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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: ‘boredom’



12 of 12: July 2009 / ١٢ من ١٢: يوليو ٢٠٠٩

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

It’s time once again for 12 of 12!  This 12th of July, I’m in Cairo, capitol of the Arab Republic of Egypt.  I’ve been out of the US since June 29 — I was in Turkey for 10 days and flew down here on the 9th.  (For the record, and if you’re interested, there are photos from Turkey here).

I’ve been in Cairo many times — I studied here for a year in university — and it’s one of my favorite places in the world.  This is my first visit since 2006. I’m here on a combined business / vacation trip.  Although today is a business day (the work week in Egypt is Sunday through Thursday, since Friday is the communal day of prayer in Islam), I didn’t have any meetings scheduled, so it was kind of a fun day.

7:52 am: Skyping with Ray

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I’ve been waking up kind of early since I got here, and I caught Ray up late at home so we talked by Skype for a bit.  Mocha was in the picture for a bit, but she never quite looked at the camera.  Sorry, Mocha fans, there are no photos of her this month :(

10:00 am: Errands

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After pretending to go back to sleep for a bit, I finally wandered out around 10 o’clock to go pick up my laundry from the place down the street.  The laundry is in the same complex as the supermarket, so I stopped in to pick up some water and soda first, and then carried it all back to the hotel.  It was warm in Cairo today (102 F/41 C), and unusually humid.  This is, lamentably, still cooler than it is at home in Austin.  Tomorrow it’s going to be cooler – by Tuesday, it’ll be 91 (36).

1:56 pm: Christian Cairo

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I met up today with Tarek, our junior professor in modern Arabic literature, and we went down to the so-called Christian quarter.  It’s in the oldest part of the city, which actually predates the city of Cairo by 300 years.  A little-known fact: around 10 per cent of Egypt’s population is Christian, belonging to the native Coptic Church.  In an area of town called Mar Girgis, there are a number of churches and one of the few synagogues remaining in the country, all clumped together.

Tarek and I first hit the Coptic Museum (no photography allowed), and then wandered through the rest of the complex.  Although it’s a tourist draw, most of the people there were Egyptian, which was OK by us.

2:11 pm: St George’s Cemetery

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That’s Tarek taking a photo of the mausoleums in the Greek Orthodox cemetery behind St. George’s Church.  There are a bunch of mausoleums and family plots back there.  I was a bit surprised to find the tomb of someone with the same name as my grandfather — how many Neoklis Triantafillides’s could there have been in the Greek speaking world?

2:16 pm: Water from the Holy Well

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Although it’s not spelled out in the Gospels, the Egyptians have an entire itinerary set out for exactly where the Holy Family (Mary, Joseph, and the infant Jesus) traveled during their flight into Egypt.  In the cemetery is a crypt built over a cave where the Holy Family is said to have sheltered and drawn water from the well above.  As Mary (as Meryem) and Jesus (as ‘Issa) are both revered as prophets in Islam as well as Christianity, you can see adherents of both faiths making pilgrimages at these shrines.

2:51 pm: … you crazy, adorable fool

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The oldest known synagogue in Egypt still in existence, the Ben Ezra Synagogue, is in Mar Girgis as well, although, once again, no photography allowed.  Tarek and I got the royal tour, and were shown to the ‘Ayn Musa, the spring of Moses, located behind the synagogue.  This is said to be the spring where Pharaoh’s daughter drew the baby Moses from the Nile (the synagogue is said to be on the place where Moses pleaded with God to stop the plagues inflicted on Egypt).

3:12 pm: Off to Lunch

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OK, by this point in the day it was really hot in the sun and time for lunch.  Tarek and I had made plans to meet up with some students who are here for the summer, so we set back off for the area where I’m staying and several of the students live.

I am routinely asked by people if I feel unsafe traveling to Egypt as often as I do.  The answer is no – I have been coming to Egypt for 15 years, and I’ve never hidden the fact that I’m American, nor that I’m Christian (I don’t mention the part about being gay, however — that’s one barrier I’m not willing to cross here).  I’ve never been greeted with anything but kindness by people here.

The one place I do feel unsafe is on the road, however.  Egyptian taxis are built like tanks, but it doesn’t stop me from flinching often when riding in them.  Cairo is horrifically congested (by most unofficial estimates there are 20 million people in the Cairo/Giza/Shubra el Khayma metropolitan area) and it can take ages to get anywhere.  The Metro, wisely, is more for local use than tourists (it’s also not air conditioned), so we decided to cab it.

3:44 pm: Decisions, Decisions

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We met up for lunch at Abu Sid, a local upscale Egyptian restaurant.  You can get just about everything they serve on the street, but without the nasty side effects afterwards :)

5:38 pm: Towel Art

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Back on my own, I headed back to the hotel — a small, unassuming place run by a lady who governs with an iron fist.  I had forgotten that I’d hung my socks on the towel rack to dry after handwashing them in the sink this morning.  Hence, the guy who cleans the rooms at the hotel got a little creative with towel placement and left me a duck!

8:05 pm: Sunset

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In my food coma haze, I checked e-mail quickly and read while half watching episodes of the less successful Law and Order franchises (Trial by Jury; Trial by Fire; and Parks and Recreational Petty Crimes Division).  I lose track of the time until I hear the call to prayer wafting in through the window, meaning that it’s sunset.

8:45 pm: Evening Traffic in Zamalek

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I wander out, mostly from sheer boredom, and it’s traffic as usual in Zamalek on a weeknight.  Cars and pedestrians going every which way.

10:06 pm: Dessert before dinner

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One of the students calls to see what I’m up to and invite me to tag along to dinner (they eat late here).  I’m not that hungry, but first we stop in at a local bakery/sweet shop that I’ve frequented since my student days.  They churn out really nice baked goods–baklava, basboussa, kinaffeh–and ice cream as well.

For the record, we didn’t actually eat this stuff until after dinner (the shop was on the way to where we were going).  That would have been totally crazy … *innocent look*

And that was my 12.  How was yours?

The Old Ennui

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

It’s a slow day at work.

I went up front to take care of something or another and came back and found that my iTunes hadn’t paused, and was, instead, playing “Business Time” by Flight of the Conchords, which provided a moment of surrealism to my day:

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I’m fighting off the old ennui right now.  There’s not much going on that involves me at the office, and I’m not terribly in the mood to start making stuff up for myself to do.  It’s going to get crazy in a week or two, and I should be enjoying the quiet while it lasts.

Things at home are exactly the same as they were when I last posted: we have new doors, but no roof over the deck, and no idea when our contractor intends to return to start that project.  He didn’t come last night (no phone call).  Given the impending passage of Tropical Storm Eduardo through this area tonight and tomorrow it seems unrealistic to expect him to show up tonight, and I’m sure he won’t show up tomorrow either.  Now we’re on to next weekend, which means that we’re in the position of likely having to cancel existing plans … or not, given his complete unreliability to show up when he says he will.

To say that Ray’s bummed out would be an understatement.  It’s his money we’re spending on this project, and he’s still not completely certain that our guy isn’t going to just vanish with the money that he paid up front.

I don’t think the guy’s going to vanish, but I do think it’s going to take us forever to get the money back if/when we reach the breaking point and decide to scrap the project.  My fear is that he’s going to take forever to finish it once he gets started, leaving us with a half-built roof and unusable back patio for weeks on end.

It does start wearing you down after a while.  The consolation — the new doors look great, and I may be imagining it, but I swear that part of the house is cooling a lot better than it did with the old flap dog-door and uninsulated patio doors.

The good news is that Natalie is back from her trip to Perú, so at least I’m being unproductive more efficiently around here!

Hope your week’s off to a good start!

Oh, good. More rain.

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

I probably shouldn’t look a gift horse in the mouth, but it’s raining again and I dare say I’m a little weary of the dreary.

We’ve been perennially low on water here in Central Texas for the past few years. Our key reservoir, Lake Travis, was looking a little empty six months ago:

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After months and months of rain … and don’t let’s forget the ice storm that shut the city down in January … the lake has filled up to where it’s supposed to be:

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The problem is that the rain keeps coming. And coming. And coming. (Not making a porn joke, it’s just too easy.)

Yesterday, Ray and I went to run a couple of errands and didn’t realize until we were well on our way that there were no umbrellas in the car, so we sat in the car watching the sheets of rain fall for fifteen minutes because it was coming down far too hard and fast to try to run through.

Today, at least we’re at home and not out in the mess:

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Dog is unhappy. Well, dog is unhappy anyway because the new sod in the back yard covered up her hole … all of them … and we won’t let her dig anymore. Too bad, because the ground is nice and soft for digging now…

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Anyway. I haven’t posted recently because there’s really nothing to post. I’m still under the weather (pun may or may not be intended), and I’m at the point where I’m tired of feeling sick so I do things I ought not to do, which leads to a setback the next day. I figured the blogsphere could survive without regular updates on which ear I can hear out of and what color … never mind.

Hope the sun is shining in your world …

Listless

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

Well, it’s that time of year again. The summer workshop of early June is over, there’s nothing on the schedule until mid-August, and the variation between heat and air conditioning has conspired to give me that little tickle in the back of my throat, the one that says: you might want to clear your schedule for the end of the week and stock up on some clear liquids. I could be wrong, but I’ve gotten to know this body pretty well over the past 32 years, and I’m pretty sure I know what impending illness looks like.

It’s probably just as well. The parade of people stopping by my office wanting to know where I’m going this summer has ceased, as all of the askers have actually proceeded off to the places they’re going. And I’m rather ashamed to admit that I lied: I really wasn’t looking forward to a quiet summer at home so much as I was looking forward to not having the stress involved of being The Person Responsible for hauling a group of adults and/or students around.

Reading Will’s dispatches from Jerusalem, hearing occasionally from Christine in Cairo, Alyssa in Damascus, and hearing about the students in Dushanbe (it’s in Tajikistan) from other sources has all conspired to give me a big ol’case of the wanderlust blues. Not that I have any burning desire to go to Dushanbe … oh, who the hell am I kidding. If they wanted to send me to Dushanbe, I’d go in a second. It’s a disease. It’s called dromomania. Ask Michael Palin if you don’t believe me.

On the other hand, while the spirit is willing, the wallet is light. Between the sprinkler lawn irrigation system and new sod for the back yard, the dog’s surgery, a couple of unpaid bills, etc., I’ve got about fifty cents to play with, and with gas the price it is (I know, all you readers outside the US have no sympathy) I’ve even been rethinking whether I really need to go into Austin on the weekends, and that’s only twenty miles.

So, as the title of this post suggests, I’m feeling a little listless … after five consecutive summers of flying hither and yon, can you blame me?

Oh, what the heck. At least I’ve got cheesy Euro pop to tide me over …

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