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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: ‘weird’



Ahh, it’s good to be back

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Note: names have been changed to protect the clueless.

On one of my earlier days on this trip to Cairo, I got a random message from my boss, in that weird formal style he always uses.

Dear Chris:

[Name of new faculty member who hasn't yet moved to Austin] wants more information about the upcoming conference you’re working on.  Could you please send her the details.

Hooshmand.

I wrote back:

Hooshmand:

Will be happy to do so, but I don’t have her contact info — can you send it to me?

Chris.

And then I heard nothing.  I didn’t think much of this, as I was out of the country, and also, the conference in question is still months off (and I don’t really have any information to provide yet).

I kind of put it out of my mind until this morning, when I got an unexpected message from the new faculty member in question, in which she gave me her e-mail address. I thought this was a little weird — was she copied on that original message and I didn’t notice?  Sometimes on the Exchange Web access it’s hard to tell.

I went back through my e-mail and was able to determine that the message that he’d sent was only copied to me.

And then I scrolled through the text of the message I’d just received.  And I was able to determine that, rather than just send me her e-mail address, he had, in fact, gone through the trouble of looking up her e-mail, sending my message to her, and letting her respond with the one piece of information I needed … which he already had.

I’m going to assume he did this at the crack of midnight after a difficult night of dealing with the new infant and just wasn’t thinking clearly.  Because the alternatives … are significantly more frightening.

Ahh, it’s good to be back.

On Physical Activity and Other Inconveniences

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

After a lengthy absence therefrom, I have finally returned to the land of the work out.  You may applaud accordingly.

Physical fitness is one of those things that I know I should be more interested in than I actually am.  After all, who wouldn’t want to lick from head to toe look like young Marco Dapper here:

The problem I have with actually attaining this goal personally is that I happen to find spending time in large cavernous rooms that smell like old sweat in order to pick up heavy objects and put them down repeatedly one of the most stultifyingly dull activities imaginable.  It’s down there with doing my taxes (sorry, Matt).

I know that I have the “wrong attitude.”  Some of my gym rat friends have told me this repeatedly.  “Think of it as ‘you time,’” one has told me often.  “You’re taking time for yourself and not for anyone else.”  While this may be true, time I take for myself is more pleasurably spent doing many things other than putting myself in extreme physical discomfort so that afterwards I can shower in an open room with a bunch of extremely overweight unattractive men while trying not to let on that my arms are so sore that I can barely raise them high enough to wash my hair.

Yes, as you can see, I very much embody the wrong attitude.  I’ve tried the “workout partner” thing, too.  That lasted as long as it took for me to want to throw one of the heavy objects at said workout partner.  In addition to his numerous other psychological problems, the gent in question was one of those who, if I somehow managed to perform with more weight than he could, would stand back, analyze my form using those years of experience in physical training that he gained working on his doctorate in film studies, and declare, “I think you’re doing that wrong.”

For many years, I forced myself to the gym a few times a week, but I always run up against the same problem: I belong to the gym at work.  I carpool.  My carpool ride doesn’t go to the gym herself.  I also recognize that I am an early morning workout kind of person – if I leave it until later in the day, I will come up with every excuse imaginable not to go.

A couple of years ago, Ray acquired a WiiFit.  I was intrigued by the concept of the WiiFit.  It’s a workout that you can do at home!  Right?

Well, the WiiFit has a couple of problems, most of which are incorporated in the fact that you get to pick and choose your exercises.  There’s very little guidance, which means that if you happen to not like doing a particular activity, you can just not do it.

joyoftech1129

The WiiFit also has the slightest of attitude problems.  When I started to lag behind, I recognized perfectly well that one of the reasons that I was avoiding it had to do with not wanting to sit through the scolding it was likely to give me when I came back.

So, last week, Ray announced that he wanted to get the newest home work out program for the Wii – EA Active, it’s called.

And here’s what I’m going to say about it: it’s kicking my ass.  And I kind of like it.  It makes up for the shortcomings of WiiFit — there’s a personal trainer (“30 day challenge”) that makes you do exercises that you don’t want to (I fucking HATE lunges).  It also rotates them so that you’re not doing the same thing every day — this was something I never quite managed myself with WiiFit.  Best of all, I can do it in the morning before I leave for work — I have to get up a little earlier, but I feel like I’m actually accomplishing something besides doing yoga poses in my underwear.

While it incorporates the Wii Balance Board (what she’s standing on in the cartoon), it’s a little weird about it.  WiiFit used the balance board to take your weight and calculate body mass – EA Action wants you to input your weight manually.  For the past few days, I was convinced that the settings had slipped somehow because I wasn’t using the balance board at all, but today it was back.  And I kind of wished it weren’t.

Probably the biggest annoyance is that I’ve had to hold poses for a really long time before realizing that the problem is that I’m holding the Wii Remote and Nunchuk incorrectly, so the machine isn’t registering that I’ve done the set.  I’m not sure whether that’s an annoyance with me or with the system.

But at any rate, I’m through my first full week of the 30 day challenge, and it’s actually bringing me back.  That’s new.  And different.  And I kind of like it :)

Why machines won’t win … this week, anyway

Friday, May 15th, 2009

I’ve previously mentioned my addiction to Web stats, so we’re not going to rehash that…

Whilst killing time, I decided to check my latest stats on Google Webmaster Tools (not to be confused with Google Analytics, which is, like, totally different).  Webmaster Tools isn’t as pretty as Analytics, but there’s some good stuff in there.

Webmaster Tools is where you set up Google to crawl your site.  I have long maintained that there is a reason why human editors will never be replaced by machines (anyone who’s ever tried to use Google Translate knows that), and, well, here’s why:

volvo

Here’s a quick Google-to-English translation.  This Keywords function lists the “most common keywords Google found when crawling your site.”

And the keyword in the number one spot is “Volvo.”

VOLVO??

When the heck have I ever mentioned a Volvo in my blog?  Out of curiosity … and because I really am trying to avoid work that much … I pulled up my blog and … well, it’s just as I suspected:

nothing-found

And that, children, is why Terminator and Battlestar Galactica only exist within the realm of science fiction.

Or, perhaps the Volvo corporation is hooking up with Google to insert themselves into ever Web site on Earth.  And now I’m thinking that learning Swedish may be just the ticket to fooling the machines: Jag är en maskin också, kamrat.

And it’s Friday … and I want a nap in the worst way.  Happy weekend, ever’body!

Relaxing Weekend

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

Mocha was supposed to have surgery on Friday, so that the two of us could recover together and both be able to tell people that we were both recovering from procedures that can’t be discussed in polite company.  So, on Friday morning I drove her over to the vet shortly after I had to take my anti-inflammation pill that’s made me loopy every six hours (including while sleeping) so that they could do pre-surgery prepwork.

I was in a light doze around 9:30 on the sofa (post-painkiller) when the phone rang.  It was the vet.  “We’ve been looking at the lump we were going to remove,” she said, “and it’s shrunk considerably.  We’d like to try oral steroids to see if that reduces it completely.  The surgery is just going to make her really uncomfortable, and keeping her from licking at it is going to be very difficult.”

Now, not spending a bunch of money on the dog’s surgery didn’t upset me so much.  On the other hand, it was getting dark because a storm was coming in, and I hadn’t driven by myself since my own surgery on Wednesday (except for the trip to the vet).

We’ve had weird weather this week.  Wednesday evening, while Ray was in class and I was at home parked on the sofa, a massive thunderstorm system went through that dropped baseball-sized hail on the part of town where the vet’s office is located.  When I’d dropped Mocha off, they’d had trouble finding an exam room to put us in because the storm had taken out all of their skylights.

So, I drove over to pick Mocha up and, sure enough, just as I entered the office, it started to pour (plainly audible from the two exam rooms with the busted out skylights).  They brought out Mocha, who seemed clueless about her reprieve, except that she kept licking at the spot on her leg that they’d shaved down to insert the IV they didn’t have to use.  All weekend, we’ve been listening to “lick … lick … lick … lick …

We dodged the raindrops back into the car (unsuccessfully – that never works), and I drove home at 30 miles an hour because that’s the fastest I could go with the rain coming down as hard as it was.

And then we got home and took a nap together.  That’s my girl!

Lifestyles of the Straight and Hopeless

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

I realize that I neglected, in my not-terribly-triumphant announcement that I am returning to blogging more frequently, that I neglected to provide any details about Saturday evening.

Every so often, when I’m out in public, I observe the mating habits of that most intriguing of creatures, homo sapiensis heterosexualis, and I wonder–sometimes to myself, sometimes aloud–how it is that our species has managed to propagate itself as long as it has, given that, well, straight boys are just completely inept. Honestly. The survival of mankind as we know it depends on this??

I should preface this by acknowledging that Ray made what is not an entirely inaccurate observation about me. When I’m out in public, and I see someone who looks young, I tend to comment that they’re “twelve!” Ray gently pointed out that it’s not that they’re getting younger, it’s that I’m getting older. I prefer to think that it’s both, but whatever.

We started Valentine’s Day evening at a local wine bar, Cork and Company, where we had a couple of glasses of wine and some cheese. It was here that I had my first great revelation of the evening: I don’t know anywhere near enough lesbians. I like lesbians. In fact, it’s entirely possible that I enjoy the company of lesbians more than I enjoy the company of many gay men. We were seated at the bar (stupid me: it hadn’t occurred to me to make reservations at the bar that I planned to go to before dinner–this is why I hate Valentine’s Day!) next to a pair of lesbians. I don’t know if they were a couple or not, but they were a hoot to watch. They kept the alcohol coming, and they were no-nonsense, and god help the meandering soul who got a little too close to their space. They even managed to get the bartender to watch their seats for them while they went outside to smoke (Austin’s starting to make California look pro-tobacco).

On the other side of us was a young straight couple (me: “He’s twelve!” Ray: “He’s got three wine glasses in front of him. He’s clearly over 21.” Me: “He can’t possibly be shaving.” Ray: “You do know that he’s two feet away from you and can probably hear every word you’re saying, right?”). In all honesty, these were straight people who were significantly less inept than the others I observed later. She had on a nice dress; he was wearing a suit, and they seemed to be engaging each other in some conversation that prevented him from hearing (or at least acknowledging) the bitterly aging queen sitting next to them.

Then we strolled off to dinner. I had managed to secure late reservations at a Mediterranean restaurant called Taverna. They have a sister branch in Dallas that I’m convinced that I’ve been to, which is more Greek in style. The one in Austin is decidedly Italian. I kind of want to try the one in Houston just to see if it’s Lebanese.

Anyway, Taverna isn’t the cheapest place in town — it’s midrange, and I knew it because when I was spending a lot of Fulbright’s money last summer, I took a group of twenty there for dinner and earned a few frequent flier miles for it. I recalled that we enjoyed the food, and I thought it might be a nice place on Valentine’s Day.

Dirty business first: Ray had the veal parmagiana, I had butternut squash risotto with sea scallops. They were both good. Moving on.

There was another (presumably) gay couple sitting next to us. We decided that we were cuter than they were, and so that was that.

At my eleven o’clock, there was a young Latino couple. (Me: “They’re twelve!” Ray: “They’re not twelve. They have drinks.” Me: “They’re drinking soda.”) He was in a shirt and tie (no jacket), and a pair of loafers that had seen better days. He was slouched so far down in his seat that it was a wonder that he didn’t have to put his plate in his lap in order to eat. She was dolled up in a cute dress. I don’t know what the story was, but I tend to form judgments when, for example, it’s Valentine’s Day and the waiter hands the check to the woman and she pays. That’s just not right.

About halfway through the meal, another couple came in and sat at my nine o’clock. She was wearing a gray dress and had clearly spent hours getting ready. He clearly had not. He was wearing an untucked shirt over a paid of jeans and black athletic shoes. If I were her, I’d have left his sorry ass standing at the door. He spent the whole meal leering at her as if he was just going through the motions so that he could get to the part later where they have sex. Assuming that she didn’t dump him after dinner.

Which, of course, leads to the other thing I find weird about Valentine’s Day. You’re supposed to get dressed up, go out, eat a lot, have dessert, and drinks, and then … who still feels sexy after that? I felt kind of bloated.

But still. Every time I’m out in a formal setting, I tend to look at the straight couples of whom society approves, and I wonder … “How in the name of God have we not died out yet?” Because sometimes … it just doesn’t make that much sense.

 

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