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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\'m an opinionated, snarky, gay academic with a predilection for the history, the Arab world, languages, photography, food, and music. I live in Austin, Texas. 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: ‘dog’



12 of 12: September 2009

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

Howdy, 12ers!  How was your month?

Down here in Central Texas, we’ve been in a severe drought for the past two years.  We also had a record number of days this summer over 100 degrees F (~38 C).  So, today, when it turned out to be gray, rainy, and rather chilly (72 degrees ~ 21 C), no one complained much.

It’s raining!  It’s raining!

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This was not, however, the unanimous opinion of everyone in our household.

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Some dogs love to play in water.  Mocha does not.  She is terrified of standing water (we still tell stories about the time we took her down to Wimberley to play in the Blanco River.  We finally picked her up and deposited her in the foot-deep river and she proceeded to clamp on to Ray’s leg and wouldn’t let go.

This applies to rain, too.

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*wistful sigh*

Ray went off to take a test for his online Texas government class (did you know that all college students in Texas are required to take a course in Texas government?  I didn’t — I only did my master’s here.  Thank God it doesn’t apply to graduate students, because I’d have been pissed to waste my money on that … )

I watched Top Chef.

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It’s funny how, after Top Chef, I was hungry.  Fortunately, it was lunchtime.  Flatbread pizzas!

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Mid afternoon, the rain slows down.  I realize that I’m not sure Mocha has been outside to “take care of business” so to speak, so I went out in the yard to try to coax her out.

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Rain drops on the oleander.

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And here’s my dog, having made it five whole feet off the porch into the yard, ready to bolt at the sign of any threatening raindrops.

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Back inside, Mocha decides she’s bored.  Really, really bored.  If you own a dog, you know that this is not her problem, it’s ours.

And, yes, that is the hand-knotted silk Kayseri rug that I brought back from Turkey.  She loves it so.

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OK, the first thing we have to do is KILL THE PURPLE BEAR!!!

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And then we (that would be me and Ray) have to throw the purple bear.  Over and over and over.  Mocha’s not so good at bringing it back, but she’s pretty good at catching it.

My, that was exciting!  And when YOUR life gets exciting, it’s good to have the people at Mutual of Omaha Messina Hof Vineyards to turn to.

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And, so, as the day winds down toward dinner and a movie, I take a break to update the maps on my GPS and discover that Sarah McLachlan is on Austin City Limits.  (Sarah McLachlan was on campus three buildings over and I didn’t know about it??  I am totally straight for Sarah.)

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… and that’s my boring, rainy day at home.

And how was YOUR 12th?

Cures and Diseases

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

The doctor’s office is decorated in a style that is more reminiscent of the sitcom Newhart.  The wood trim is oak, highlighted with brass chrome.  The wallpaper is a narrow stripe pattern that alternates between midnight blue, brick red, and kelly green.  The seating is a beige sectional sofa that is low to the floor and impossible to sit upright in.  The entire waiting room has an overall feel that suggests that a mounted moose head wouldn’t be out of place hanging over the receptionist’s desk.

The receptionist herself is an ex-Marine.  I know this because the larger-than-life SUV that’s always in the parking lot has at least three lady Marine bumper stickers and, when you meet her, it’s pretty obvious that the car is hers.  She has a bedside manner that matches.   “I have a 9:30 appointmentdon’tshootmeSIRYESSIR!” is the way I usually want to check in.

As has been the case on my last three visits to this doctor, I am kept waiting for half an hour past my appointment time.  The entire rationale of my choosing the earliest possible appointment in the morning is so that this won’t happen, and I am rather unhappy about it.  I suppose there’s no reason that they need to be running around urgently, but I always find the extremely relaxed staff to be annoying.  Couldn’t you be taking me back and letting me wait in the exam room? I want to ask.

The upside of this tactic is that, once I’m in the exam room, the doctor always comes in immediately.  I suppose I should be happy about that: the magazine selection is better in the waiting room.

The doctor has no sense of humor.  Never has.  I’ve stopped trying.  He opens my file and starts going over my case.  “Well, let’s see,” he says.  “You had surgery five months ago now.”
“Yup.”
“Any discomfort?”
“Well, no, but the reason I’m here…”
“Let’s take a look.”

In a scene that would be funny were this a sitcom (or hot were this gay porn … and involving two other people), I am told to drop trou and assume the position on a table that would, it seems, be a welcome accessory in certain clubs that I’ve only ever heard about because of its ability to pretty much turn me on my head (while holding on for dear life).

I hear the snap of latex, all the while protesting, “The last time I was here, you said that I was already completely healed so I dunno if you really need toYARGHcould you warn me before you do thatGAHHfor god’s sake do you keep that metal scope in the freezer between uses??”

“There’s a bathroom through there if you’d like to wipe the lubricant off your backside,” he says, snapping off the latex and turning on the sink with his elbow.  I do so, realizing that I must have the same look on my face that the dog has whenever the vet brings her back to the exam room after going to “collect a sample.”  I kind of feel dirty and violated.

“So,” he says, “we still have some minor irritation to contend with.”
“Yes,” I say.  “That’s why I’m here — last time we tried a new prescription.”
“Yes, I see,” he says, finding the line item in my file.  “And how did that work for you?”
“It didn’t.”
He looks at me.  “You didn’t fill the prescription?”
“I did.  I think it made the problem worse.  It certainly didn’t make it better.”
“Well,” he says, and hems and haws for a while.  “There’s another one we could try.”
Yay.
“We’ve had some success with it.  There’s a catch, though.”
“A … catch.”
“Well, some patients have reported a burning sensation the first time they apply the compound.”
“Burning,” I say.
“In some cases, the patients have reported that it burns so badly that they have to wash it off immediately.  I’ve had a couple who’ve refused to use it after that.”
Blink blink.
“But let’s give this a try.”
“You know, the irritation is kind of minor…”
“Let’s schedule you in for three months from now and see how you’re doing.”

And then I’m back out on the street, $30 lighter (the Marine receptionist having given me a nasty look for not having a ten dollar bill on me), with a prescription in my hand for a compound that apparently causes a massive burning sensation.

I think my doctor must have been at Evil Medical School with Dougie.  :sigh:

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 Moment’s Respite

Friday, June 19th, 2009

It’s literally a quiet day here in the office.  Several people are out–my erstwhile assistant is enjoying a long weekend, as is the current cause of office drama.  The lack of screaming in the hallway is a nice change — it’s hard to explain when you’re having a meeting with people from outside the department.

But mostly it’s quiet because I’m at a point where I don’t want to start working on things because I’m about to be away from the office for three weeks.  Note that I didn’t say I’m going on vacation for three weeks.  If there’s one thing I can’t quite seem to get certain coworkers to understand, it’s that hauling a group of people around the Middle East is not “vacation.”  I leave in just over a week for Turkey and Egypt.  Egypt was supposed to be vacation, but is no longer.  It’s all good — in exchange for a couple of meetings, my airfare down from Istanbul and my hotel is being covered.  Past that, Egypt is cheap: if you spend more than $15 a day on food, you’re doing something wrong.

So, given that, I’m kind of piddling around this afternoon.

I got a new kerpooter at the office.  It’s a 24″ iMac, and it’s quite zippy.  It boots up in under a minute!  The major drawback is that I get less reading done, what with the not having to wait 5 minutes for Photoshop to load.

At home, we’re dog-sitting my parents’ new dog — they waited too long and the name Brandi (with an i–gag me) has stuck, although they’re calling her Boo.  It doesn’t matter much because she doesn’t actually respond to anything.  Pleas such as “Boo, please stop chewing on the electrical cords,” or “Boo, you are standing on my sunburned shoulders GET OFF GET OFF GET OFF,” fall on completely deaf ears.  She’s not deaf, though.  Any time the fridge opens, she comes running.

One of the things that we’ve been lulled into false security with is that Mocha, at 50 pounds, doesn’t fit in certain places that Boo can go easily–such as under the sofa or through the missing board in the fence that is technically the neighbor’s responsibility to replace.  I pointed out to my father that she doesn’t take direction well.  “You probably have forgotten when Mocha was all arms and legs and would bite everything is sight,” said he.

I wouldn’t say I’ve forgotten.  I’d say I’ve repressed.

Let’s see … what else.  I am almost done with the thirty day challenge on EA Active — Ray had his last day today, mine is tomorrow.  Between that and the dieting, I’m done almost 10 pounds in the last month, and Ray is close to 15.  Yay us!  Now I’ll go to Turkey where meetings come with baklava…

At any rate.  It’s Friday, and I’m ready to go home.  Have a good one, everyone!

Fun evening at home

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

My career as a hand model is over.

I know this will come as a huge shock to those of you who didn’t know I had such a career, but, well…

So, here’s what happened: I was chopping onions and garlic to mix with black beans as a side to the salisbury steak we were having for dinner.  All of a sudden, I had a perfect trifecta: mid-chop, my phone began to ring.  And the dog began barking.  You see, Mocha isn’t a barker -when she gets antsy and starts barking, something’s going on.

And I did that thing you should never do, especially when using a brand-new Wüsthof 10-inch chef’s knife: I looked away from the cutting board … in the upward motion … and then brought the knife down.  And sliced my finger.

And then I did the logical thing: I answered the phone.  It was Will.

“William!” I exclaimed.
“How … are you?” he asked.  “You’re a bit … ebullient.”
“I just cut off part of my finger,” I explained.
“Do you want to take care of that and call me back?” he asked.
“No, I’m fine,” I insisted, wrapping paper towels around my finger and heading upstairs to the master bathroom, which is inexplicably the only place we keep band aids.
Will and I are having lunch today, and we started making plans, which were interrupted when I removed the paper towels to put a bandaid on and announced, “Jesus Christ!”
“What?”
“It’s … deep,” I said.
“Are you sure you want to take care of that and call me back?” he asked.
“I’m fine.  Gimme another beer,” I said, channeling Bill Engval, which should have been a sign.
“How very Texan of you.”
We finished the conversation normally, I hung up and noticed that I hadn’t just bled through the bandaid, I was actively dripping blood.  I reached for a cottonball and noticed for the first time that I hadn’t just cut myself — I’d cut something off.  About a quarter inch of my left index fingertip was missing on the right side.

And so I called Ray, who’d been at a meeting and had called to say he was going to Sam’s Club with Rodney.  “I need you to come home,” I said.  “I just cut my fingertip off.”

It took Ray about 10 minutes to get home (which is record time–I don’t want to know how many lights he ran).  “Did you put it on ice?” he asked.

“It’s not that kind of cut,” I said … although I had identified the cut-off piece and pulled it off the cutting board.

And off we went to the emergency room.  I was triaged, and the nurse replaced my Bounty™ bandages with real ones.

After 15 minutes in the waiting room, I was taken back to one of the trauma rooms.  The explanation was that they might need the surgical light to see better.  Sadly, there was no TV, so I amused myself by taking photos with my phone and uploading them to Facebook.

And I waited … and waited …

The incident happened at 7 pm – I know this because I checked the call record while waiting.  Finally, at 9 pm, the doctor came in to see me.  It was still bleeding.  There was, as I suspected, nothing to stitch.  They applied something called “gel foam,” which has a clotting agent in it, and let me rest for a little while.

Then I got a tetanus shot, a shiny new bandage, and a bill for $100.

And so, today, eveyone wants to know what happened.  Yay.  Because I don’t already feel like a massive tool…

And I’m off in a little bit for an appointment with my regular doctor.  Just what I need.  More medical bills…

And how was YOUR evening?

 

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