Thursday, November 20, 2008

Introspective Essays: Part 1 - The Hatchling

Recent conversations with Ana have had me reflecting as to whom I am, and how I got to where I am. These following essays are my contributions to a better understanding of myself, my past, my future and my interpretation of the human condition. Please note this will likely be a deep insight into my heart and mind that no one, save a select few, have ever heard. I doubt this will be pretty and may be surprising to some, but I’ve learned through much introspection that I do not care what I perceive others think.

Disclaimer: By no means is my story to be taken as advice, only a guide to help individuals make their own decisions. In order to protect the innocent and the not-so-innocent alike, names will not be used.

Part I – The Hatchling

After a first semester at Purdue University that had me dating several young women, from an obsessive, to an old flame who was like an unyielding pilot light in a wind-swept furnace, to an unbeknownst-to-me engaged upperclassman, I found myself exactly where I began my first days of college, alone. In February of 1995, and in the never ending pursuit of fulfilling the desires of a young man, I met, through a matter of coincidence and happenstance, a young woman, L.

L was a breath of fresh air to me, as she was different than any other woman I had ever dated before. We both had similar personalities, senses of humor and intellectual interests. I could venture to say that for the two of us it was instant puppy love. After several nights of endless conversation and little sleep, we soon found ourselves to be an item as the second semester was quickly ending.

In retrospect, as the summer-break loomed, this ideally should have been the end of our relationship. I say this as we were both very young with a world full of opportunities that lay in front of us, but I believe we were blinded by the sense of being wanted. We were succumbed to the ever powerful lure of teenagers in love.

As summer came, I left for an internship in Los Angeles and L stayed in Indiana. Thus we diligently and religiously kept in contact over that summer to preserve that young flickering flame. When I returned for my sophomore year, we quickly picked up where we had physically left off the year prior. While the fall semester progressed we became more inseparable, to the point where our friends felt slighted and my individuality became blurred.

Soon, I fell into my crutch-like ways of depending on L to guide the ship and I following her footsteps.

(For back story, I surmise that I basically went to Purdue because my father and brother had gone there. In my mind, Purdue was the only option and in reality, I had applied only there and Rose Hulman as a back-up. This was regardless of the academic scholarships I had received from New Mexico State University and Penn State University. And as I entered Purdue’s College of Engineering, I was required to declare my intended major of Chemical Engineering, which trail had already been blazed by my brother.)

Early in my second year, I learned that Chemical Engineering was not suited for me, or vice versa. In hindsight, I am amazed that I personally decided to leave that academic field for my own reasons, yet I am not surprised that I quickly relied on L to find my new calling of Civil/Environmental Engineering. (As an aside, I am truly interested in the field of Environmental Engineering, but perhaps as I frequently realize due to job related challenges, it is not my calling – this will likely be expounded upon in Part 3). So, it could be coincidence or my flaw of following that I ended up in the field I still practice today.

In addition to my changes in academics, I eventually began to lose my own extracurricular persona. Being smitten and eager to spend as much time with L, I joined many social and service groups that she either already belonged to or was thinking about joining. In essence, I was tailoring my beliefs and personality to fit someone else’s agenda.

I now recognize that my actions were wrong, and that part of the relationship was completely my fault. Altering one’s self to be more “attractive” to one’s partner is not how a relationship should be based. Your partner should take you as you are, therefore I shouldn’t have changed myself to maintain the relationship. I should have left the relationship to maintain my identity (This thought will likely be played again in Part 2, but from my interpretation of another’s point of view – as an FYI, I’ve learned a lot by letting those I’ve loved go, and by being the loved one that was let go).

Eventually, another summer had passed, and then it almost seemed like we spent more time apart than together. For a few summers, I was interning in Los Angeles, and L became part of a cooperative program where she was working in Indianapolis for a semester, then in school the next, etc. Although we had been dating for almost three years, I would suspect the last two years we were only physically together for at most half that time.

If it wasn’t for my need to be wanted, and not to be alone or “looking”, I don’t think the relationship would have survived. I believe we both functioned well without each other because to me there was always that feeling of security because I had a “relationship net” to catch me if I fell. And since we did not see each other often, when we were together, our times were great. It was like we were catching up, reconnecting or cramming lost time into a finite space.

Using this on-again, off-again method, I believe we extended our relationship far longer than it should have lasted, which eventually became my personal downfall. Graduation was coming and the deep dark abyss of the future was looming large on the horizon. To be honest, I was scared to death of what I was going to do after graduation. I had nary a clue of what I wanted to pursue, so I fell on my fatal flaw, I turned to footsteps that had gone before me.

My father and brother had both attended graduate school, so that became a given for me. My next action on an August evening in 1997 signaled the worst singular decision I have ever made in my life (Yet, in a cause and effect way, it has eventually led to my greatest triumphs…). Desperate to avoid venturing into the unknown post-graduate world alone, and what seemed like taking the next logical step in a relationship, I asked L to marry me (My brother had married a lovely woman at a young age, why couldn’t I?). L gleefully accepted and an unstoppable force was soon set into motion that neither of us could derail until it came crashing down in an unfathomably painful end.

At that time, I thought I had figured it all out and that I was the envy of all my peers. I knew my career path and I had a fiancé, but in reality, I hadn’t made these choices because I let the situation choose me. I was too frightened to end a long term relationship, so I asked her to marry me. I was too scared of the post-graduate unknown, so I let my father, brother and L’s choices lead the way.

Both L and I decided to attend graduate school, and after graduation, I moved down south to attend Texas A&M for my master’s, while L finished up her bachelor’s degree due to her co-op work (I was offered positions at Clemson, Texas, Texas A&M and Purdue, and how much do you want to bet that A&M was not my first choice?). Yet again, L and I were separated by a vast distance, but this time our communication was no longer as diligent as our early love days.

While in Texas, I met a lot of people. Some good guys, some questionable. Some nice women, and some unbelievable beautiful ones. For the first time in a long time, I had a good time alone, but there was always my safety net. Before long, the wedding day was fast approaching. Soon winter break was upon us, and I was in Indiana for our wedding day. When L and I met again, I couldn’t quite place it at the time, but it just didn’t seem right. I think both of us knew subconsciously that this was a bad idea, but like I said, the unstoppable forces were in motion. Invitations had been sent, dresses hemmed, reception halls booked and meals catered. A lot of non-refundable money had been spent and I thought I needed my safety net, so to my mind, the dye had been cast.

L and I were wed on December 27, 1998 rather spectacularly with the church adorned in Christmas regalia; however, frankly, I remember little or none of the actual day. After a much underutilized honeymoon to the south coast of Spain (Malagá, Fuengirola, etc. – My word would I like to relive that trip!), we began our married life deep in the heart of Texas. Like most young couples, I think we experienced the tribulations that were to be expected. What I did not expect was the vast difference of how it used to be with us seeing each other in cycles, to us seeing each other every day. This leads to my firm belief that all engaged couples need to live together for at least 6 months, regardless of perceived religious beliefs and feelings from parents (That alone probably would have woken L and I up to the fierce reality of our relationship).

To dull a razor sharp knife I sometimes still feel in my back, I will politely redact most of the end of my and L’s relationship. To be brief, L chose a unilateral course to end our marriage with no regard to how I felt. There was no counseling, no opportunity for me to voice my opinions; she ended the marriage on her terms alone.

In conclusion of Part 1, L and I had plenty of good times during our 5 ½ year relationship, and when I remember L, I choose to remember those times, and not the times that drew the final curtain.

To which I ask, should we have married? I would respond a resounding no. Was it all her fault? No, I share responsibility for not following my head and heart, and yielding to guilt, perception and my inherent desire to not be a failure.

Yet, I learned a lot about myself, relationships and overall human nature from our marriage, which next led to my unprecedented period of independence and self reliance that inexcusably and somewhat inevitably brought me right back to my fatal flaws.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

An Epiphany

Yesterday was a bad day. I would venture to say that "bad" is quite an understatement.

This week has been an epiphany for myself. I won't bore with details, but if you give me an adult beverage, I am sure I'll pontificate.

Alas, here is a paraphrased snapshot of a conversation I had with Ana last night:

"Work is work. Work does not define you. A man is measured by his devotion to his family and his community. When you die, your headstone will not read 'Devoted State Employee.' It will read 'Beloved Husband, Father and Grandfather.'"

Sometimes words cannot describe how much Ana and our child(ren) mean to me.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

A Brieft Encounter at the Beaufort County DOT Terminal

Long time, no post.

Yesterday, I traveled to Little Washington out in Beaufort County for an express review meeting. It was a beautiful day for a drive, and frankly I needed the time away from the office. As I rumbled down 264 in my beat up F350 Truck, I noticed a peculiar number of convict crews out and about in their green uniforms, cleaning up the litter from our careless motorists.



After my express meeting, which was a laborious 2.5 hours (however, it all went well from all sides represented), I headed to the Beaufort County DOT to fuel up the state car and be back on my merry way to Raleigh. I pulled up to the pumps and noticed one of the convict buses getting some diesel.

As I got out of the car and began fiddling with the gas key card, I nodded to the Guard fueling the bus, then heard someone say "Dude. What's up Chad? It's been so long, bro. We should go catch some gnarly waves. Awesome!" I smiled, and realized one of the convicts was commenting on my Hawaiian shirt I was wearing.



He kept right on cracking jokes and poking fun at me, and I could hear the entire bus hooting and hollering. I kept a pretty grim face now, and looked over at the guard. He shrugged, and kept on pumping fuel.

As the joking kept rolling, I motioned to the guard and pointed at the bus. The guard gave me the ok sign, and I said...

"I wear Hawaiian shirts because I don't look good in green."

I heard a roar of laughter from the other convicts, then I heard the guy who had been cracking on me yell "What did you say??"

Time to get in the car and roll back to Raleigh.

That exchange made my day.

Monday, June 2, 2008

Cruise Chronicles: Imagination Day 3 - Moderation Tastes Better

On the third day, we awoke to calm, tranquil seas as our ship was easing its way to the dock at the island of Grand Turk. Having been at sea for two days, I was glad to finally be back on terra firma. Not because sea sickness was having its way with me, but because I was adding a new country to my list (Spain, Mexico, Bermuda, Bahamas and now Turks and Caicos)! Also, this stop was the halfway mark and Ana’s emergency exit to the United States. Prior to leaving on the cruise, we wanted an itinerary that included an airport mid-way through the cruise in case Ana was too homesick for Kendal to continue. Our original plan was to cruise to Bermuda, where I had a lovely time back in June of 2005, because they have a direct flight to Raleigh, but that cruise was too long for Mama to stomach (8 days, 7 nights, compared to our more modest 6 days, 5 nights).

Finally moored to the dock, Ana and I were some of the first people off the boat thanks to early nights and earlier mornings. We were greeted to a comfortable 80 degree day, and not a trace of humidity in the air, as well as the traditional Tax and Duty free shop you conveniently had to walk through to get on the island proper. But, it really didn’t feel like we were on the island because the port had recently been constructed by Carnival Cruise lines and had all the trappings of a tourist spot. We dallied for a moment in the shops and then found our excursion “director” who collected our tickets and led us to our bus. Like all island destinations, Ana and I are suckers for a good snorkel. That being said, Grand Turk is world renowned for its scuba diving and magnificent reefs. So on to the bus we went, where we were of course greeted by another Haitian driver. Let’s recap from the first bus experience: 1. Say something unintelligible; 2. Drive haphazardly to our destination; 3. Say something unintelligible; 4. Say in perfect English “I am not an employee of the cruise line…”; 5. Hold hand out for tip. Rinse and repeat.


I am not an employee of the cruise line, but I play one on TV

That unpleasantry completed, we stood on Governor’s Beach eager to snorkel and relax, but not before we got the worst welcome and snorkel instruction in the history of mankind. The girl wouldn’t look anyone in the eye, and spoke with an accent so thick you could slice it. At one point it was bad enough that someone in the crowd asked her to repeat herself. So, she started all over from the beginning. Egads, woman! At least we’d snorkeled before and were familiar with the equipment…

We grabbed some chez lounges and walked down the beach some to a nice shady spot with a magnificent view of the ocean. The water was teal blue until about 200 yards out, where the water went a stunning deep blue. We’d known prior from my nerdy internet research that the ocean floor dropped off to a depth of 7,000 feet just off shore! Our instructor reiterated this fact and told us “Don’t go swim out der man, or joo go down to da bottom.” Apparently the laws of physics don’t work 600 feet offshore.

Having secured our perfect spot, we walked down the beach a few hundred feet per the instructor’s direction to a rocky location on the ocean floor. As we arrived, people were milling around in circles wondering where this mysterious rocky spot was. Someone said they’d walked down the beach and back and saw no rocks to be spoken of. Well, I thought, did you perchance happen to notice the rocks beneath the waves? For one, you cannot snorkel on land, so the rocks would be in the water, and two, were you expecting Gibraltar to be poking out of the surf beckoning you to explore her crags?


Our Pristine View on Grand Turk

Bemused, I donned my gear and was braced by the not-so-equatorial cool waters. Meanwhile, Ana was stowing our packs near a nice, elderly woman who had no intention of getting into the water, and who was quite alarmed at the number of sunburned people from our ship. I guess a long previous day at sea with innumerable drinks served in coconut shells, plus the fact most people can’t reach the middle of their backs, made for some startlingly painful looking sunburns. I believe the Crayola name for it is magenta.

Ana and I swam around the reef, and personally, I was not too impressed. Most of this reef had long since died (probably because of the straight piped toilets to the bay!) leaving little habitat for fish. We saw a few neat schools here and there, as well as some shipwreck debris (i.e., mast timbers, a rudder and I saw a pot! Ooh, a pot). However, nearing the end of the snorkel, Ana spied a rather peculiar looking fish that was camouflaged with the sea floor. Ana approached the fish for a picture, and all of a sudden its tail fanned and revealed a beautiful shade of purple, most likely warning Ana to keep her distance. Unlike Ana’s previous wildlife encounter with a Road Runner in Anza Borrego, she respected the fish, took its picture and swam away. Good thing she did, as the fish was a Scorpionfish, which has poisonous barbs running down its spine…

We eventually made our way back to our lounges, where I decided to redeem our tickets for our complimentary rum punch. Woo hoo, free drinks! Not really, as they were included in our excursion price, and I wouldn’t exactly call them drinks. They were served in 4 ounce Dixie cups filled to the brim in ice, and more watered down than the ocean in front of us. Unsatisfied, I made my way back to shack, and asked for a Turk Head beer, which is the national beer of the Turks and Caicos. I read about this beer prior to the trip, and was jazzed to knock another beer off my list. I was not unsatisfied this time. The beer was like a hepped up version of Corona, both crisp and refreshing, yet with a punch. Also, their government warning is unlike the States, where alcohol hurts babies and wrecks lives. Their motto is “Moderation Tastes Better.” I like that. Also, a funny thing happened when I ordered a beer, he gave me a half empty capped bottle. Um, no. He gave me another and this one was ¾ full. Um, no again. Finally, he gave me a full to the top bottle. Apparently they have bottling issues at the brewery, or it was the fact that they were all reusable/refillable twist offs, which I have never seen before. Eh, when in Rome.


Turk's Head Beer

Returning back to our spot, I was dismayed to find that some ditzy couple had parked their lounges right in front of us. The beach was at least a half mile long, and these two numbnuts blocked our view! I imagine I need to lighten up, but you know I didn’t. They got into the water, and while Analee was back snorkeling, hunting for worn glass, I moved their seats. Soon after, another couple asked me to watch their stuff while they snorkeled a few hundred feet down the beach. “Sure” I said, but heck, I’m on vacation and not going to be tied to my seat while they frolic, just so I can protect their packs of Marlboro Reds. I watched them walk down the beach, and once they got in the water, I joined Ana to help her hunt for glass and seashells. No one was ever the wiser.

Once Ana got a good collection of glass, enough to make a trivet or tile, we boarded the bus back to the ship. Rinse and repeat. We quickly showered, changed clothes and went to the Lido deck for a fast lunch where instead of hitting the buffet, we decided to try the made to order deli. Being a sucker for a sandwich, I was salivating for a hot pastrami on rye. While we waited our turn, the girl in front of us wretched and open mouth coughed all over the food station! Luckily our food was already prepared and grilling, but this hooch didn’t have the decency to cover her skank troll mouth before hurtling unknown diseases onto the condiments. Grossed out, I managed to eat my lunch, and we made our way back to the island for some shopping.


Our Ship at the Grand Turk Dock

We went from shop to shop, but always seemed to return to this one shop that specialized in pearl/coral necklaces. Ana found a beautiful pearl necklace, but being the fashion butterfly, she had to have matching earrings. She set the staff on a wild chase to find earrings to match the pearl necklace, but amazingly they had none to offer. They tried to get her to buy some earrings that somewhat matched, but my SATC girl would have nothing of it. Right about this time, I realized that Mother’s day was on the horizon, and that although we agreed the cruise would suffice as a gift, I knew this not to be true. I had to keep my eyes peeled for a gift, and to find the time to buy one without her knowing…

From here, we sauntered over to the Jimmy Buffet Margaritaville Bar. Ah, commercialism. The place was packed with scantily clad patrons, and the pool was a venerable sea of skin and sexed out drunkards. Not exactly my spot, nor a place for my pregnant wife, yet, I wanted another Turk Head beer. We finally were served at the bar, and low and behold, they didn’t carry Turk Head. One would think a Grand Turk bar would carry the national beer, but heck no. Eh, when not in Rome.

After a few more shops and another run through the pearl necklace store, we went back to the ship and Ana napped for a few hours while the ship sailed to sea. I ended up watching some horrid Scooby Doo cartoon about Vampire Rock, but at least it was in English. Awake from the nap, we received our tickets for the Previous Guest Party in the Dynasty Lounge, where I once again took full advantage of the free bar. I think that evening I partook in a witches brew of red wine, a margarita, a martini, some blue concoction and a whiskey sour. I’m sure my liver and stomach had thought I’d lost my mind.

Feeling like a kite in a strong breeze, we met our tablemates for dinner in the Spirit Dining Room. During dinner, we found out that our tablemate, Cary, whose wife was coincidentally named Carrie, was chosen via a karaoke contest to be the Elvis Presley impersonator during the Friday after dinner show. Cary told me they were holding the Frank Sinatra and Elton John auditions that night, and maybe, just maybe if I had enough free drinks in me I’d be game to give Old Blue Eyes a run for his money…

For dinner, I dined on:

  • Salmon Truffle – disgustingly presented, but tasty
  • Caesar Salad
  • Caribbean Jerked Pork Loin
  • Some desert – I had had a lot of free drinks, so my mind is a little fuzzy on this one.
After dinner, we retired to the Dynasty Lounge for a Gameshow Trivia event, and settled in for another rousing dance routine until…”Oh God, did the boat lurch? Oh man, I don’t feel so hot. Did the boat hit an iceberg?” The Revenge of the Witches Brew hit me. Oh, and that witch hit me hard. I quickly made a staggered path to our room to flop into bed. Old Blue Eyes crown would remain safe from this usurper, and apparently, moderation does taste better.



Day 3 Towel Creature...Hmmm

UP NEXT: Cruise Chronicles: Imagination Day 4 – Heaven on Earth

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Cruise Chronicles: Imagination Day 2 - In Search of Gilligan's Isle

Prior to going on the cruise, Ana and I wanted to watch each sunrise. Too make a long story short that never happened. Not because we weren’t awake (our internal clocks are set to a waking baby at 6 a.m.), but because our bed was soooooo comfortable. Having fresh high thread count sheets every day, your bed made in the morning and turndown service at night spoiled me rotten. Plus, breakfast served in bed with the deep azure Caribbean Sea splashing outside your window made for some lazy mornings. Each morning started with a light breakfast of bagel, lox and cream cheese with coffee for me and tea for the misses. Why couldn’t we bring our cabin steward home with us?!?



Room with a View

Learning from previous cruises, we knew that the main dining room was open to all guests for a formal breakfast, so we would typically have breakfast in bed at 6, and breakfast in the Pride Dining Room at 9. No wonder I gained 8.5 pounds on the trip, and why by the 5th day my pants weren’t so roomy anymore. Time to head back to the gym…

Alas, we went to our second breakfast, where you are randomly seated with other cruisers. In the past, this has been a somewhat quiet affair, but not this day. We were stuck across from each other between two families, which should never have happened because if people followed proper dining etiquette, you always sit to the left of your lady. But judging by these morons, etiquette to them is raising their pinkie when they sip their Boone’s Farm Strawberry Wine.

As we were eating, we eavesdropped on our fellow cruiser’s conversations (how couldn’t we!). We overheard an awful previous cruise experience had by the unfortunate couple to my right. On their last cruise, they were tendered to an island (similar to how we were tendered on Day 4) and while on the island, a fierce storm developed. The seas were so rough that the guests could not be tendered back to the cruise ship. Roughly 1,000 guests were stuck on a deserted isle with minimal food, as lunch had already been served, and little protection from the elements. They told of guests hoarding food and blankets, bickering, fighting and overall dreadful sleeping conditions. The real injustice was that many had left their medications on the ship. Finally, after 24 hours, they were able to return to the ship where they received complimentary beverages, their cruise reimbursed and a future cruise for free! I think I could sweat it out on an isle for a night if I knew I’d be getting freebies! Yet, I feel for those who were probably sunburned, missing medication and overall frightened. Just thinking of terrified children makes me queasy. Would this be our fate on Half Moon Cay? Stay tuned for Day 4…

Now to my left, another equally disturbing situation was unfolding, yet not from a past cruise experience, but because of a righteous asshole. Making casual conversation with the elderly lady on my left, I noticed a red faced bespectacled buffoon lambasting the wait staff about the “consistency” of his eggs. “I ordered these poached! These are all runny!” he bellowed at the poor Filipino waiter, who apologetically removed the plate and took them back to the kitchen. Before leaving our sight, we noticed that the eggs were indeed poached, and slightly runny, AS POACHED EGGS SHOULD BE YOU INBRED IDIOT! And speaking of inbred, I learned that the ill-tempered ass was on vacation with his wife and his elderly parents, who wouldn’t even acknowledge his tirade over something so insignificant as the style of his eggs. It appeared they were terrified and/or mortified of his behavior. Later the waiter returned with “poached” eggs to order, which looked eerily similar to hard fried…This would not be my last encounter with this man, not by a long shot.



Me Looking Incredibly Chapel Hill-ish

Having completed my dual breakfast with a tasty dish of Eggs Benedict, Ana and I braved the Sea of Flesh, and made our way to the Verandah Deck for some sunbathing. Now, by no stretch of the imagination, I am no bo-hunk. I’m a 32 year old fun loving guy, who has eaten too many tacos and had too many beers in my past, yet, it was vacation, so I was game to blind my fellow cruisers with my 200 watt skin. We found two chez lounges on the balcony deck, as far as possible from the skinny, tan, drunk crowd, and relaxed between two Hawaiian Tropically-tan ladies. With us between them, it probably looked like a Double Stuff Oreo, with us as the pasty white cream filling!

Feeling the effects of the sun, I decided to brave the “fun” crowd and go down one level to the pool and hot tub. I immediately jumped into the pool in a veiled attempt to hide my “Truffle Shuffle” belly (By the way Ana has a video of my doing the Truffle Shuffle from the movie Goonies on the beach at Half Moon Cay. Decidedly, you will not see that video on this blog). Once I hit the water, I realized this was not pool water, but cool, salty sea water. As Ana put it, “It’ll give you a good nose enema.” Shivering, I jumped out of the pool and quickly slid into the hot tub, which was then quickly vacated by the other guests. Did I forget deodorant? While I lazed in the warm water, feeling the sun beat down on my face until I noticed three Barbies standing by the hot tub. Feeling thirteen (i.e., awkward about my appearance), I exited the hot tub and returned to Ana on the Verandah. As I sat down, she smiled at me and said “Those girls go in and soon as you got out!” I’m glad Ana likes my appearance.

Undeterred, I looked at Ana and said, let’s go down the waterslides! Back in October of 2007, the Imagination had a 55 million dollar upgrade, which included the installation of a water park on the rear of the ship. What a kids’ paradise. There were two “racing” slides, and a 4 story twisty curvy tube slide. I immediately gravitated towards the huge slide and begged Ana to watch me like I was a 5 year old trying to impress his mom. I patiently waited my turn, and then finally made it to the top. It had been decades since my last water slide experience, and the thought of twisting down a tube 4 stories above the 12th deck of a cruise ship slicing through the Caribbean was like a daydream. I braced myself, slid into the tube and immediately felt my swim trunks slide right up my backside, which felt like a different kind of “nose enema.” The ride was bumpy, scratched my back, but damn, it was awesome. I pleaded with Ana to do it but the sight of me pulling my shorts out of my back-crack probably deterred her from enjoying that stimulating experience.

Water Slides!

From there, we changed clothes and decided to, what else, go eat! We had our formal lunch again in the Pride Dining Room, and were seated with a family from Canada. The lunch was uneventful save for the Canadian conversation. We resisted the urge to make small talk with them about hockey, as Ana and I are huge Hurricanes fans. I thought it would be too cliché to discuss hockey with a Canadian, yet, what else would there be to talk about? Moose? Snow? Strange Brew? Anyways, we sat back, listening (we love to people watch) to the teenage girl talk to her mother about an island that was off in the distance. Her voice rose and said “I see land. That must be Cuba!” I looked out the window and saw a small island, oh, the size of Gilligan’s Island that had a single water tower on it. Now, I know Cuba is impoverished but I also know it is about the size of Florida and surely would have more than one measly, rusted water tower I smirked my pompous smile, and thought, girl, we are about 200 miles north of Cuba, plus we are traveling southeast and you are looking northeast. Even if you could see 200 miles into the distance, you are still looking out the wrong side of the boat, Blondie. As an aside, her boyfriend, who had Blondie’s mom as a third wheel (how romantic) ordered sushi, and promptly peeled the seaweed, ate the rice and left the filling. Guess that is a Canadian Roll.

After lunch, we cruised (bad pun) to the Xanadu Lounge on the Promenade Deck to attend the Art Auction. On our last cruise, the auctioneers were two sweet gents from South Africa. Prior to the auction, they decided to hold a raffle to win free art. To win raffle tickets, you had to answer trivia questions about South Africa, and the catch was you could never have visited the Rainbow Nation. Fair enough. I’d never been to the ZA, but boy, do I know a lot about that land. Needless to say, we got all the questions right (e.g., hippopotamus, Mandiba, Boers, etc.), and the raffle was loaded in our favor. We eventually came away with two lovely pieces that now reside above our fireplace and in Kendal’s bathroom.



Xanadu Lounge - Promenade Deck


Unfortunately, we had no such cosmic luck on this cruise. However, unlike the last cruise, people were actually bidding on the art! One Russian man bid approximately $20,000 on several original works by Anatole Krasnyansky, who paints in a distinctive bold color style specializing in hiding faces in his work. It was nice, but not $20,000 nice… There were a few original art works by a Miami pop artist that we liked, however, they were in the $1,200 to $2,000 range, which we could not justify purchasing. Maybe one day.

Krasnyansky's Work

After the art auction, we made our way back to the Dynasty Lounge for the Captain’s Cocktail Party. This party is a precursor to the formal dinner night, so Ana and I were decked out in our best. This for me meant I was wearing one of Dad’s old suits that just happened to be 100% wool. Trust me, wool is not something I’d advise wearing in the Eastern Caribbean. Although I looked dapper, I was more suited for an executive business meeting in December, and not a lobster dinner on a cruise ship in May.

The cocktail party was quaint, but really not note worthy save for the 5 free drinks I managed to slam down in 45 minutes. Five drinks on a cruise ship is about $30, so if you know my coal to diamond penny pinching antics, I was not going to let this pass by. After the party, we were immediately escorted to our formal lobster dinner in the Spirit Dining Room. As with my last lobster cruise dinner, it was lackluster. Dry, overcooked lobster that tasted as if it was freshly caught last week, flash frozen then trucked 1,800 miles to Miami where it sat in the ship’s freezer on dry ice for another 36 hours.

For dinner, I dined on:

  • Tiger Prawn Cocktail
  • Caesar Salad again (maybe, I can’t remember for sure)
  • Broiled Lobster Tail with Melted Butter
  • Warm Melting Chocolate Cake with Vanilla Ice Cream

Sated from an overhyped uncomfortably woolen meal, we made our way back to the Dynasty Lounge to watch the stage show America! The show was a tribute to all songs that had to do with cities or locations in the United States, plus a show stopping rendition of Coming to America by Neil Diamond. I know somewhere in Kentucky, Rob is salivating as I type this. The show was utterly corny, the singing was haphazardly done by a Wayne Brady look-a-like, and a woman who fancied herself Beverly D’Angelo from the Vacation movies. Her voice was so smoky she sounded like she had swallowed the entire ashtray. Alas, there were a few shining stars that included a dance couple from Russia who were amazing, and a showgirl Ana and I later met who was phenomenal. She showed grace and controlled movements, but perhaps our view was skewed as she was the only one with a dancer’s body (i.e., had shoulder blades and abs).

The show ended around 9:45, which is customarily around our bedtime, so off to those turned down sheets we headed!

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UP NEXT: Cruise Chronicles: Imagination Day 3 - Moderation Tastes Better

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Cruise Chronicles: Imagination Day 1 – Strange Encounters

The day began at the unholy hour of 4 a.m., awoken not to an alarm clock, but to the sweet heart wrenching cry of Kendal. Our 6 day journey on the high seas was about to begin, but without our pride and joy. For a brief moment, I saw the infinite depth of Ana’s love as she kissed Kendal and placed him in Mamaw’s bed. I knew at that instance this would be our last vacation without our children for the next 20 or so years, and as a family man, that is just fine with me. As Ana later told me, “It is great to spend time as a couple, but we are not complete unless we are whole.” I could not agree more.

Having checked our bags onto our free American flight to Miami (Thank you Citi Rewards Points!), we groggily made our way to our gate. Needing a rest stop, I entered the restroom and was cheerily greeted with a belch to the face that had a strong hint of Eau de Old Milwaukee. What a way to start a vacation!

After washing this dude’s booze ooze off my face, we were ready to begin boarding. We just settled into our cozy seats at the back of the plane, when low and behold, The Belcher came stumbling down the aisle with his Belcheress. They sat cattycorner behind us, and then came the cell phone calls. Ring, ring. “Dude, I’m going on vacation. Call Steve if you need help…” Ring, ring. “Dude, I’m …” Ring, ring. Dude, have you heard of voice mail? No, no, never. Methinks The Belcher liked the sound of his own blathering voice, however, blissfully the attendants made him turn off his cell phone after 4 or 5 calls. Upon which time, The Belcher began suction cleaning and tongue polishing his girlfriend’s wisdom teeth for the remainder of the flight. Slurp and burp. Certain people just have a way of getting under my skin, yet, this couldn’t go on forever, right? Right?



Bon Voyage, Miami!

Soon enough, we were beginning our final approach into Miami International, and the search for the transfer bus to the port was on. By the way, when I say International, I mean international. Perhaps I have lived in Franklin County too long, but I could not understand any of the Miami "locals." One exchange between Ana and a Carnival Attendant sounded like an Abbott and Costello “Who’s on First” routine. After several rounds of ¿Que?, Who?, ¿Cuando?, What?, ¿Como?, we managed to decipher the word venti-eight (28 for those who don’t speak Spanglish) and made off for Baggage Claim 28.

Securing our place in line for the Imagination bus, I found a Rey de la Hamburguesa, or a Burger-o King-o for the Spanish disinclined. Returning to our seats in line, Ana headed off for Round Two of ¿Que?, Who?, ¿Cuando?, What?, ¿Como?, and I was heartily greeted by a seemingly lovely older couple from Chattanooga, TN. As I sat down, she said “My goodness I bet you thought we’d never get here. Did you think we were lost?” I immediately thought, does Ana know these people from somewhere (which she did not), then said “No, Ma’am.” She next said, “Ma’am? Oh, I can tell you are from the South.” More like South California. I nodded in agreement, and she continued to drone on and on about Tennessee and black people going on our cruise. Sweet Mary, I do attract the loons, eh? Coincidentally, there was a large contingent of black people who appeared to be having a family reunion on the cruise. To which the Crazy Lady commented, “My goodness, do all black people know each other?” I nodded, and resisted the urge to comment that they are all “brothers and sisters” but I doubt she would have got the silliness of my bad black/reunion joke.

Luckily, the awkwardness on my part was broken when Ana reappeared with our transfer tickets and we began boarding the bus. Once on the bus, Ana told me that she and the Crazy Lady had an even WEIRDER conversation while I was gone about sunscreen and sunburns. To which Crazy Lady said, and I am not making this up, “I have to keep my face out of the sun, otherwise it looks like a cow pooted in my face.” Say what? The best we could deduce was that she gets freckles on her face from sunburns, but thankfully we will never know the answer. No sooner had Ana told me this, Crazy Lady and her husband sat down in front of us in the handicap seats. Why, Lord, why? My prayers were answered, and they moved to the rear of bus realizing the seats were reserved for handicapped. I breathed a sigh of relief, then felt the cruel hand of fate smack me upside the head, as The Belcher and his bloated babe plopped down in front of us. Shit. They were going on our cruise. I wondered if this had something to do with us missing church the day before…



Sailing Away!

I endured The Belcher during our brief ride to the port, while our Haitian driver gave us a “spoken tour” of the Miami area. I could not understand one word. Oh, my Franklin County ears. However, the only audible English he spoke was at the end of the ride when he clearly pronounced and annunciated “I am not an employee of the cruise line, therefore please remember to tip.” We tipped, retrieved our bags, carried them 10 feet to another Haitian who took our bags and then held out his hand. Ah, money, the international language.

Next we made our way into the Port of Miami. I will say this is a spectacular facility. It made the Norfolk and Jacksonville ports look like the minor leagues. There were at least 30 check-in terminals with flat screen TVs everywhere trumpeting the amenities of the Carnival Imagination. We quickly were in front of a Carnival representative who began our embarkation procedures. Midway through the process, the rep paused, looked at us with concern and said that there was a restriction on our boarding passes. Great. I’ve heard of the “do not fly” list, but the “do not sail” list? She took our passports and headed off to the main office. Ah, shit. We wracked our brains thinking of what it could be…

We were then waived over to the corporate office, where we were asked to sit and wait. An “official” looking man came sheepishly over and looked at me with trepidation. He turned to Ana and asked VERY delicately, “Your boarding papers indicate you are…expecting.” I toyed with the idea of looking at Ana and saying, “YOU’RE PREGNANT?!”, but I could tell that this reaction was what the employee was trying to avoid. We clearly stated, “No, we are not pregnant. We had a false positive and are definitely not pregnant.” Which is true, from a certain point of view.

That crisis passed, we were onto the boat where we entered the Grand Atrium on the 7th deck. This room was 7 stories tall and so awesomely gaudy, it was amazing. The room had two glass elevators, casino carpet, black-light paintings, enough neon for Times Square and was ringed on all seven levels with hundreds of Egyptian Sphinx busts with big ole’ boobies. Nipples and neon everywhere!



The Grand Atrium - Empress Deck

We got our frequent cruiser Sail and Sign™ cards (our key to some future free beverages) and headed to the Lido Deck for a bite to eat while our bags were being scanned and taken to our room (Riviera 211). Once on Deck 10, we settled in at the Horizon Bar and Grill, where according to Ana, I began to pout. The last cruise we took, Ana and I wracked up a ghastly three page $1,400 cruise bill on booze and excursions. It was awesome, yet not to be this trip because…

Back in March at a hockey game, I drunkenly agreed to a bet with Ana that the next time she was pregnant I would go the entire nine months without a drop of alcohol. Well, no less than 3 HOURS after we booked the cruise, we found out that Ana was indeed pregnant. No false positive as happened the month prior, all four tests came back gleaming blue! For your information, when we had begun the ticket ordering process, Ana did have a false positive, so in essence we did not lie to the concerned employee mentioned above. The reason we fudged admitting the next month’s pregnancy test was because if they knew she was pregnant, she was supposed to have written doctor’s approval to cruise (our ob appointment wasn’t until a few days after we got back from the cruise) and they wouldn’t allow her on any excursions. Now, no alcohol (which is a given) and no excursions for Ana would make for a not so fun cruise…which leads to my “apparent” pouting.



Mmm, Toxic Concoction at the Horizon Grill - Lido Deck

To this day, I will stand by my guns and say that I wasn’t pouting, but Ana disagrees. She looked at me, shook her head, got up and came back with a virgin Pina Colada and rip roaringly toxic concoction for me. All it took was one drink and I was smooth sailing. Must have been all the Bacardi 151 with a splash of fruit juice. For those who are interested, the cruise was a reprieve and I am back supporting mama, and don’t let her fool you, she had a few sips here and there ;-)

After sailing out of the harbor, we retired to our room where Ana took her customary 2 hour nap. I took this time to scout the ship, learn the decks and figure out the confusing elevator system. Trust me, if I hadn’t of done this, we’d still be stuck on the Verandah deck trying to figure out how to get to our room. Unaware that I had even left the room, Ana finally woke up (I did tell her where I was going, but she “sleep talked” the conversation). We headed up to dinner in the Spirit Dining Room, where we met our tablemates (I will discuss them later, as this post is already way too long).

I dined on:
  • Cherrywood-Smoked Breast of Long Island Duckling
  • Caesar Salad with Anchovies
  • Grilled, Aged New York Sirloin Steak with Three Peppercorn Sauce
  • Cheesecake with Strawberry Dipping Sauce


Dynasty Lounge - Atlantic & Promenade Decks

After dinner, we headed to the Dynasty Lounge, another spectacular room dedicated to bad taste and horrid décor, but that is what makes Carnival special. It’s like a floating Vegas Hotel. Anyways, we took our seats in the second level “balcony” of the lounge and sat back to watch Game Show Trivia. The first three contestants headed to the stage, and wouldn’t you know it, The Belcher was contestant number two (fitting). We watched him get completely annihilated, most likely due to his blood alcohol level being higher than his IQ. During this trivia debacle, Crazy Lady Cow Poot Face walked right in front of our seats, grabbed the brass pole next to our table, tried to swing on it (like a stripper, I guess), and tripped. Not wanting to extend our record setting run-ins with these two yahoos and having had such a long day, we cut the evening short and watched the waves splash beneath our starboard side window as the boat gently rocked us to sleep.

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UP NEXT: Cruise Chronicles: Imagination Day 2 - In Search of Gilligan's Isle


Friday, May 2, 2008

Bon Voyage!

My office door reads...



If you are reading this, you are at work.
Ha, ha, ha!


Who wants to bet that sign is vandalized or torn down?


Thursday, April 17, 2008

The Adventures Continue

The day is dawning on a new adventure for Circle A and T-Square. Beginning May 5th, we shall depart on an Eastern Caribbean cruise bound for Grand Turk, Half Moon Cay and the City of Nassau in the Bahamas. Shortly thereafter new adventures will be posted for your viewing pleasure. Unlike the last cruise, I will remember this entire cruise. Wink, wink...

Just to rub it in a little, here are a few pictures of our future island destinations aboard the Carnival Imagination.



Carnival Imagination




Cockburn Town, Grand Turk




Half Moon Cay, Bahamas




Nassau, Bahamas

I have also been hard at work on previous adventures that never made it to the old 360 blog. That blog took on a mind of its own, and failed to follow the main purpose of chronicling our adventures. My intent is to have these blogs be bound in book format for each calendar year, and serve as a history for our children. To qualify as an adventure, it must be: a life changing event; an overnight excursion; or be a place of significance...

Future adventures to come include (and some have been written, so they already have titles):

The Phoenix Rises

An Innocuous Note

The Birth of Bubba

First Date

2nd Date

Run Hill

Falls Lake

Stone Mountain

Washington DC

Anza Borrego (completed)

Indy #1

Richmond

Hot Springs

Cruise #1

Washington

Greenville

Cary

Louisburg

The Dark Side of the Luna

Wedding & Party

Ft. Knox #1 & Indy #2

Linville Falls

The Greatest Adventure

Thornbeer Fest

Ft. Knox #2

PCS Phosphate

Yadkin Valley Wine Tour

Ft. Knox #3

Ana, feel free to add adventures that I've missed...

Anza Borrego: Epilogue - Home Again



Mom & Dad

magnify

From my first trip as an infant, caged in a baby pen, to my last visit with Analee, Anza Borrego has been my Eden. From my early years until college, I camped in Agua Caliente at least once a year. If there has ever been a constant in my life, the desert is it. No matter what problems were occurring in my life, ups and downs in my family or worldwide strife, the desert was always there. It was either a reward or a refuge. It is an eternal home.

Growing up, I always felt like an only child, even though I have 4 brothers and sisters. All of my siblings left the nest by the time I was twelve, and I was the son of a traveling businessman. When I felt alone, the desert reunited my family. My sisters came in from college in San Diego. My too cool brother was there (if only for a brief skirt chasing rest). My mom was there, of course, and my dad made the time to be there.

As a child, the desert was pure joy. I played in the sand. Hiked on trails. Swam in warm mineral water. We had water balloon fights. We bravely traversed Moonlight Trail in the dark. We watched the rangers give presentations on snakes and stars. We made Easter eggs. We hiked Ghost Mountain. Although I’m sure I’m looking back with rose-colored glasses, it is special to me. It is the one place I can always know that we were a family.

Now those knowing how important family is to me, can probably relate to the issues I had a year or so ago. Again, my attempts to have a family and share my love failed. I was not angry. I was not spiteful. I was just sad. It was like a death. However, I soon realized that from death comes birth. What seemed like a curse was a blessing in disguise.

That is why I’ve never given up on my dream. My dream to have a wife that loves me and a family who I can love. I never gave up because all that soul searching during the past 2 ½ years has lead me to one constant in my life. In fact, two constants in my life, the desert, and most importantly, my family.

Now that you can see that the desert is so strongly connected to my feelings of family, you can no doubt understand why it was imperative for me to return after 10 years and to bring Analee. I returned, not to lick my wounds and seek refuge, but to stand tall and show my scars. I returned to get what I deserve, a desert and a family.