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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I live in Austin, Texas, with my partner, Ray, and our child dog, Mocha. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

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Rest and Relaxation

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

My wanderings around the state have come to an end, and not a moment too soon.  I do enjoy the traveling, but there comes a point when you’re in yet another hotel chain that looks like any other hotel chain (LaQuinta?  Fairfield Inn?  Hampton Inn?  Is there a difference?) when you realize that you simply can’t face one more morning with Faux News blaring in the background over another styrofoam plate and plastic fork breakfast featuring KAW-FEE brand coffee bean product and individually wrapped English Muffins (which are neither English nor muffins.  Discuss).

There is the occasional quirkiness to be had.  Despite the fact that San Angelo–which only two years ago was proudly putting in all of its tourist literature that it had the highest murder rate west of the Mississippi between 1850 and 1870–is now trying to bill itself as the culture capitol of the Panhandle Plains (a title that is disputed by … well, no one), the town is relatively uninteresting.  A tour around town on a Sunday evening revealed a frightening number of businesses with Christian names (such as: Bible Automotive.  I’m not kidding.) and a dearth of business actually open to the public.  After eating Mexican food from a restaurant that clearly used to be a service station (the food wasn’t bad — Bobby Flay had apparently been there at one point), Natalie and I wound up at Baskin Robbins … along with half the town because, as I may have mentioned, there was nothing else open at 7 pm on a Sunday.

Then there was the unexplained psychedelic van (above) that I stopped to photograph on the way out of town.  And this place:

This place practices false advertising: there are no man’s for sale in the man’s shop.

My most recent trip ended a scant three hours ago with a flourish and flutter (literally: the woman sitting next to me apparently cramming for a medical school exam who had refused four requests to put away her book and notes for landing seemed surprised when it all flew up the aisle upon touchdown.  That’ll learn her).

We were over in El Paso, the one place in the state that, it is regularly agreed upon, we must fly to.  I’ve heard rumors that you can drive it in under eight hours now, with the speed limit on I-10 through west Texas now legally at 80 miles per hour, but I’m more happy to reduce it to an hour and twenty minutes on Southwest Airlines.

I have always liked going to El Paso — in fact, I’ve enjoyed all of our trips to the border area, both in West Texas and down in the Rio Grande Valley (for the uninitiated among you, even though technically El Paso is on the Rio Grande, the term “Rio Grande Valley” seems to only apply to the part between Laredo and Brownsville, on the Gulf of Mexico).  We usually get groups that are really energetic and happy to learn, and this was the case with our session yesterday.  One of the guys was so enthusiastic that he engaged me in conversation in the men’s room.  I am not a particular fan of the conversation-while-I-pee.  If you see me in the men’s room, please don’t strike up a conversation until I’m at the sink, OK?

It’s also saying something about the sort of people that Natalie and I are that we kept coming back to the five or so really negative evaluations we collected at the end of the day.  There were 68 people in the room–our largest audience ever.  The vibe was overwhelmingly positive, but we still kept coming back to those negative ones.  I think somehow we just need to validate that the criticism isn’t valid–we’ve gotten unenthusiastic comments before, but this time the people who didn’t like us really didn’t like us, and they weren’t shy about expressing it.

At the end of the day, though, this last trip was a good note to end the late summer training sessions on.  We had a new audience, and they seemed to be happy with what we were doing.  The people who invited us were effervescent.  And then it was off to have a nice drink in the historic Dome Bar in the lobby of our hotel, the historic Hotel Paso del Norte.

And now … I’m home.  Next up is a trip to a conference in San Juan, Puerto Rico toward the end of September.  Technically it’s work.  I just wonder if I can put sunscreen on my expense account :D

12 of 12: August 2009

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

So, I’m a day late and a dollar short for 12 of 12.  Yes, it’s the 13th.  Shoot me ;)

Unlike last month when I posted my 12 from Egypt, this time … I was taking a day off from work.  I got home late the night before from Abilene, and I was due, dagnabbit.

8:41 am: French Press

August-1

I’ve recently discovered the magic of the french press and the full bodied nutty coffedy goodness that it can provide when you have the time to wait for it…

9:17 am: Doggie break.

August-2

My parents went to New York for a long weekend, and we agreed to sit their dog, formally known as Brandy.  However, because she startles really easily, we call her Boo.

9:37 am: Editing Photos

August-3

Editing some shots I took on my business trip to west Texas.  This one is from San Angelo.  It’s completely false advertising, by the way: they sell no men in the man’s shop.

10:01 am: Reading

August-4

I do not relax well.  However, I decided to try my hand by reading for a good chunk of the morning.

11:31 am: Furmination Time

August-5

If you are the owner of a short-haired dog who sheds all over creation, and you have not discovered the wonders of the Furminator, you are totally missing out.

11:31: You Can’t See Me

August-6

Brandy-Boo is small enough that she can try to hide behind blades of grass.  And the hair that’s always in her eyes.  No wonder she thinks we can’t see her–she can’t see us through that mop!

12:04 pm: Lunch

August-7

Trying to keep healthy.  Ray has lost 20 pounds in two months.  So have I.  The difference is that he’s lost 20 pounds, and I’ve lost 10 pounds twice.  It’s all the traveling.  Honest.

3:17 pm: The Kudzu Covered Walls of Higher Ed

August-8

I had a potluck to attend last night–a reunion for the trip to Turkey last month–and I needed to run to the store for stuff.  On the way, I stopped by the Round Rock Higher Education Center, because three of my photos are on display there.

3:20 pm: My first show!

August-9

It’s a photo exhibition of “places and spaces that matter” in Round Rock.  3 of the 20 photos are mine.  My first show!  *sniff*  I’m so proud.  This is one I took in the slave section of the old cemetery a while back.

4:39 pm: Making Simple Syrup

August-10

I’m bringing baklava for the potluck.  Real baklava does not have honey in it, dammit.  It’s simple syrup.

5:49 pm: The finished product.

August-11

Yes, you may have my recipe.  It’s right here.

6:51 pm: Rain Clouds

August-12

They got an inch of rain in Austin.  In Round Rock, we got … about ten drops.  Bah.

The reunion ran long, so I didn’t get to post this last night.  Honest.  I’ll get a doctor’s note!

And how was YOUR twelfth?

A little levity to brighten your Sunday

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

These are commercials for Viagra and the Saudi knock-off, Snafi, that ran on Saudi television.  Trust me when I say it’s not necessary to understand Arabic in order to understand the commercials …

Happy Sunday!

Version Creep

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

I’ve been a bad blogger of late, and haven’t posted much. I didn’t realize that I’d let the whole of October slip by without weighing in on things, but I’ve been … well, there’s the rub.

A few weeks back, I had one of those medical management sessions with my psychiatrist that costs $2 a minute (15 minute appointment, $30 co-pay) in which we mutually decided, for a variety of reasons that I won’t go into here, to cut the dosage of medication that I’ve been taking for years in half. This seemed like a good idea at the time.

I should point out to those of you who aren’t on anti-depressants that dosage adjustment isn’t a quick process. Once you do so, it can take up to three weeks for the effects to make themselves apparent. My appointment was a little under two weeks ago, and the change hit me yesterday, a bit like a steamroller. I’ve been flakier and loopier than normal, and I swear I must have studied air molecules in my office (at least that’s the explanation I offered my bewildered assistant who found me staring into space blankly) for a good twenty minutes this afternoon.

There is a more productive rationale behind this–again, really not something I feel comfortable discussing publicly–but it’s clear at this point that our first attempt at finding a solution isn’t going to pan out. I have to drive to Dallas tomorrow and I’m going to resume my normal dose of medication this evening so that I don’t either forget to take a turn or cower in fear at every car that approaches in the next lane. The only surprise at this point would be which personality becomes the dominant one. Yesterday I was jumping at my shadow. Today I’m mopey.

So I guess it’s back to the drawing board. Yuck. :neutral:

As I was perusing my news feeds, which I did repeatedly today in case there was another round of found video of Sarah Palin in the evening gown competition for Miss Alaska 1984, I have already become sick of the endless advertising for Photoshop CS4. This is starting to remind me of the iPhone phenomena, and the Mac OS 10.5 phenomena before that: not all of us upgrade every time a new set of software/hardware comes out.

In fact, some of us don’t own an iPhone at all, but if you read Lifehacker, you’d swear it was the only phone on the market.

When Mac OS X.5 came out, all of the Apple sites I peruse instantly began acting like no one in their right mind could possibly decide not to upgrade, and so every article they ran had to do with this nifty new feature or that nifty new feature. Apparently 10.4 ran out of nifty. I didn’t know that was possible.

Likewise, as I peruse the numerous digital photography and Photoshop blogs I read, it’s CS4 mania! Apparently CS3 is tapped out, and we’re all just supposed to shell out the ridiculous price for the upgrade just as soon as it comes out. I can’t even be bothered to buy Lightroom 2, and I think I qualify for an upgrade on that one.

I guess the thread that binds this altogether is that the grass is always greener somewhere else. Granted, it wasn’t the sentiment that started my search for a new medication regimen (although one that’s in generic would be nice), but it all comes to the same thing: after the luster is gone, are you truly happier? Or do you suddenly find yourself wishing you hadn’t had that second cup of coffee this morning … ?

God Bless Italy … Again

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

The next installments in the Dolce and Gabbana underwear advertising campaign featuring scantily clad members of an Italian sports team (rugby this time):

In case you don’t remember the last time, allow me to refresh yer memory:

dg2007

It’s a nice start for a Wednesday :wink:

 

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