Showing posts with label #helpamberout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #helpamberout. Show all posts

Friday, June 27, 2014

Community, For The Win

The article isn’t about the popular TV show, but rather about actual, or at least, digital, community.
I am a very big fan of a certain British fantasy author by the name of Michael Moorcock. When I first read The Eternal Champion, I was hooked, and have read everything I could get my hands on written by him, about him, or inspired by him. I’ll save the reason why I enjoy his writing to another post so I don’t distract from the point of this post.
My point is: My roof sucks. We (my wife and I) are finalists to get a free room from C&C Roofing as part of their Roofing it Forward competition.
I mentioned this on the forum of Moorcock’s official website, and the next thing I know, the admin sends out an email to pretty much all members explaining my predicament. Wow.
So, I’d just like to take this time to say: Thank you members of multiverse.org. You’ve been great. So great, I decided that my next NaNoWriMo novel will be total Moorcock pastiche.
But will it be CC0? I guess we’ll see...

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Roofing It Forward - Last Week To Vote!

I woke up this morning, and my allergies were killing me. That’s because I have a hole in my roof. Well, I actually have several holes in my roof. All of these holes were supposedly repaired by the person who sold me the house back in December. All of these holes were present since before I bought the house.
Why were my allergies killing me? Because of these holes, and the rain. And the mold. My walls are full of mold. Some of that mold was there before I bought the house. Some of it is new. Mold grows fast, so that’s not surprising. But the condition that created the mold was present before I purchased this house, and hidden by the seller, mostly by painting over the stains. The rest of the stains and other signs of neglect were hidden by the loads of junk they left in the house.
Every time we would open a closet, it would be filled with billowy curtains hanging on hangers. Moving these aside revealed brown stains on the walls.
Nevertheless, we got screwed. We got scammed. We were fleeced. And this was our first house. This is the house that we bought after living in apartments for 7.5 years, and then being homeless and living with family for 8 months. This was meant to be our paradise, and it’s been nothing but hell for since after 2 weeks in.
We can’t afford to fix it on our own. We need help. Fortunately, C&C Roofing has selected us as finalists to receive a new roof. If you’ve been following my blog, you probably also saw how I recently raised the stakes.
Now, it’s the last week to vote. I need your votes. To get you to vote, I included some sad pictures of my roof (reposted from my Google+). Please, please, please, please go to http://www.roofingitforward.com and vote for Amber Silvia. Please, please, please tell all your friends, family, and such. Please, please, please let’s put the Roof on the House, and #HelpAmberOut.
I promise that if I win, I will make more time for working on some awesome projects ranging from writing to software development.
I need every last vote (but please only vote once). Thank you so very much.
-Jacob
Only one layer of shingles.
"We fixed the leak in 2012."
See those white patches? Kilz Ceiling Stain-Sealing paint courtesy of the seller!

Thursday, June 19, 2014

The Roof Is On the House - Raising the Stakes

In one of my previous posts, I discussed our exciting roof situation with our house. As of June 17, there were over 300 votes. Now, I’m hoping that most of those are for my wife, Amber, but I can’t rely on hope alone. That’s why I’ve decided to (cue some fanfare horns)..

Raise the Stakes

July is a celebrated month in our household. It marks my birthday as well as Amber’s. It’s during the summer, so it’s warm. We also have Independence Day, so there’s a holiday in the mix as well.
If we are selected for the new roof from C&C Roofing, it will also give us another reason to celebrate: The Roof Is On the House!
So, I’ll try to give you guys a reason to celebrate July too.
Since I don’t have a lot of financial capital, I’ll have to make do with what I have.
If Amber Silvia gets the most votes, I will do the following things during July:

1. My NaNoWriMo? Yours!

To kick off the celebration, I will dedicate every single NaNoWriMo book I have written to the Public Domain. That means that their respective Creative Commons licenses will all be replaced with CC0.
To raise the stakes, I will also dedicate all future NaNoWriMo books I write to the public domain AS I WRITE THEM.
And as an act of good faith, come July I will dedicate my first NaNoWriMo book, Cabbages and Kings to the Public Domain, no matter what.
Here’s a list of all the books you, the public, could own:
  • Cabbages and Kings (2005)
  • These Aren’t the Druids You’re Looking For (2006)
  • Three Counts of Copyright Infringement (2007)
  • The Aether Cowboy (2008)
  • Qhoenix (2009)
  • In a Cabin, In the Woods (2010)
  • Island (2011)
  • It’s Just a Game! (2012)

Wow! Links to their full texts may be found here.

2. On Spec Assignations

I am a writer as a pastime (in case you didn’t realize it by the previous item). So, I can provide another great prize. If Amber Silvia gets the most votes, I will write, on-spec, one short work of fiction (2,000 to 10,000 words), for a lucky recipient. Not only that, but once I’ve written it, I will assign the copyright to that person. I will do this for every 10 percentage points of the total votes Amber gets (I will round up, so 51% => 6). If I don’t have the result data available to me, I will just assume 50%, unless you want to try to convince me that a higher number is more reasonable.

As an act of good faith, no matter what, I'll do one.
The only stipulations on this are:
  1. I won’t write “adult-themed” fiction
  2. No fan fiction, please
  3. Local laws and regulations apply

3. Audiobook Giveaway

If Amber gets the most votes, I will hold a series sweepstakes to give away some audiobooks I have in my collection.
These books will be:
  • Torn by David Massey, read by Saskia Maarleveld (MSRP $77.75)
  • Tuesdays at the Castle by Jessica Day George, read by Suzy Jackson (MSRP $66.75)
These are physical audiobooks on CD. Local sweepstakes rules/laws will apply, but I’ll cover shipping costs. There may be a third book in the mix, but that is to be determined.

How You Can Help

First, if you haven’t yet voted, vote (for Amber Silvia). Second, if you have friends, family, and loved ones who can vote too, tell them. Please hurry, as the deadline is June 30, 2014.
If you use social media, let’s use the hashtags #helpamberout and #roofingitforward.
And if you have any other amazing July “The Roof Is On the House” pledges for things you’ll do if we get the new roof. Please feel free to post them here or e-mail me.
Every little vote counts. Thank you for your support.

Monday, June 16, 2014

This Old Roof

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(TLDR: Click here and select “Amber Silvia” in your vote)
When Amber and I moved to Ohio, our goal was to be closer to family, to have our daughter be able to spend time with her cousin, and to be around people we knew and loved. When we first moved up here, we stayed with family, temporarily of course. This was March of 2013.
The first thing we did after we moved in with Amber’s parents was try to get financing to buy a new house. Unfortunately, as we had lived credit free in Houston, our credit score was not appealing to creditors. We were denied.
Through trials of living in a house with four other people (plus our three) and three cats (plus our one), with other people coming and going freely, we finally managed to get our credit to a point where banks would talk to us. Fortunately, since the only reason was a lack of credit history, our credit was AMAZING.
It was October in which we were able to start looking. After several days of looking, we found it: our dream home. It was a quaint tri-level on a big stretch of land. Most of the plot was wooded, and the street was the quiet kind of street you could amble down the middle of without worrying about being plowed over by a speeding car.
We initiated the purchase, got all the inspections, found no problems that weren’t cosmetic, and eventually purchased the house. We moved into our first home at the end of December. We had been homeless for almost eight months, living out of boxes and sleeping on floors and air mattresses in other peoples’ spare rooms. It was a breath of fresh air.
Until… less than 15 days later, it was raining. Amber looked at the ceiling of the kitchen and noticed a growing water mark. She pushed on it, and her thumb went through. The next day, my dad and I were on the roof, fixing the leak.
See, the seller had disclosed a leak in 2012. They didn’t really specify where, but they said they fixed it. Looking at the “fix” made me wish I had jumped up on the roof to check it out during the inspections. The corner where the lower roof met the outside wall was poorly patched with aluminum and roof cement, with nail holes and gaps admitting the water raining down.
My dad and I replaced this with a temporary solution, diverting the water away from the corner. However, the wood, our roof, was spongy to the touch. Winter was on us, so repairing the roof on a larger scale was out of the question at this time. Nevertheless, come spring, this corner would need to be replaced.
Returning to the kitchen, we opened up the water damaged wall. It crumbled away in our hands. Below it was rotten wood. Wood that had been exposed to water for years. It was likely that the leak was a problem for a while, and that their “repair” didn’t do anything to actually fix the problem (in fact, if you’ll allow an aside, we discovered several cans of recently used Kilz “stain sealing” ceiling paint in the kitchen pantry, kindly left by the previous owner). The studs and other wood in the wall was completely rotten, crumbling to the touch. Not only that, but it was infested with carpenter ants.
Since the wood that was damaged composed part of the floor structure to our top floor, we did our best to replace these pieces, again, a temporary work-around until we could get the roof repaired.
Our eyes were opened then, less than half a month into this new house experience, to all the flaws that the inspector missed. We noticed more poorly masked stains on the ceilings in other rooms. Trips to the attic revealed some of the most corroded wood making up much of the roof. Several roofing experts indicated that the roof was the original roof, making it 37 years old. Older than me.
The best part was, that when asked the age of the roof, emphasizing NOT the last time the shingles were replaced, we were told that the roof was new as of 1997. Yay! A complete lie!
The general consensus of the roofers was that the roof needed a complete replacement, including replacing several pieces of the roof structure that had been severely damaged by neglect. We scheduled a roofer to come by in the spring, and scraped our money together to pay for it.
Finally, spring came. Other problems with the house seemed to spring up without warning, and these required me to step out and tend to during the day while I worked for a company that claimed to provide “flexible hours.” This and other factors (e.g., my putting my family first) led to my unexpected dismissal from this company. The next day, our roofer came by. Well, sorry, roofer, we can’t get our roof done now. I’m unemployed, and we need that money to stop the gap between this and the next job.
And that buffer helped, even if our roof didn’t get repaired. Now I’m employed again, but making a significant amount less every year. Money is tight, and at the rate things are going, the roof might not get replaced any time soon.
Fortunately, Amber and I were finalists for a contest called “Roofing it Forward,” put on by C&C Roofing. If we get the highest number of votes, we’ll get a free, new roof. This is really great, as we were not sure how we would manage.
If you would like to help out, please click the link below and vote for Amber Silvia. If we get the most votes, we’ll get a new roof, and hopefully that will be enough to stop the unusual misfortune we’d had with this house since we got it (I only skimmed the surface here, the whole story is almost unbelievable).
I appreciate your getting this far. Please feel free to comment below and let me know you voted, and feel free to tell your friends so they can help too. Thank you.
-Jacob