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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!

Tag: ‘bathrooms’



… and release

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

At this point, I’ve decided that I’m going to stop apologizing for my weird personality quirks and off-color comments.  If you haven’t learned by now, there’s no learnin’ ya.

I was in the kitchen this afternoon, getting something simmering on the stove top (I won’t say what as it’s not relevant and I don’t want people googling this post looking for the recipe) when the phone rang.  I know that each and every one of you out there will understand exactly what I mean when I say that it sounded like my mother’s ring.

I don’t tend to dash for the phone when it rings — despite the fact that we are on the Do Not Call registry or whatever it’s called, we get plenty of phone calls from businesses that we have some weak connection to, which makes them exempt from the rule.  The bank calls repeatedly wanting to offer us some weird insurance on the mortgage (we have home insurance–they’re literally trying to sell us insurance on the mortgage itself).  One credit card company or the other wants to sell us credit insurance–ever since I repaired my credit after a couple of really bad years, they just don’t stop calling me!  Some magazine that we subscribe to wants us to subscribe to some other magazine that’s owned by the same corporation.  (“We noticed that you subscribe to Wired.  Would you also be interested in a subscription to Playboy?”)

And yet, I knew that it was my mother on the phone anyway, picked it up–and I was right.  It’s Sunday afternoon, I’m kind of lazing about the house, so we start chatting.

And … I’ll try not to be graphic, but I have noticed that there’s just something about talking to my mother that facilitates my body’s yearning for … release.  You know what I mean.  I’m halfway through “Uh huh”ing my way through a story about my parents’ latest trip to wherever they’ve run off to (Atlanta this time), hearing about the chain restaurants where they ate, the malls they went to, the frustration they had driving the rental car (I bought them a GPS and, for some reason, they haven’t quite mastered the concept of “You can take it with you to use in the rental car”), etc., when I feel that pressure in the lower end of my bowels.

I don’t know why, but I seem to find myself in this situation every. single. time.

At first, it’s more of a mere suggestion, as if my body is saying, “Hi there!  This is just a courtesy announcement that we’re going to need to move to a bathroom soon.  Please put your chair in the upright and locked position, stow your tray tables, return your carry on luggage to the overhead bin or underneath the seat in front of you, and pass any remaining service items to the aisle for collection.  We’ll be landing shortly!”

And now we’re discussing the plans that my parents have hatched for moving flowers around in the back yard, the tomatoes that she didn’t buy at the supermarket because she apparently doesn’t know that they’ve identified ‘safe’ tomatoes after the salmonella outbreak.  (“How did they do that?” she asked.  “I don’t know,” I said, “that’s the FDA’s problem.”)

And then there’s a knock at my lower intestine.  “Hi.”  It says.  “Remember that earlier announcement?  We need you to take your seat for the short duration of the flight.  We’re landing.  Now.”

Mom: “And you father said that he wanted to go to Lowe’s to look for wahwahwahwahwah … ”
Me (starting to sweat): “Uh huh.”
Mom: “And I thought they came in colors but they only had them in black and white.”
Me (sweating profusely): “Uh huh.”
Mom: “And then we got home and the dog had done the cutest thing … ”
My lower intestines: “Sir, we have landed and are on an active taxiway. Please sit down.”
Me (mopping my brow with a towel): “Oh god.”
Mom: “What?  Did you burn something?”
Me: “No, finish your story.  Quickly please.”
My lower intestines: “Sir, if you do not sit down, we are going to call ahead and have security meet us at the gate.”

I know that the politically expedient thing to do would be to just tell her I’ll call her back, hang up and take care of things, but there’s just something about doing that with my mother.  Also, I only ever find myself in this situations toward the end of the conversation, and I always feel like we wouldn’t have much to talk about when I called back, so I tend to grin and bear it.

I realize this is all totally lame, but if it were a well-reasoned logical story, it wouldn’t make good blog fodder, would it?

Anyway, the story had a happy ending – it always does, but I can’t help wonder what Dr. Freud would think about the connection between my mother’s voice and release.  (Alternatively, we could discuss how she tends to call around the same time every Sunday afternoon and wonder whether that has anything to do with it, but that’s far less entertaining).

The other weird thing is that this has been the kind of Sunday where that’s pretty much the most profound thought I’ve had all day.  I’m up for a busy week, I’m allowed to be kind of frivolous …

You want me to do what *where*??

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

I was commenting to someone yesterday that my blog hasn’t been that gay of late. I’m growing to have the sneaking suspicion that he’s actually straight and just afraid to tell me. It’s OK, little blog. You can’t help it. That’s just who you are.

However, in an attempt to ram some homo action down his throat, I wanted to bring up a topic that wouldn’t disturb me nearly as much if I hadn’t seen it on two consecutive programs on television last night.

After we put up the Christmas tree, Ray and I ran through a number of the programs we have stored on the DVR (thank Bob for the writer’s strike or we’d never get caught up). We finally saw last week’s Project Runway, and I was able to finally weigh in on Shin’s recap of the episode (both of them). We watched Monday night’s Heroes (are Nikki and Monica alive? Will Nathan live? Do I care?), and then settled in to watch Kathy Griffin’s latest special, Straight to Hell.

Yes, I find Kathy Griffin funny. Shut up.

Among the many, many topics la Kathy talked about was Larry Craig and the bathroom incident, which I’m not going to even bother to find a story to link to because if you don’t know by now then you’re clearly not reading this blog. She made fun of him a little bit (which he deserves), and then started in on this bit about how she asked her gays about the toe tapping and what that was all about.

When the show was over, the TV came back on, and Lewis Black was doing a standup bit on Comedy Central about the exact same topic: Larry Craig, but more importantly, the toe tapping and its greater significance.

And I learned something I didn’t know: apparently there’s a toe tapping code that one uses if one wants to engage in hot man-on-man action in a public restroom.

Of course, like everyone else I know who’s suddenly come across this concept, I start thinking about all the times that I’ve been in public restrooms. Dear God, was I accidentally sending someone in the next booth signals? Have I ever been sent signals and didn’t know? (This wouldn’t surprise me. Just about everyone who’s ever tried to ask me out has had to beat me over the head to realize that I was being flirted with. I’m a little dense.)

And most importantly, how come I didn’t know about this? Was this something they covered in gay school? I’ll bet it was the same day as the Know Your Divas lecture, because I am horrifyingly diva free in my life. I care not for Judy, Barbra, Liza, Bette, Beyoncé, or Madonna. (I can take Madonna or leave her, but I do the same with Marianne Faithfull, who is the anti-diva, so she cancels out Madonna).

Then, of course, I get started thinking about public restrooms. For my female readers, men’s restrooms look a lot like the bathrooms at your straight single male friends apartments. Despite the amount of time boys spend playing with their genitals during and after puberty, they still can’t aim at the toilet for shit, and if they miss, they don’t tend to clean it up.

I don’t care how acrobatic and limber the boys in question are — you mess around in a public restroom and some part of you is going on the floor. In that mess. With the smells of industrial strength cleaner and the guy three stalls over who had Taco Bell for lunch. On the unsanitized seat. With someone who looks like your grandfather. Who thinks this is hot? Ew. I-don’t-think-so.

To me that sounds about as much of a turn on as doing it on the buffet table in a senior center dining room around 4 PM. Hold my teeth.

On the other hand, it is amazing what depths some people will turn to in order to live out a secret life they don’t want anyone to know about. Larry Craig must be hardcore if he can put up with all that and still get his rocks off. Which means, of course, he’s a lying hypocritical bastard, but we knew that already.

And now I know to keep my feet very very still in public restrooms.

I can’t believe I’m writing this

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

I don’t quite get the fascination with male bathroom etiquette that has attracted so many people to a post I wrote about a month ago in which I ranted about the behavior of some people I work with and how I’ve almost wound up in the stall with them because they can’t seem to shut the door behind them. (Rather than re-explain this, just go read the original post.) However, the sheer number of people who seem to need guidance on how to use the men’s room (other than the obvious performance of bodily functions) and are thus inspired to Google for tips has led me to believe that some pointers might be in order.

There are more serious subjects that I really want to be blogging about — the state of the universe, Bush in Latin America (and why the press can’t seem to say “Yucatán” properly), the latest blog crackdown in Egypt, and my basil plant is still gay.

However, this was the one that I found myself musing about on a walk back from the Dean’s office. And I’ve long ago learned to go with what I’m musing about as my topic for the day.

So, here we go:

Rules of etiquette for men’s restrooms
(I should point out that most of the below doesn’t actually apply in the men’s rooms of gyms, or gay bars or nightclubs)

  1. THERE IS NO TALKING IN THE MEN’S ROOM. Not on your cell phone, not to your buddy, not ever. If you have a question about the budget, whether I sent or received an e-mail, or whether or not I saw the Spurs game last night, you can catch me in the hall. Better yet, come to my office. And, for God’s sake, who wants to talk to you while you’re peeing?
  2. Never take the urinal next to someone else, unless it’s the only one left. Even then, no one will think you’re weird if you wait for the next available one to become available. (This rule is obviously moot if you’re cruising someone.)
  3. Eyes forward at all times. Keep your eyes on your prize and no one else’s. You’re not going to get a good view from that angle anyway, and everyone will notice if you try.
  4. Keep bathroom noises to a minimum when there’s someone else in there with you. This sentence can be read one of several ways, and it applies to all of them. Hold it in until whoever is outside leaves. And if someone happens to actually be in there with you, remember that it’s much more fun when you’re being quiet.
  5. Flush twice. Everyone likes a fresh bowl. You know what I’m talking about.
  6. Wash your hands. With soap. The next time you’re tempted to just flush and run, consider this: a recent study found that every. single. surface. that was tested the passenger cabin of an airplane had some degree of fecal matter on it.

There, wasn’t that easy? Print ‘em out for reference and take them with you, so that you can refer to them the next time you have any questions. Remember, silence and cleanliness are next to godliness, and will earn you far fewer weird looks.

TGIF

Friday, February 16th, 2007

It’s Friday morning, and it’s freakin’ cold here in Austin. Seriously, it was 25 degrees when I left the house this morning. I’m not leaving my office today if I can help it … brrr! There’s no real reason to do so — some of my coworkers brought in a cake for the birthday I’m ignoring (it’s tomorrow, anyway), and there’s nothing like chocolate to keep warm. Mmmm. Chocolate.

A frightening number of people tuned into my post yesterday about my frustrations with the men I work with and their weird bathroom habits. Should I write about scatological topics more often? Trust me. I’ve travelled in lots of places with really interesting bathrooms. In fact, there was this one time when I was in some itty bitty town in the Sinai Peninsula on a bus going somewhere, and all the guys went around behind the building and peed against the wall because the bathroom in the bus station was so rank. Like, the toilet directly opened into the sewer lines which clearly hadn’t been flushed out in a very long time. OK, I’m done with that. Just thinking about it makes me a little queasy.

So, it seems that today the House may or may not get around to voting on a non-binding resolution that will or will not scold the president for trying to build up troop levels when everyone and their dog both here and in Iraq is saying it’s a bad idea. Now, normally I’m all for people standing up to the president, but I have this feeling they’re going to produce something that’s so watered down it will amount to something more akin to a swab with a cotton ball than a slap on the wrist. Not that he’ll pay attention to the resolution anyway … well, at least until it comes time to decide which one of the Republican candidates he’ll endorse next year. I see a lot of other bloggers getting very up in arms about this. I don’t understand why – maybe I’m too jaded, but it’s not going to make a bit of difference. Not now, not ever.

Speaking of stupid … things … can someone please explain to me why it costs more to fly from Austin to Albuquerque than it does to fly from Austin to Los Angeles? Can I book a flight to Los Angeles and just get them to let me off as we’re going over Albuquerque? And how come a certain airline’s “special sale fares” look exactly the same as the “normal fun fares” I saw when I looked this all up last week?

At any rate. Tomorrow is another day — and another year for me, although I’m going to pretend otherwise (denial ain’t just a river in Egypt). I hope you’re keeping warm and that there’s chocolate of some sort … ooh, chocolate martini …. in your future.

Happy Friday!

Bathroom Etiquette

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

I have to get this off my chest, and since I work in an office full of women who won’t understand, I shall vent my frustrations to you, dear readers.

The straight men that I work with have absolutely no bathroom etiquette. They’re a bunch of slobbish, older guys who seem to be content to foul up the bathroom as much as possible and are completely oblivious about it.

Not our actual bathroomTo elaborate: The men’s room here at work is a small, one-hole operation. It consists of a sink, an inexplicable wall, and the lonely stall around the corner. It’s the only stall. We all know it’s the only stall. And yet, three times today, I have walked into the bathroom, turned the corner and actually walked into the stall while there’s somebody in it because they can’t be bothered to close the door when they’re doing their business. (And don’t go having any horny, porn film kinds of thoughts about things that could transpire afterwards–you haven’t seen the people I work with. Seriously. Ew. Ew, ew, ew.) It’s not like they don’t know someone can walk in there on accident. And I’m praying to every deity imaginable that they’re not hoping someone will walk in there on accident.

And then there’s the issue where half of them don’t flush afterwards. And then there’s at least one person–I don’t know who, fortunately for him–who seems to be chronic about not lifting the seat and … ugh. Do I even need to finish that thought? We all work here at least 8 hours a day. It’s not like he doesn’t know there isn’t a seat cover dispenser in there.

Seriously. What is wrong with straight men? Do they just not think about these things, ever? Even when they suffer the consequences? And why do women put up with it?

 

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