” I feel like every parent talks about creating memories for their children – heck, Disney’s entire marketing machine relies on it – but here I did it unintentionally just by spending the day with my daughter and two of the people I love the most in the world.

Filed Under: memories Tagged With: erika, lindsay

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 30
  • Page 31
  • Page 32
  • Page 33
  • Page 34
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 502
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar


Support Crushing Krisis on Patreon
Support CK
on Patreon


Follow me on BlueSky Follow me on Twitter Contact me Watch me on Youtube Subscribe to the CK RSS Feed

About CK

About Crushing Krisis
About My Music
About Your Author
Blog Archive
Comics Blogs Only
Contact Krisis
Terms & Conditions

Crushing Comics

Marvel Comics

Marvel Events Guide

Spider-Man Guide

DC Comics

  • Marvel Omnibus Announcement: Runaways by Rainbow Rowell and Predator vs. The Marvel Universe
    Near Mint Condition announced new Marvel omnis for January 2027: Runaways by Rainbow Rowell Omnibus and Predator vs. The Marvel Universe! […]
  • Patrons-Only: Crushing Comics Club Aftershow – Post Ranking X-Men Events Hangout and Q&A
    Every week after my Sunday stream I keep on streaming […]
  • Ranking the 100 BIGGEST X-Men Events & Stories with OneWheelChairX! | Crushing Comics Live
    Because you demanded it – my opinion on every […]
  • Patrons-Only: Crushing Comics Club Aftershow – Post-Marvel Omni Price Check Hangout and Q&A
    Every week after my Sunday stream I keep on streaming […]
  • Marvel Omnibus Price Check! | How much do Marvel’s most-obscure omnis cost online?
    Price check on Aisle Marvel! I’m doing a price […]
  • Patrons-Only: Crushing Comics Club Aftershow – Most-Wanted DC Omnibus Ballot Hangout and Q&A
    Every week after my Sunday stream I keep on streaming […]
  • My Most-Wanted DC Omnibus, 2026 Edition | Tigereyes Most-Wanted DC Omnibus Poll
    Because you demanded it, I’m here with my picks […]
  • Tigereyes Most Wanted DC Omnibus 3rd Annual Poll in 2026 Announcement
    It’s time to kick off The 2026 Tigereyes Most […]
  • Crushing Comics Live Aftershow 2027 Marvel Omnibus Fantasy Draft PicksPatrons-Only: Crushing Comics Club Aftershow – Post-Fantasy Draft Hangout and Q&A
    It’s time for another hour of Krisis uncut, […]
  • Crushing Comics Live 2027 Marvel Omnibus Fantasy Draft PicksMarvel Omnibus Fantasy Draft 2027 – Predicting Next Year’s Marvel Omnis (& you can too!)
    I’m back with an absolutely massive new […]
  • Patrons-Only: Crushing Comics Club Aftershow for Ranking Every X-Men Omnibus
    We’re trying something new! Yesterday after my […]
  • Crushing Comics Live - Ranking Every X-Men OmnibusRanking Every X-Men Omnibus, Ever
    Today, I woke up and chose violence… violence […]
  • Haul Around The World: 2026 So Far in Omnis, Epics, DC Finest, and more!
    It’s Sunday, and that means it’s time for […]
  • Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 14th Annual Secret Ballot – 2026 Results
    Join me on Near Mint Condition along with Uncanny […]

Content Copyright ©2000-2023 Krisis Productions

Crushing Krisis participates in affiliate programs including (but not limited to): Amazon Services LLC Associates Program (in the US, UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain), eBay Partner Network, and iTunes Affiliate Program. If you make a qualifying purchase through an affiliate link I may receive a commission.