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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: ‘weekend’



Summer’s End

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Summer officially ends today here on this esteemed campus of higher learning.  Never mind that today will likely be the 66th consecutive day of 100+ degree temperatures, and that we’re still in a massive drought.  Summer’s over when classes start.

Most years, it seems that I always have something to say about the massive influx of students.  There is something disarming about the arrival of 40,000 students on campus all at once (and believe you me, they all showed up over the weekend).  Our summer school numbers are pretty low here, something I’ve never quite understood since it’s an easy way to relieve that crowding over the rest of the year, but what do I know?

The Bible pushers weren’t out yet this morning when I came in.  You may recall them from a post several years ago in which I lamented my inability to throw out holy scripture that I didn’t want.  I’m sure I’ll see them this afternoon, unless their precious saved souls can’t quite deal with the heat.  That’d be funny.

When I got to my department this morning, I was surprised to find new fliers up everywhere.

We have this professor–I won’t name him because he actually googles himself on a daily basis (and given his narcissism, there’s at least three or four entendres at work in that statement)–who has declared himself the only expert in the bizarre dialect of a language that he teaches.  He’s declared his office the World Headquarters of studies in this particular language.

So, this morning, there are fliers up all over the place.  He’s running some bizarre contest, and god alone knows what the prize will be.  A copy of his most recent biography, I suppose.  (Seriously: he publishes these random books consisting of his journals through one of those “publish it yourself” vanity presses, like we all need to know what his opinion of the canapes at a restaurant that no longer exists is … )

I saw another professor on my way out yesterday.  We joke around the office that he taught Hebrew to Moses — seriously, the guy is almost 90 and still teaching.  I’ve thought to myself that I suppose that I’d like to be that active at his age.  (The other running joke is that he’s still teaching because he’s afraid that if he retires he’ll discover that, after all these years, he really doesn’t like his wife.)  We have come in on Monday mornings and noticed on the switchboard phone that the receiver in his office is off the hook and wondered to ourselves if he failed to hang up properly again, or if this is going to be the time that we key into his office and find him still in there …

He’s also massively grumpy at times, when it comes to things like only four students registered for his class and it’s going to be cancelled due to low enrollment.  This was yesterday’s drama, and he was complaining about it to everyone.  The problem there is that the person he needed to complain to wasn’t in the office, so the rest of it had to hear about it at some length.  He doesn’t talk very loudly or quickly, you see.

The kicker to all of the pre-semester faculty drama is that I had a meeting yesterday that included the faculty member who sent a particularly nasty message at the end of my trip to Cairo.  She was very nice and sweet and pretended like nothing ever happened.  I suppose that’s one way to deal with it, but … for god’s sake, if you’re going to be that bitchy, own it!  Don’t brush it under the rug.  Seriously, does no one understand the finer points of bitchcraft?

At any rate.  I need to go see how we’re doing on the office pool: the first day of classes we always have a pool to guess what time the first panicked student will arrive freaking out because he/she couldn’t get into the class he/she wanted.  Never mind that registration is over and that we’ve been here all summer long — there’s always a handful of them.  I picked 8:45.

I hope your summer is ending smoothly :)

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?

So You’re Back, Then?

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

It’s been over a week since my last blog post.  This probably makes me a Bad Blogger, but whatevs.

It’s also been a little over a week since I flew back from the Middle East.  I had a slow weekend that involved going few places and seeing no one, and then it was time to go to work on Monday.  Needless to say, as I mentioned in my last post, returning to work was not something that I was actively looking forward to.

My office was a mess.  I had been running a workshop right up until I left and had left a couple of piles of things in my office to deal with when I got back.  Normally, when I go on vacation, I try to leave the house or my office in as good a shape as possible, so that when I come back I don’t have exactly the kind of reaction that I had when I walked into my office on Monday: “Oh, fuck.”

My office is still a mess.  There’s still workplace drama.  It’s like the never ending cycle of birth, death, rebirth, and the occasional Bollywood epic describing it.

What my being out of the way has meant, however, is that I haven’t been able to touch base on what one friend called Celebrity Death Fest 2009.  (Yeah, it’s kind of a tasteless term … but it does have its merits.)

All over the Middle East, the one thing everyone wanted to talk about was Michael Jackson … but not for the reason that I thought.  In addition to the obvious question (“What do you think about Michael Jackson dying?”  Seriously, folks, what answer is there to that question??) came this stumper: “Was Michael Jackson Muslim?”

Before you give yourself whiplash trying to figure out where that question came from, lemme ‘splain: when Jermaine made the public announcement of MJ’s passing, he ended with a prayer to ‘almighty Allah.’  Jermaine is Muslim.  Michael … I never heard nothing about.

However, since the Muslim world loves a good conspiracy theory bar none (they include themselves–most of the theories involved local politicians I’ve never heard of, and some of them weren’t about which ones had slept with Sylvio Berlusconi), this was immediately taken as a Sign that the entire Jackson family was Muslim and that the Islam-hating Western media had covered it up.

Clearly they’ve never seen Janet.  Or maybe they ought to, I dunno–depends on whether you think Islam is pro- or anti-feminist … and whether you think Janet is pro- or anti-feminist.  She’d certainly present a different face of Muslim women than a woman in a burqa, that’s for darned sure.

In one of my more sardonic moments, I responded to someone in the Istanbul bazaar, “Right now, the public face of your religion is Osama bin Laden.  Do you really think a gender neutral accused child molester is a step in the right direction?”  Fortunately for me, his English wasn’t good enough to understand most of what I said.  (It was kind of tasteless … even if there’s just the faintest hint of truth in there.)

As for what I think … well, the sad truth was that the likelihood was that his story wasn’t going to end well.  I feel sorry for the guy.  He was surrounded his entire life by people that wanted stuff from him, and he was always alone.

I never got asked what I thought about Farah Fawcett, Billy Mays, Karl Malden, or Ed McMahon.

Anyway.  It’s still hotter than blue blazes here in Texas (everyone in Turkey kept apologizing for the heat–I finally had to break out with, “It’s 44 at home!  It’s only 36 here!  We’re loving it!”), with no end in sight.  If anyone has sway with the Powers that Be, some rain would be great, mmkay?

And maybe some throat lozenges … I think my long-anticipated summer cold might finally be materializing.

Geography Lessons

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

It’s a lazy Sunday afternoon.  Or, rather, I’m being lazy this Sunday afternoon.  In a little over 24 hours, I’m supposed to leave for Turkey and Egypt for three weeks, and as of this moment I haven’t lifted a finger to begin packing.  I am relaxing, as it were.

It’s been a heck of a couple of weeks.  I’ve run three workshops — the last one was the orientation for another group going to Turkey who left yesterday morning.  Now that they’re gone, I’m barely able to grasp the concept that I, myself, am leaving.  Tomorrow.  So, instead of getting ready to go, I’m going to blog about it instead.  Ha!

Ray’s parents were visiting — they left this morning.  I barely got to see them since this last workshop was the sort that involves me playing host at breakfast, lunch, and dinner (I did eat well).  Yesterday, before my marathon two hour nap that is part of my effort to not begin my trip already physically exhausted, we all went to see the new Transformers movie, Revenge of the Fallen.

Some things you might be interested in knowing about it up front:

  • Even Ray, the one who really wanted to go, said it was “OK.”  This is tantamount to saying it wasn’t very good.
  • Megan Fox is not a good actress, but she’s hardly the worst actress in the movie.
  • Shia LeBeouf is going to have to stop playing a teenager soon.

However, the part of the movie that started making my head hurt was the utterly ridiculous sequence set in the Egyptian desert in which the filmmakers used very famous landmarks apparently banking on the audience not knowing where they are located.  That and the continuity gaffes were appalling.

To whit (potential spoilers ahead):

Part of the plot involves, for no particular reason as far as I can see, the northern tip of the Gulf of Aqaba, which our friendly geography specialist announces, “is where Egypt and Jordan meet.”  Thats’ not quite true: Egypt and Jordan don’t meet there because Israel is located between them.  Lest the movie be accused of being anti-semitic for pretending Israel isn’t there, Jordan seems to be flexible.  By which I mean, it apparently gets up and moves out of the way when it would be too inconvenient to recognize that an international border is being crossed.

In fact, based on all of the GPS technology and maps, it would appear that the climax of the film takes place in Saudi Arabia, another country denied its due as a member of the club of countries that border the Gulf of Aqaba (Jordan having only 9 miles of coastline).

Lest this be a problem in and of itself, the pyramids of Giza are conveniently relocated (by Michael Bay) to be located on the Gulf of Aqaba itself.  (Again, in what should very clearly be Saudi Arabia). To be fair, they’re never specifically identified as the pyramids of Giza, but if that were the case they could have used less recognizable pyramids.

The pyramids of Giza, for those not in the know, are no longer on the outskirts of Cairo — now, they’re kind of within the urban area itself.  At various times during the scenes that follow, you might be able to see Cairo itself in the background.  Sometimes it’s replaced by desert, giving the sites the appearance of being out in the middle of nowhere.  Once it seems to have inexplicably been replaced with Los Angeles, with the telltale skyline quite clearly visible in the background.

We won’t even get started on the concrete quarry located at the base of the pyramids itself.

There’s another intriguing play with geography involving John Turturro’s character.  The pyramid that plays a critical role (I won’t say what it is) is quite clearly the number two pyramids: the pyramid of Khafra (sometimes spelled Kahfre or Chephren).  It’s distinctive because part of the smooth limestone casing remains covering the top portion — it’s the only one of the three at Giza that still has part of that original casing.  Turturro is shown at the bottom of this pyramid, and then, when we go to close up, it appears behind him while he’s supposedly still standing at the bottom of it.  Clearly those scenes were filmed at the base of the next one over.

Another interesting move in the film is that Karnak temple, located 350 miles south of Cairo, is relocated to the foot of the pyramids.  Which were supposedly undiscovered.  Next to a big city.  Next to a source of navigable water.  And — another favorite — within shouting distance of the ruins of Petra … which, in a nod to Jordan’s new geographic flexibility, is located in Egypt.

I’m willing to forgive oversights in geography from time to time, but this was too much for my brain to handle.  I instead amused myself by identifying where the scenes were filmed (this being how I noticed LA suddenly replacing Cairo in one take).

Anyway.  My vote on the movie as a whole is to save it for video … if you’re really interested.

The drier has dinged and it’s probably time to drag out the suitcase now.  Happy weekend!

Triptychs

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

I’ve been wanting to do something with the photos that I’ve shot for a while (hey, guess what you’re getting for Christmas, everyone?), and ran across these neat frames at IKEA (which I think is Swedish for “evil store that sucks you in and compels you to purchase items).  They’re a triptych of photos mounted about an inch behind frosted glass that separates out the three pictures:

67337_PE181005_S2

They were on clearance.  The catch, naturally, is that there was your typical IKEA art in them (stock photo of stones or trees.  Woo).  So, Ray and I decided to swap out the artwork with some of mine (OK, he suggested it and I readily agreed, because I like taking photos and he likes taking stuff apart).

So, we wound up with these pictures instead:

Wood inlay on the main doors, YeÅŸil Cami, Bursa. Tiling CRW_5356_RJ

I wound up having to take these to get them developed after it turned out that our laser printer doesn’t do the best job (not surprised, really, but figured I’d give it a shot).  These are photos that I shot of the door to the Green Mosque in Bursa, Turkey; stone work on a wall just off of Insadong-Gil in Seoul, Korea; and the door to the Mosque of Sultan Qalawun in Cairo, Egypt.  I set them all in black and white using Matt Kloskowski’s “A More Natural Black and White” preset in Adobe Lightroom.

We picked up a second one with a beechwood frame when we were at IKEA over the weekend.  Our bedroom, where I envision it going, is in shades of blue and beige, so I tried to find photos that matched the color scheme:

Ruins and Ocean, Tulum Postcard perfect AK Trip 246

… and those would be Tulum, Mexico; the Puna Coast of the Big Island, Hawaii; and Zanzibar.

I’m trying to get more into presenting my photography a little more, rather than just shooting it and collecting comments on Flickr, which seem to be few and far between.

I’m also trying to gauge what I need to shoot on my upcoming trip — it’s going to be a whirlwind in Turkey, and I’m hoping I still have enough energy to be adventurous in Egypt afterwards.  I have ideas — hopefully they’ll pan out!

So … whaddya think?

 

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