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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: ‘emotions’



Friday

Friday, November 7th, 2008

It’s Friday, praise Bob.

I’ve been a ball of stress for too long, and even though the stress part kind of had a denouement (note the usage of a $45 word) on Monday and then with the election on Tuesday night, I think I’ve forgotten how to relax.  I’ve just been on edge for too many weeks.

So, thanks to those of you who offered advice on which photos to send off to my iStockPhoto audition.  Turns out it was all for naught, as this was their response to me, sent barely a couple of hours later:

At this time we regret to inform you that we did not feel the overall composition of your photography or subject matter is at the minimum level of standard for iStockphoto. Please take some time to review training materials, resources and articles provided through iStockphoto. The photographs provided in your application should be your best work. Try and impress us, we want to see how you stand out from the crowd.

In other words, they think I suck.

I question whether or not my stuff is suitable as stock photography anyway.  It’s a bit particular, and I think their restrictions are annoying.  I happen to like my photos of pets, flowers, sunsets, and people.  So there.

Anyway.

I’m being swamped in a deluge of e-mails from California-based friends who are unhappy about the passage of Prop 8.  I, too, am unhappy about it, but I do kind of wonder whether going after the Mormons is really a good strategy.  I mean, look how well that worked for the Islamic world during the whole Danish cartoons thing. At the end of the day, it was the Californians who actually voted for the law which means that maybe the left coast isn’t as liberal as everyone thought.

More frightening to me is the Arkansas law that passed banning unmarried couples from adopting.  They try that shit here in Texas every legislative cycle (because we’re weird, legislative cycles are every two years), but the last time apparently there was so much laughter during the hearing that it never even made it to committee vote, let alone to the full house of delegates or onto the ballot.

So, it’s a mixed bag of emotions as we end the week here.  We have a new president-elect, and the Imperial reign of the Bushes is at an end, and the nation spoke loud and clear about how they felt about the last eight years.  That’s a big thumbs up.

On the other hand, homos always lose.  I feel for California.  We’ve had marriage banned here in Texas already.  In fact, we’ve had it banned twice.  We’ve gotten kind of used to being the failsafe punching bag.

And so, on that note.  It’s almost the weekend, and I plan to laze around and do as little as possible.  How ’bout you?

Curses! Memed again

Monday, March 24th, 2008

My friend Cindy, who is a reporter living in Cairo with her husband, Mike, and their adopted daughter Maya, tagged me on her blog for yet another meme. Ugh! Too many memes, too little time.

I’ve known Cindy for years – we studied abroad in Cairo together, and we were both bitten by the Egypt bug. Hard. (Even worse in her case.)

Anyhoo, here’s the meme:

Rules of play:

  • Post 10 random things about yourself
  • Choose 5 people to tag and a reason you chose each person (can be totally nonsensical)
  • Leave them each a comment directing them to your blog so they know they are it
  • You can’t tag the person who tagged you (you’ll have to make new friends)
  • As a courtesy to the person who tagged you, please let them know when you have posted so they can have the sheer delight and extra work load of reading your answers

Play!!

10 more random things about myself … ugh.

OK, here goes.

  1. Despite my loud, outgoing and sometimes rambunctious nature, I am extremely insecure when it comes to issues where my feelings have been hurt, and am often at pains to express myself in such situations, even when I’ve brought up the subject myself.
  2. I’m a travel geek. I can happily stare at maps for hours on end, get lost reading guidebooks to places I have no particular plans to visit (it’s worse with places that I do plan to visit), and have a running airline timetable in my head. Ultimately, this makes me very good at spotting the stupid stuff that they do in movies. It bothers me to an unreasonable level that someone at ABC thought it was plausable that the fake wreckage of Oceanic flight 815 (a Sydney-to-LA flight) would be found off Bali and that no one would have noticed a plane flying over Indonesia with its transponder off. I mean, really. Do they think we’re idiots? (And don’t even get me started on Jessica Alba’s character flying American Airlines directly to Antarctica in Good Luck Chuck.)
  3. Demonstration of such geekiness: I have logged 127,406 unique air miles (that is, without counting routes I’ve flown multiple times). Even geekier? I have them all mapped out (click for larger view):

    Air Map 1Air Map 2

  4. Because I speak a number of languages to varying degrees, I am exceptionally useless when I find myself in a situation where I am unable to communicate with someone at all due to a language barrier. (Notable examples of languages I’ve recently discovered that “I can’t fake it” in include French and Portuguese.)
  5. Ocular trauma freaks me out. I can … and, lamentably, have … watched loads of slasher flicks. I’m fine right up until they start messing around with people’s eyes. Then I have to look away.
  6. I am extremely logical and find it very difficult to deal with people who base everything on emotion. One of the worst professional relationships I’ve had in my life was with a woman who literally seemed not to possess any logic skills — it was all about her emotions, and I found myself completely unable to justify anything to her on logic. It didn’t help that she seemed to think I was the Anti-Christ and that she was the only person who could stop my nefarious plots to do whatever the hell it was that I was plotting to do.
  7. If I were plotting nefariously, I would enjoy it very much, and you’d know about it. Thank you.
  8. At nearly every stage in my adult life there has been someone in my circle of friends, acquaintances, or coworkers who clearly suffers from Narcissistic Personality Disorder. Part of this goes back to what I said in number 6 — narcissists are only concerned with how things affect them on an emotional level. The low point was when I came to the long overdue realization that a ‘friend’ of mine only came into my life when he needed something from me and vanished otherwise — and he had made an art form out of putting the pressure tactics on. Saying no to him was literally impossible, as he had mastered the ability to make people realize that it took less effort to just do whatever completely unreasonable thing he was asking for than it would be to justify non-compliance. The low point occurred when I saw him coming toward me down the street and ducked into the nearest building to avoid talking to him … which turned out to be the University Baptist Church.
  9. Even though my triglycerides are high, I’m not giving up my wine. Dammit. A boy has to have some vices.
  10. I have a deep, unreasonable dislike of modern art. I know art is 9/10ths intent, but don’t ask me to look at a blank canvas with a tiny little red square on it and ask me to consider it “deep.” I can scribble on canvas and call it my interpretation of the depths of the soul’s despair at the plight of humanity, too. Anyone wanna give me a couple million for it? Didn’t think so.

Mmmkay. Tag time! Let’s get some new people in there.

1. I choose Shin because I know he’ll do it;

2. Danny because I’m curious to see what he’ll tell us;

3. Michael because he needs to get with the program;

4. Christine, because even though I can’t read her blog, I’m still curious;

5. Scooter, because he’s totally a random pick.

Anniversaire

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

Well, two anniversaries of note this week.

Ray and I hit 7 years on Monday. I said I wasn’t going to go into huge amounts of detail about it, and I’m sticking to that. We had a nice evening. I invested in a new iPod, letting go of the old 40 GB iPod photo that Ray bought me in 2004–which, he likes to point out, made me cry (it was sweet, shut up)–in favor of a new 80 GB iPod Classic that actually works.

We went to a place I hadn’t been before, Zax Pints and Plates downtown, which was our first time there and definitely won’t be our last. They had a grilled polenta with bleu cheese and marinara appetizer that was incredible, and I will be replicating it constantly if I can figure out how to grill polenta (oh Brian? any tips?). I think, however, that the Baileys-and-Andes mint chocolates cheesecake would be better off unreplicated at home.

Then, of course, there was yesterday. September 11. 11 Eylul. A date that, for this generation, will live in infamy.

Brian wrote a nice long post about that day.

As I was walking to class with my professor, we walked past the model twin towers that had been erected by the local chapter of whatever looney student organization remains convinced that there was some vast conspiracy theory behind the whole thing. We walked past the little plastic American flags that had been stuck into the South Mall – one for each victim. I read all the news stories about the controversy over this year’s commemorations in New York and the whole bit about whether Giuliani was trying to use this as political clout now that he’s a candidate for president.

And then I moved on to something else.

Even now, as I write these words, it’s hard for me to even try to think about 9/11. Not the day – the day itself was traumatic. I was sitting right here at this very desk still trying to boot up my computer when a coworker came in to ask if I’d “heard something about two planes flying into the World Trade Center.” I remember that the first news source I was able to access was the BBC because all of the other news sites were overloaded with people trying to find out what was going on. I remember going with the office manager across to the student union because at the time we had no cable hookup in the building, rendering our television useless for live broadcast, and hearing all sorts of reports: explosion at the White House, fire at the Pentagon, car bomb at the State Department.

And I remember Dr. Mohammad, who had been teaching when the news broke, sitting out on the West Mall smoking his unfiltered cigarettes. Dr. Mohammad is Palestinian, and he wears a khiffayeh, the black-and-white checkered headscarf, around his neck like a shawl. And he had no idea what was going on. Hillary and I stopped to talk to him, and told him the news, and he said, “Oh. Maybe that’s why that guy just spat on me.”

Shin and I have had a few exchanges comparing post 9/11 attitudes toward Arabs/Muslims with the World War II-era treatment of Asian Americans (who did, frankly, have it worse, since the post-9/11 conversations about concentration camps kinda went away fairly quickly). I’ve had my self-righteous indignation up in hackles since then, and I’ve had a few un-PC moments.

But I’ve really never processed it all.

I’ve never quite dealt with the response to a talk I gave once, wherein one of the attendees–whose constant interjections were so annoying that, had I been a more experienced speaker, I would have asked her to leave–decided to follow up with an e-mail to my Director, a man I respected but feared, telling him that I was an ignorant buffoon and that he should never allow me to speak in public again.

I’ve never quite dealt with the experience of enthusiastically sending out invitations to a workshop, only to be contacted a week later by a columnist I’d never heard of from a neighboring town who’d been sent my correspondence by a third party upset that we were, in post 9/11 America, having a workshop about the Islamic world and weren’t planning to devote equal time to Judaism and Christianity. After all, her forwarded message to him rationed, there is much more prejudice against Christianity than Islam in the US, so why all the attention?

I still thought at this early stage in my career that there was a way to rationally explain things to people in such a way so as to make them understand my argument. I was wrong. The subsequent column–based on a twenty minute interview–contained only three quotes from me, all out of place, all of which were used to represent a position for me that I didn’t espouse.

Then I got tracked down at home by a talk radio hostess who began the live, on-air interview with, “I was shocked–shocked!–when I read this column in the newspaper and found out what’s going on up at UT. Here to explain himself is … ” I have, since they tracked me down at home on a day I was sick and I conducted the phone interview while in bed, jokingly said that my biggest regret is that i didn’t inform the hostess that I was in my underwear. I’m lying, however. My biggest regret is that I let my idealistic notion that somehow, by agreeing to the interview, I would be able to change her perception cloud my judgment. I should have said “No, thank you,” hung up and gone back to sleep. I didn’t.

I know this is all petty in the wake of the fact that real people died on 9/11, and that many more have had their lives effected in ways far more significant than the ways I have. My role in all of this has been different: I’ve been in the front line of trying to explain away the hate. And worst of all, there’s an active movement afoot to try to shut down the departments that do what we do, buoyed, ironically enough, by the argument that we failed to prevent 9/11 in the first place.

So, there it is. It’s been 6 years since the towers fell, since Osama bin Laden’s name went up there with Quisling, Hitler, Cromwell, Tojo, and all the other names that will forever be said with a sneer. It’s been 6 years since we were shocked out of our idyll by watching people die on live TV and being unable to do anything about it.

6 years of putting the thoughts and raw, unprocessed emotions aside and planning to deal with them … later.

Here’s to 6 more?

9/12: 5 years later

Tuesday, September 12th, 2006

You might find it odd that I didn’t post anything yesterday in commemoration of the fifth anniversary of 9/11. The fact is that I had written a long, rambling, rather irate post and then deleted it because it didn’t say anything new, and yesterday of all days was probably not the optimum time for me to get on my soapbox and rant about the ills of the world. Like everyone else, I have strong emotions about what happened that day, and even I can be repectful enough of the collective pain of our country to allow 24 hours to pass in a respectful manner.

Andy Towle points us to an interesting retrospective on Gay Americans and 9/11. It’s quite interesting how many perspectives there are on this issue. I remember getting quite worked up in Turkey when our tour guide, an otherwise fine and upstanding gent, decided to go into the conspiracy theory about no planes hitting the Pentagon. I remember that what surprised me about that little incident was how upset I got, and how I felt like he wasn’t allowed to have an opinion on the matter. NPR had an interesting piece this afternoon on public denial of culpability for 9/11 in the Arab/Islamic world. I thought it was a bit gutsy of them; although the piece was handled with tact, I imagine they’ll still get quite a bit of angry mail about it.

Some of our media chose not to be so tactful, though. If I am evil for not wanting to watch CNN replay the events of 9/11 in real time, then sign me up. The much-ballyhooed miniseries on ABC apparently attracted no viewers. Regardless of whether we can pin the tail on the Democrats or the Republicans, it seems that most people just don’t want to give up their Sunday and Monday nights in order to watch it all play out again on the small screen.

We’ve referred an awful lot to the post-September 11 world, and post-September 11 started on 9/12/01. Today might be an appropriate day for us to reflect on whether we are where we wanted to be five years later.

I have opinions, of course, but I won’t share them here. I’ve been playing with spray adhesive and my brain cells are a little fried. It smells a bit like a new roll of scotch tape, right out of the box. It’s one of those smells from childhood … ‘cept I don’t remember it killing quite so many brain cells.

Anyway. Today it’s 9/12 and we return to our Brave New World, already in progress…

 

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