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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: ‘belgium’



Exercising My Right to be Lazy

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

‘Tis the Sunday after Thanksgiving and all through the house
Not a creature is stirring, especially not my lazy dog
The stockings have been hung by the TV with care
Because this is Texas and we don’t have a fireplace — get real!

And enough of the writing in verse.  It’s gotten chilly down here in America’s south, although it’s not as bad as, say, up north in DC or Seattle or Ireland, but let’s be perfectly honest: I’ll bet I can deal with the heat better than those guys can (except maybe Brian since he grew up in Atlanta).  Challenge extended, I’m going to exercise my right to sit here and be a lazy bum on the sofa today.  We have a free extended cable “preview” weekend, so Ray and I have watched nearly the entire first season of True Blood and are now catching up on Dexter.  Or we will whenever Ray gets up.

Thanksgiving this year was a small affair — just the two of us and my parents, who brought their photos from their recent “If it’s Tuesday, it must be Belgium” trip through Europe.  Ray chided me slightly for critiquing my father’s photography skills (or lack thereof) but, honestly, how many times can you shoot through your bus window with flash … when you’re using a digital camera … before it occurs to you that maybe you ought to turn the flash off?

This year, the menu consisted of ham (I’m ambivalent about turkey; Ray doesn’t care for it, and my parents always have one on Christmas if they’re jonesing for a tryptophan fix), cornbread stuffing, sweet potato puree, mashed potatoes, and asparagus.  We ate outside–Thanksgiving purists, recoil in horror!  It was 80 degrees on T day this year, and I suggested that we eat on the back patio because, after the stress involved in getting the damned thing built, I kind of feel as though we ought to use it as much as possible.

I insisted on going to the outlet malls down the street (they’re only two miles away) when they opened at midnight.  For those of you not in the US, I don’t know if you can appreciate the cultural phenomenon that is Black Friday.  Frankly, I was a little astounded at the number of people who showed up at midnight, and even more astounded by the number of people who brought small, tired, cranky, whining children with them.  Isn’t the whole point of hitting the Black Friday sales to buy gifts FOR your children?  What good does it to to wake them up in the middle of the night to bring them with you??

Ray and I went together because our primary objective really wasn’t gifts for each other.  We are going on a family visit to Korea in January to visit my brother and sister-in-law (along with my parents), and, based on the advice of everyone I know who’s been to Korea in the winter, I wanted to get thermal underwear, which was on sale at the Jockey store. 

That mission accomplished, we hit a few other places–Brooks Brothers was having a sale.  I have long coveted Brooks Brothers trousers.  I own many BB shirts, and they’re the easiest damned things to take care of.  You can practically wad them up into a ball at the bottom of your suitcase and, as long as you hang them up when you get to your hotel, they’ll be free of wrinkles by morning.  I hate ironing in hotel rooms — they never make the cord long enough and the ironing board tends to leave very little room for one to actually stand in front of it and … well, let’s just say I got my trousers.  Three pair, in fact :mrgreen:

Ray actually got up again at 4 am to go hit a bunch of other stores when they opened.  I slept right through it.

It’s been a fairly quiet long weekend — after what has been a hellish fall, I’m kind of enjoying it, actually.  Yesterday we put up some of the Christmas decorations, and I guess we need to decide how much we’re going to put up outside today or put the lights away. 

Oh, and my car is now overdue for its annual inspection.  Seriously –this is earthshattering stuff here, ain’t it?

Other than that.  I hope your weekend(s) have been fun and exciting or lowkey and relaxing, whichever your hearts desire!

Give me Strength …

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

I’ve been really proud of my parents since they retired.  Considering they’ve never really expressed an interest in going anywhere when I was a kid, since they’ve retired they’ve been to Guam and Saipan (several times), they went to Beijing in April, and currently they’re on one of those “If it’s Tuesday, it must be Belgium” tours that started in Berlin and ends in Warsaw.

In January, Mom and Dad, along with me and Ray, are going to Korea to visit my brother and sister in law (they’re not married but it’s easier than trying to explain that).

I do have to admit that I think I’ve made more assumptions about what all of this travel has meant for their, shall we say, cultural enlightenment.  I got the following message this morning:

Hi, there.  We are now in Krakow.  We saw the old city this morning and are heading for lunch.  We found a mexican restaurant on the square.  This p.m., we are off to the salt mines.  Then, tomorrow we are off for Warsaw via Auschwitz.

I don’t mean to be insensitive, but … they went to a Mexican restaurant … in Poland.  Does this scare the living bejeezus out of anyone else?

I’ve already given my brother and sister-in-law specific instructions: we’re not to eat at any restaurant we have in the US, and … now I guess I need to add Mexican restaurants.

Seriously.  Mexican food?  In Poland??

Give me strength …

And We Think Our Politicians Are Dumb …

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

The next time I plan to comment on our president’s stupidity lack of smarts, I must stop and consider the following: The candidate who was, until this moment, expected to become the next prime minister of Belgium made a huge gaffe and probably committed political suicide when he was asked to sing the Belgian national anthem … and he started singing the French national anthem.

As little credit as I give W., I don’t think he could ever do anything like that. Of course, that’s because he probably doesn’t know the national anthem to any other country … but neither do I, so I can’t really fault him on that one.

 

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