Friday, March 30, 2012

Week 5/6 - A haircut and the Tree of Life

Items of note for the week:

So i'll just start off with the really bad news.  My mustache was taken away in the night by some right wing conservative bureaucratic paper pushers.  My beard, stricken from grief, passed on,  the following day in the shower.  Maybe that's exaduration.  The long story is that you must adhere to the clean shaven policy unless you have religious beliefs that are against that.  I can't think of a verse in the bible that supports mustaches and beards.  Especially as bad as mine looked.  I did get my stache trimmed before it went away, at the barbers.  No sign on the door, you wouldn't be able to tell it was a barber unless you knew where Faiha Barber is.  I am constantly amazed by how bad-ass people can do things, and do them manually, rather than using electronics, or machinery.  Case in point, my hair cut.  The entire thing was done by scissors.  I think I got charged more because I asked him to trim the neck using the electric trimmer at the end, and trust me, he did not need a trimmer to get a clean edge, or a transition edge.  That I can understand too.  I should pay extra for the electricity, the maintenance, and any wearing edges on the razor.  I've been told that stylists will cut your hair with just scissors, but it'll cost more.  That's like asking an accountant to do your taxes, and he charges more to do it with an abacus.  I'm ok with him doing it with the slide ruler, but I'm not payin for it.  Anyways, the cut was nice, quick, and he rubbed my head with tissues, to get the hair out.  It really worked too!  Not a drop of hair anywhere on me for the rest of the day.  That was the first thing I noticed when I took a shower.  (Different place, not the hair cut place).  And then he asked do I want him to trim my mustache?  Hell yeah!  It looked less like a walrus in puberty and more like, well me with a stache.  Kinda cool, but generally kinda creepy, and filipino apparently.

The rest of last weekend was pretty quiet too, a friend made hamburgers and hot dogs, I brought over french fries, tossed in Tony Chacheres, some garlic powder and truffle oil.  Pretty good.  The hot dogs did not plump when I cooked em.  We drank a bunch of Budweiser.  The N/A stuff of course.  It's a very interesting tasting beer, I'll have to try a O'douls when I get back in the states.  But then I would hate myself if I did, so maybe not.  I found out vacuuming tile's kinda hard.  I left a tums in my pocket when doing laundry.  My clothes had a high pH, but was all very berry blend red.  Sorry, can't have exciting weekends every week.

Week 6:

Kinda a rinse and recycle weekend from the Bahrain trip the last week.  We did do some more site-seeing this time.  I didn't bring my camera of course.  Bleah.  We used our fancy company phones for this, so I'll upload them.  I talk about it a little bit below.  That night, quiet night, but we ate at a place called shrimpy's.  Fast food place, they shwarma everything.  Philly cheese steak shwarma, actually spelled awfully.  Something like fylli cheestik sanmich.  Once I figured it out, I ordered a regular chicken swarma.  Pretty tasty.  It's still cool how some of these places work.  There's a Walmart Greeter type guy at the door.  He shakes everyone's hand, with gloves on.  Then he goes picks up trash.  Who's the underpaid smart one here?  He's got gloves to pick up our crap, and then we shake his hand.  Glad I washed mine first.  Not everyone put those two together.  Haha.  We had some amazing thai food, it had a funny name.  Wang thai, or something like that.  *giggles*.  Should not have ordered the super spicy curry.  (See week 1 and the adventures of the squatter toilet).  I've adapted now to it though, just like a friend mentioned, you learn to stuff your "onesy,"  if you've work FRC, you know what I'm talking about.  I basically take the sleeves, stuff them in my pant legs, and roll it all up, or down, whatever your perspective is.  You have a flash-proof roll of clothing.  Still don't understand how to do this without holding onto the walls.  I swear, those guys must just get naked and go.  No more poopy stories.

This time, I spent a lot of times with some friends talking about careers and life, and how to best approach life.  Not sure I agree with all of what I heard.  But I can't say no to it, I haven't tried that yet.  And besides, the worst that could happen, well at least to me, is that I'll smell a little nicer, and have some nicer clothes.  Although if my jeans are too tight, I might only have girls for the rest of my life.  Haha.  Speaking of that, man, got swindled like suckers at the mall.  Perfume shop selling cologne.  Good smelling stuff.  started off about about 75% of retail price.  Ok, here we go with the haggling.  Let's see how far we can go.  Knocked down to 50%, still battling, alright let's try 25%.  They're balking, saying that's ridiculous.  That's all we're doing, final offer.  They take it.  We think we're making it off like bandits.  $25 dollars for good cologne, that  retails for 4 times the price?  Too good to believe.  Definitely so.  We did the first dummy thing, and didn't open the bottle right then and there.  We inspect the box, and bag.  They were most definitely legit.  The bottles, also legitimate.  The cap and more importantly the bottle seal, were fake.  I.e. refilled.  i.e. cheap ass cologne you buy by the gallon.  Same color though at least.  Needless to say, some people that I don't like too much, but am obligated to like are getting some good colored stuff.  And at least I learned the valuable less that every one learns, if it's too good to be real, it probably is.  The final clue should have been when the guy sold a buddy a fake rolex, that came in the real box.  Haha.  At least they didn't sell me a bridge.

Alright, tree of life.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_of_Life,_Bahrain


So we have some time to burn until dinner, and ask what's the best thing to do in the meantime?  We have beer in the car, and nothing to do.  Well, we can drive around and drink, or do something touristy.  Answer:  Both!  Let's go to the museum and visit the tree of life, and drink on the way there.  I'm glad our DD doesn't drink.  It makes us feel better about our safety.  The museum that we visited was right next to the tree of life, so we couldn't help but go.  It was a museum dedicated to the oil trade, and all the things that it spurred.  Now, Bahrain doesn't do much more exploration and drilling, but it still does a bit of refining.  So, in either case, it's still quite important.  We took some pictures in front of the original well that was drilled back in the 1900s.  Haha, looked like original equipment.   One of the guys that's a big wig now over here is in one of the pictures.  That's pretty crazy.




We then proceeded to try to get to the tree of life.  Now, what you'd usually see for a national monument is big signs, and big a nice paved road.  This is authentic old school stuff.  You have to definitely know where you're going in order to find the place.  The one thing that I still find great in the country is that (as long as you're a guy, sorry) everyone is quite friendly.  We were shamefully lost, and asked for directions.  They guy who didn't know us at all escorted us all the way to it.  No problem.  Mia mia.  (Saudi slang for good.  It means 100, 100 i guess it's like the percentage.  So so is then 50/50.  I think its noose noose, or something like that)  The tree is big.  And it's in the middle of nowhere.  And that's about it.  There's a fence around it that's new.  The tree was quite wet.  In the desert.  I'm assuming someone felt as though they needed to water the tree of life.  (with pee)  My favorite part of this entire trip is the two polar reactions that occur when we pull up to the tree of life.

1.  Pure amazement, seeing this large tree, in the middle of nowhere.  There is no water source, or anything near by.  Only a ice cream truck, of all things.  I don't think the ice cream truck has been there since the tree.  You start wondering how the tree got there in the first place, where the seed came from, and maybe, just maybe, if a tree can make it out here, then we can survive anywhere in the world in any condition.

2.  (From our Saudi friend who had been driving).  What the hell is this?  We drove for 45 minutes getting lost to look at a tree?  We have bigger trees than this in Saudi, what's the big deal?  You American guys are weird.  I'll go take you to a big tree that people pee on in Jubail, Saudi if you really want to.  Let's go already.  Ooh, ice cream.  Maybe it was worth the wait.

The rest of the car ride was both sides trying to convince the other who was right, no one won.  Alright,  now what?  We call the restaurant, and the earliest they can get us in, is  9:30 pm.  It's 6:00.  Hmm, what can we do?  Our driver friend recommends we go to a Saudi club... Hmm what kind of club?  Club with women.  Club with what kind of women?  Oh, you'll see.  Uh oh.  I think we all know what kind of club this is in the states.  Eh, let's give it a try, we all thought that this kind of stuff is prohibited over here.  So we go to the club, and it's pretty normal, no cover, which is expected, it's only 6:00.  We go in, there's a few women singing on stage, very traditional music.  Or maybe not, it didn't sound poppy to me.  There's a gaggle of girls in the back, all looking bored and hanging out.  Everyone is elegantly dressed, something like evening wear I suppose, long dress.  First thing I notice (sorry, i'm shallow) is that they all have big personalities.  Not fat, just very curvy.  Very curvy.  Kinda fat I guess.  Anyways, I digress.  It's dark like you'd expect, and we sit down, the waitress takes our order, and we all get a beer, i get a Walker Red and coke, and a few of us get some sheesha.  The water cooled tobacco stuff.  There's not much to it, you're smoking cooled smoke, not as filtered, some people claim the water filters some, which is probably true.  If you smoke a lot of the stuff, it could be worse than cigarrettes.  Depends on how often you smoke it.  It's flavored double apple, and it's pretty tasty.  Still bad for you, tsk tisk.  I digress again.  We all are just watching, seeing what's going on.  There are Filipino waitresses handing out flower necklaces to people.  We ask, hey what is that for.  "It's a tip for the pretty ladies."  Ok... So what she do for the tips?  Do?  She's doing it right now.  Standing there?  Yup.  She'll look your direction.  Ok... Hmm, what else?  Well they'll dance with you too.  Oh, ok maybe that's what they're talking about, a "dance."  So we watch for a while, they actually meant dance dance.  (Revolution, hahahahaha, aw, not funny).  So its in bad form to give a singer/dancer money directly, instead you give the Filipino waitress, in this case 3 bd (8 bucks) the money, and then she goes to the dancer, gives here the flowers, and tells her who gave her the flowers.  Ok, if you give her enough flowers, she looks at you more intensely?  And then eventually she'll go to you, and you do some awkward hand holding dance.  Still 6th grade style with 18" between yourselves.  Eh, it's a living I guess.  So the women singers get replaced by a guy, and he gets a bunch of flower necklaces.  Enough that you can't see him anymore, he's head to toe in bright red flower necklaces.  He's by far the most leyed person of the night.  (haha)  People continue to come in, and the club's getting busy.  There's a group of guys, and you can tell they're ready to party.  They all stand up in unison, and start dancing with each other.   Hmm, ok.  The girls just stand across from them as they dance.  Hmm.  This is a pg-13 strip club.  Maybe even PG.  By this point, my head's spinning due to all the tobacco in my head.  One of the other guys says screw it, and buys a girl a flower necklace.  They do an awkwad dance, neither of them really speak or understand what they're saying, but good for you, way to try something new.  Communication is 90% body language anyways right?  It's now 9, and we're ready for dinner.

Dinner time. We start making the drive back, towards the city, now that we're all treed out.  Dinner is at a nice Asian restaurant, asian fusion style food called Monsoon.  It was nice, and we were classy.  Until someone fell in the fountain.  In his defense, this was a fountain that was not curbed, and it was below us.  One of our friends who will remain nameless just took a step backwards, and, well caught himself, so all he did was go thigh deep (one leg) into the fountain.  Apparently this wasn't the first time, since the hostess, who was very nice about it brought towels, I mean bathing towels out immediately for him to dry off.  No one really laughed, everyone noticed, but we were the ones laughing the most.  Anyways, it was time for us to be shooshed away to somewhere, where we couldn't embarrass ourselves.  We had 5 people, and ate at one of those sit down booths, where you sit on the floor, but there's a sub-floor that you put your legs and feet in.  It gives an illusion of being close to the ground.  One of the guys will always order egg rolls and fried rice no matter where we go, regardless of the country of origin, if it's Asian.  So we order egg rolls for an appetizer, they have some Viet food which I jump on.  They have spring rolls with lemongrass beef, and one lemon grass chicken.  We definitely have to order that.  Main entrees were also quite tasty, some Thai curry, pad thai, Humour fish cooked in a nice broth, and some beef stuff I can't remember.

Our driver has some international lebanese music on that's quite catchy.  Poppy really.  I liked it, and proceeded to borrow the CD.  If you're interested, or want to help translate, it's:  Nancy Ajram.  Very mellow, and pretty.  She's quite a looker too.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Ajram

And that was all we really had time for, we had work the next day, and it was time to go home.  So we did, and continued trying to solve the world's problems one beer at the time till we got to the border, and had a nice long nap on the way back home.

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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Week 5 - Make it (Bah)rain

Items of note for the week:



Spent most of the week preparing myself for the weekend, and trying to say hi, and bye to the proud, the few, the "subject matter experts" that were still here for work.  Many of them, I knew from my previous work, and for the most part, being able to hang out with them as I transitioned over to working in Saudi was one of the big reasons why I feel like I'm doing OK over here.  It's always nice to have something familiar to cling on to, when you go to a big new scary place.  We didn't go anywhere too crazy for the dinners or anything, actually we ended up going to some fairly familiar places, and one new place.  Grillo's is a kinda fast food place, serving I suppose some Arabic, some American, and some Italian food.  It seems to me that most of the places here have some of the problems that make some of the restaurants really bad on that show "Kitchen Nightmares."  They have a ridiculous amount of food on the menu, with no apparent theme.  Super cheap though, so no big deal.  I tried a new side salad called Fattoush, very crunchy.  It sticks with the concept of everything here must have a higher proportion of carbs than anything else.  Tasty though.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fattoush
  Had a traditional Shwarma, and that was all there was to it in the for the restaurant.  I'm not huge on sweets, but the guys I were with do, so we dropped off at Baskin Robin's while we were there.  From last week's note, one of the guys that was at the beach camp, the guy who threw the party for last week, decided to play ball in his basketball cowboy boots.  Didn't work so well, especially when he twisted his ankle. Ouch.  He hurt it pretty bad, and pretty much limped the entire last week of work he had over here.

 (Funny side note, the language barrier can be a bit tricky, or funny depending on what side you're on.  He went to the work doctor to see if the doctor had anything to help him with the pain.  So he takes off his boot, and shoe, and pointed to an area on his foot, and says to the doctor that he hurt his ankle, and it hurts the most right here.  So the doctor looks, at the foot, then at him, and then pokes right there.  Friends' response.  OWWW!, why did you do that?!   Doctor goes and gets another doctor, and he proceeds to almost do the same thing, but friend is fast enough to pull his foot away this time.  Long story short, pain killers over here, even the numbing gel is much more powerful.  Nice. )

Dinner was at the Steak House, and Sailor's for the guys.  Food still good at both places.  One of the Saudi national guys came with us to steak house as well.  He forgot to check to see if the ketchup lid was securely closed before he shook it like a Polaris.  Like fate always has it, the ketchup ends up right on my crotch, and no amount of wiping would keep me from appearing that I wet my pants.  Plus you don't want to be the guy rubbing his crotch at dinner.

I wish my friends that were here temporarily here the best, and thank you for all the help, inside, but especially outside of work.

Bahrain:
So I'll start off by just saying details may be blurry, for the weekend.  There was a great deal of drinking involved.  I think.  I dunno, I can't remember the details, it was kinda blurry.  :-)

Bahrain is an island about 1-1/2 hour away from where we are.  It's its own separate country, and is connected to KSA via a bridge.  It honestly reminded me very much of the old section of Las Vegas.  It's the city of basically doing whatever you can't do in Saudi.  So bacon, alcohol, shorts, and women minus their  Abayas.

And what happens there, definitely stays there.  We leave the compound around 6:00 AM, drive the 1.5 hours, and cross over.  It's a slow down over there, and you realize very quickly that things move at their own pace, and no matter what you do, unless you know someone, will continue to move at that pace.  We took about another 1.5 hours to reach Bahrain after we enter the customs area.  No line either.  Just had to wait for coffee, tea, pee, prayer, chit chat, etc...

No big deal, no one's in a huge rush to get there.  Well, correct that.  I'm not in a huge rush.  First drop off is a place called Ric's.  The place is owned by some owner who originally is from Oklahoma.  So nothing but comfort food.  Kinda pricey for the area.  Oh, to get everyone confused / in the know, here's the exchange rates:

US - Saudi Riyals 1 dollar = 3.75 Riyal.  (Basically divide everything by ~4)
Saudi Riyals - Bahrain Dinar = 10 Riyal = 1 BD
US - BD:  2.65 dollar per BD.  (Basically multiply by 3)

I got biscuits and sausage gravy, with a side of bacon.  Cup of coffee as well.  Total after tip was 7 BD.  21 bucks for breakfast.  Sausage was good.  The driver ordered something that was actually tastier.  I traded one piece of bacon for one piece of tocino.  Tocino, which is spanish for bacon, is filipino for delicious pork with a little bit of skin and fat on it.  Should have gone with that.
http://www.pinoyrecipe.net/pork-tocino-sweetened-cured-pork-recipe/#axzz1oviHfEkL

Alright, so next we need to go pick up the rental car.  The island is pretty small, and you could drive anywhere in about 10 minutes.  There are taxis available.  However, the problem is that there are other people driving on the road.  Specifically crazy Bahrainian drivers.  And Saudi drivers.  Everyone is on their cell phone, texting, talking, making double lane turns, and running red lights for grins.  Granted, the light system is a bit different.  Sequence is Red - Yellow - Green - Red.  I guess it means to look for people running red lights before you go.

So, specifically, the costs of electronics is higher in the middle east, than it is in other parts of the world.  Therefore, things that can be done by cheap labor will be done before you buy a part that can do it quicker. Good example is car washing.  At least in Saudi, someone will wash your car for 10 Riyals.  Not a bad deal.  They do it with a damp cloth, sometimes there's even soap in the water.  But of course they can't rinse, unless you go to somewhere nicer.  Most places on the street get their cars washed with wet rags.  At our work, there's a person, maybe two, who's job it is to wash the cars everyday.  At least he gets soap, a hose, and sponges.  That's a luxury.  Back to the car.  Cars all look pretty nice from the outside, I mean they get cleaned a lot, probably every day.  However, the inside is going to get a little more wear and tear.  It's hard to vacuum a car, without a vacuum.  It's called a broom.  That doesn't work well on dirt, or food, or anything really.  So most of the cars are sticky, and dirty on the inside.  We spent quite a while trying to find a car that wasn't too sticky to get into.  It worked out ok.  I've been told though in the summer, when it's just stupid hot, all the cars smell like sweat and b.o.  Gross.

Cruzin down the road, we drive around getting our bearings.  Drove by the Grand Mosque, and start towards the "Specs" store.  The store opens at 12:00 PM, and there are no labels on the building.  In fact it looks more like a warehouse.  It's not very big, maybe the size of one of those sketchy liquor stores you see on the wrong side of town.  But, there's only two in all of Bahrain, so we get what we need.  I get a bottle of Jack, the other guys get some beer, and gin.  It's pricey, but hey.  The bottle of Jack is 21bd.  I don't quite put together that Jack's pretty cheap in the states, well, because it's made in the states.  It's considered a premium beverage over here.  Eh, oh well.  We head to the hotel, it's a Marriott, pretty nice, split between 3 people, so not too bad.  We're on the 14th floor, and have a very nice view of the city.

It's lunch time now, and we head out to eat, at the hard rock cafe.  Pretty neat place, they have beer on the menu, and it's overall a good time. The burger's pretty tasty, the waitress seems tired of all the ex-pats hitting on her, so we leave her alone.  Almost all the people we meet that are in customer service, waitresses, hotel receptionists, are all Filipino women.  They all speak English very well, and maybe it's only been a month, but they're definitely a sight for sore eyes.  We drive around, check out some of the sights, drive by some of the more infamous places, I won't get into that, haha?  We BS around, and head out to dinner.

Bushido:
http://www.bushido.com.bh/

What can I say about this place.  The place is gorgeous.  It reminds me exactly of those places you see in Vegas.  Just over the top, and gorgeous.  Very dark though, that's part of the ambiance, which I don't get.  It hides the beauty of the food.  Anyways, we are served Sake from a bamboo bottle thing, and order a little bit of everything.  Some teppanyaki, chicken skewers, sashimi, and sushi.  Nothing too crazy, just stick with the basics.  All done very well.  Nothing like Uchi over in Houston, but pretty tasty.  The bar upstairs is amazing, and fully stocked.  I had a white Russian.  No milk though, all cream.  Definitely rich.

We go hit the night clubs as well.  Won't go into the details again, it's another haha? moment.  Long story short, the drinks were nuts, 7.50 bd for a whiskey sour (whiskey is an import, don't forget) I got a smoke off of a filipino dude, who was drinking one of those long island iced teas that are blue. I can't remember what they're called, but they're strong.  Good for him.  Very limp wrist-ed guy though.  But then again, many of them are like that.  Meh, cultural thing.

Next day, pretty quiet, hung over, breakfast bar was complimentary, the mall was huge, and didn't shut down during prayer time.  We walked around, went to the movie theater.  It was quite up to date. Saw "Act of Valor."  Very intense movie, acting was what you expect from real Navy Seals.  It was very much like a video game, i.e. first person views, heavy breathing, explosions.  I liked it, critics didn't like it, but then again they're looking for character development, and deep value.  This is an "America, fuq yeah!" movie.  I'll agree with that.  We then proceeded to get some hookah, i.e. sheesha, i.e. hubbley bubbly, and dinner.  Schwarma again, and Iranian beef.  Not that different than fajita meat in flavor.  If you haven't smoked sheesha, it's an experience.  Very bad for you, the water "filters" a little bit, but mainly cools down the smoke so you can smoke more.  All flavored.  We got the double apple.  Very sweet.  An hour session is the equivalent of smoking like 5 cigarettes or something like that.  There's a valve on the hookah that increases/decreases the amount of air that mixes with the smoke before you pull.  Yeah.  Keep that valve fairly open.  You'll get light headed in no time.  It was difficult to stand up after an hour or so.  Meh, I'll do that once in a while, not all the time.  We got a text message that there was a major protest next to the mall we were just at.  Lucky for timing I suppose.  I was pretty much spent at that time, and we proceeded back home.  Now I won't get into the other part of this story with one of the guys from work.  He's a very cool guy, young, and is taking advantage of his Saudi citizenship.  He told me a few of his perks, but I have to verify with some other people before I post what he says.  Basically he's getting paid mad cash.  I'm sure I'm leaving something out, but I think this entry's long enough.  Some of the pictures are posted on flickr, and I didn't get to take many touristy photos this weekend, but I'm sure I'll be back to take more.

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Letter to *********

       Hey homey, hope all is going well over there.  I'm glad I got a hold of you on facebook the other day.  For some reason, that really made my day.  We didn't talk too much about anything serious, or much at all, but it was nice to see that you're still that awesome person.  I hope you're feeling better over that "oopsie" the other day, and learned from it.  Same thing for the other person.  That's the difference between experience and mistakes, a smart person doesn't repeat experiences, they learn from them.  Or something deep like that.  Anyways, the acrobatic yoga pictures boggle and do other things for me that are inappropriate to say in the blog, but in either case, I find the concept amazing.  That takes balance, strength, and a lot of practice.  I'm glad you're advancing in your yoga instructor skills.  Did you ever finish that paper?   Did you start writing it?  Haha, I'm sure you did.  I see that you're doing a photo shoot with the blue bonnet flowers.  I'd expect the pictures to come out amazingly.  I hear the weather has been a little wetter down there, so that's always good for the flowers.  That picture of your little one in the flowers is always neat, and I hope you've been doing that every year, so you can see her grow, in the bluebonnets.  I'm hoping you're spending good quality time with here over there, as she learns from mom, and gets more and more independent.

For some reason I was looking through my email, and I saw my old myspace link.  I wrote a poem in it, surprisingly.  It was actually pretty nice.  I'm surprised I wrote that.  I also wrote some pretty silly angry rant on it too. It's kinda funny to read both of them, and still know that I wrote both of them.  I hope it's not a sign of being bipolar.  They were 3 months apart.  I'll post the poem next week I think.  It should be a quiet weekend this week I think.  I spent way too much money last weekend in Bahrain, all on fun things, but I can't be doing that every weekend.  Just like you, I got my goals that I gotta keep on track for.  None of them are very exciting, and I'll probably blow em on vacation, but for the time being, I'm saving up for something.

Well, take care, holler at me if you see me online, and I'll do the same.  I think one time you said something like you tend to get worked up about things, I don't know why, but you have the exact opposite effect on me.  Getting a chance to talk to you, or whatever erases any frustrations, or anxiety of the day.  It's a great feeling, and although you may say you're not doing much, it's pretty cool.  Thanks for that, and keep being that amazing person we all know you are!

-Huy 

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Week 4 - Tossing Fruit in a Sandstorm

Items of note for the week:

Week started off pretty quiet as usual, went to a nice steakhouse for dinner on Saturday.  The salad reminded me of the salads available at Souper Salad.  Steak was placed on a hot rock, and slowly sizzled as I ate it.  Pretty tasty, and with good company.  Got to talk to the parents and sister via Skype on Saturday.  That made the night for sure.  My new stache/beard thing that I got going on kinda confused mom and dad.  They think it's so that I'll fit in better.  I just think it's cool.  Maybe not.  I'm still keeping it.  The weather has been pleasant, almost warm some days, but not enough to complain about.  It has been super windy.  With wind in the desert, you get sand storms.  It's gloomy outside, kinda brown.  The big difference, is that there is tiny sand blowing all over the place.  Not enough to sting your face, but enough to get in all your nooks and crannies.  I really have to wash behind my ears now, and blow my nose more often.  Might have to let my nose hairs grow longer to filter all that extra sand, haha.
http://astorblack.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/mi4sandstorm.jpg?w=540


Played some cards sometime mid week, it was nice.  Incredibly delicious spicy sausage.  Crazy game.  I've never seen so many 4 of a kinds, straights, or full houses.  None of them were mine, but I was lucky enough to get second place.  Made my night.  Well the sausages reminded me of what happens to spicy found in my gut as I was going to work.  I was 1/2 an hour late to work because of that.  Which isn't that big of a deal compared to what I had to deal with in a couple of days.

One of the guys that I worked with previously, and who traveled over here short time, left this last Wednesday, which was kinda sad.  Good guy though.  Anyways, we took him out to dinner at a fancy Chinese food place.  Well, it's one of the very few Chinese food places here.  Good amount of food between 5-6 people.  Nothing crazy, egg rolls, garlic fried rice, tempura shrimp, shredded garlic beef, sweet and sour chicken, dry hot pepper chicken, and some other shrimp stuff.  Hot and sour soup was pretty tasty too.  100 riyal a person, which is pretty pricey for Chinese food, but it's so foreign here in KSA, that people pay more for it.  It's like how we pay quite a bit more for food at Nikko's Nikko's.  It's a lot of food, but it's still expensive.  But that's not the point.  The dry hot peppers, if you haven't had one are literally that, dried, and HOT.  Well, some of them are.  The ones I had definitely were.
http://image.made-in-china.com/2f0j00PMOtzjHfakgD/New-Crop-American-Red-Chili.jpg
No big deal at the time, there was plenty of actual iced tea to wash it down.  The next day though.... So right before a stifling 3 hour staff meeting, my stomach starts rumbling, and I need to use the bathroom.  If you know me at all, then you know that I wait until the very very last minute before taking a poo.  I'd rather run and try to make a photo finish than sit on the pot and get a misfire.  I think it's a total waste of time if I have to go to the bathroom and don't relieve myself.  TMI.  Alright, to the point.  If you read my first blog, you'll know that they have squatter toilets, and regular toilets.  I wear mechanic's coveralls.
http://i21.geccdn.net/site/images/n-picgroup/91380.jpg
If you notice, it's basically a onesy.  So if you have to use the toilet, you completely drop the top of your shirt down to the ground.  No big deal normally.  However, a couple things about people who are used to using squatter toilets, and who clean themselves before prayer time.   So there's a drain next to the toilet, and a hose in the stall.  You wash yourself down in the bathroom.  So the floors are obviously wet.  Secondly, if you've never had to touch a toilet seat, the concept is pretty gross.  You wouldn't touch it, and if you had to pee, well, you know how women complain sometimes about leaving the toilet seat up?  (Because it's so hard to look at where you're about to sit?)  It's worse if they just pee on the seat.  Alright, combine the three scenarios.
1.  I have to poop fire.
2.  The floor is wet.
3.  There is pee all over the seat.

I'm in a hurry.  I grab toilet paper, and try to dry off as much pee as I can, and drop the bomb.  I sit down and realize two things.  Firstly, I missed wiping the inside lip of the toilet seat.  Gross.  2.  The arms of my nomex onesy is sitting in water.  Double gross.  I wipe over and over, hoping that somehow this cleans the horror of sitting in pee.  And I just pooped fire.  So it's not the best thing in the world.  Oh, and it's not super soft, cottonelle either.  It's generic Costco brand tree bark.  Well, at least the pee's sterile.  I go to wash my hands, try to dry off arms, and go to meeting.

During meeting, I smell this weird smell of cigarettes and pee.  I look around, thinking it's someone else, but eventually find the smell emanating from my sleeves.  And then the light bulb hits.  If I was peeing all over the seat, why wouldn't it splash on the floor?  My arms are covered in pee, and I cannot leave this staff meeting, since I'm already late.  Normally the staff meetings are 1 hour.  This one is 3.  By the time the meeting is over, the pee has dried up.  I haven't payed attention to anything in the meeting, because my arms are now covered in dry pee, and cigarettes.  The slight ammonia smell wouldn't have had been so bad, had it not been the slight finish of cheap cigarettes at the end.  Needless to say, I was pretty much mortified, and there was a lot of washy washy, gagging, gagging, sobby, sobby at the end of the meeting.

So one of the other guys that I knew before coming over here, is leaving next week, and some of the guys wanted to throw him a party as well.  This is done at a place called "Beach Camp A."  It's owned by the company, and it's pretty nice.  Place to fish, big area to hang out, basketball court, and a volley ball court.  One of the nationals offered to buy all the food.  There are 2 shifts that hang out.  The majority of our workforce are Filipino contract workers.  They get paid very very little for how much they work.  I won't go into the details, as it's not published.  But trust me, it's jack squat compared to what we get paid, but then again, it's a lot compared to what they could get at home.  It's all about perspective.  Anyways, the guys do get home, and food, but it's a small dorm style apartment, with multiple roommates, and bland crappy food.  So, they all showed up for this party, maybe 50-75 people total at the camp.  It's pretty quiet, people are hanging in their clicks, kind of waiting to see what's next.  You don't have the option where there's beer and alcohol to help stimulate discussion.  So, the fruit arrives, as an appetizer.  A box of bananas, box of granny smith apples, box of red delicious apples, and a box of oranges.  We're all kinda staring at it, not knowing the best way to distribute.  One of the contract guys says, "Hey, throw an orange over here."  And it begins. He gets an orange thrown at him, and he drops it.  Everyone laughs, and another one is thrown at him, he drops it again.  Some of the other guys are yelling, "Hey, throw it at me, I'll catch mine."  OK, you asked for it.  It's food fight time!  Only we have all the ammo on our side of the table.  All the contract guys aren't going to throw it back, they'd rather eat it.  So we start throwing fruit all over the room.  The room itself is probably about 100' x 200' long.  We're lobbing fruit, and zipping it along.  Tossing most of the fruit, but there are some cocky guys, who you just gotta zing an apple at em.  4 boxes of fruit, 50-75 hungry Filipinos = awesome.  The bananas didn't throw too well.  The oranges actually split pretty well when they hit the wall.  All the fruit is consumed.  We then proceed to play some 5 on 5 basketball, I'm awful at basketball, plus I'm out of shape.  The contract guys kick ass, and don't even break a sweat.  I'm soaked from the game.  But it's time to eat now!  What a spread.  Mixed grill, pizza, and KFC.  Can't beat that.  All the food is eaten, we take pictures.  Everyone loves to be in pictures, and it's 45 minutes of just taking pictures with the Americans.  I look Filipino, so no one really wants pictures with me.  They wouldn't know the difference, except that I don't look hungry, aka FAT.  It was a really fun night.

One of the other guys from work has a tent out in the desert, and with the guy I mentioned above leaving, they wanted to throw him a different party.  So this is literally a place out in the desert, probably about 45 minutes south of where we live, about a kilometer off the highway.  We first stop off at the Harley Davidson shop, pick up some souvenirs, I take some pictures, and we start heading to the camp.  We cross city boundaries, and take off onto a dirt road to the camp.

It's kinda a dirt road, but not really.  More of a sandy, I hope you have four wheel drive kind of a road.  The building itself is very nice, and he's an incredibly gracious host.  He tells us that it's customary for the host to literally host everything, including pouring drinks for everyone, bringing out the food, and to not relax honestly.  He provides both tea, and arabic coffee.  Very different from the traditional type of coffee.  It's freaking delicious.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabic_coffee
There's dates, caramels, and assorted nuts.  The nuts are coated in lime salt, and I couldn't stop eating them. We come into the same situation as last night, where you chit chat and BS for a while, and then it gets quiet. We go outside to explore.  Now the other ex-pats have been making the "Hey, if you hear a camel grunt, you have to cup his balls to make him stop, haha."joke all day.  Yeah, all day.  Ha ha.  The guys show us how they get water, apparently, there's a buried freshwater pipe, not pressurized, so you have to pump it up to the surface.  We watch as he primes the pump, and there's water.  Pretty neat operation actually.

 I see camels way in the background.  I grab my camera, and start taking pictures.  Same joke as above.  Yeah, yeah, I can't hear the grunts, so it doesn't count.  We notice that there's an actual herd hanging out pretty close to where we were.  We start heading that way, hoping to get up close and personal.  I ask if they're wild, but our host tells us that they're owned by someone, and they're just grazing.  Just like cows.  They're domesticated, and don't really mind us.  So we pet, and take pictures, and make camel toe jokes.  They are big animals.  Very lean too.  It explains why the camel I ate the other week was so dry.  No fat on them at all.  Interesting thing about them.  No flies anywhere near them.  When I think of cows, I think of flies, and genuinely smelly animals.  These animals are pretty clean, don't smell, and we don't see flies.  There are flies, we saw that around the food back at the camp.  Clean animals.  Good.  We start walking back to the camp.  I find a hole in the ground, and start trying to take pictures, and am out of sight.  The camel starts grunting, and I hear a laugh, and a "Huy, where you at?  He's lonely."  I stay on the ground and wait out until the punchline is over.

We go back, and hang out for a while, dinner's in a few hours, and the time just passes by as we hang out, small talk, and watch the sand continually pass us by.  More and more people show up, one brings a remote control helicopter which gets picked up by the strong winds, taken out of range, and crashes.  It gets dark, a little chilly almost, and after a while, dinner arrives, and it's a great amount of food as always.  Fresh hummus, tabbouleh, grape leaves stuffed with rice, cream of chicken soup, braised goat and rice, mixed grill of chicken and beef, some salads, and lasagna.  Weird.  But all very delicious.  We all were hungry, and eat too much, watch the truck driver who brought the catering food and tables almost get stuck in the sand, and then almost take out the water tanks.  We laugh, and make the long drive home.  We're all pretty exhausted, stuffed, and pretty content for a relaxing quiet day at the beach.  Well it's like a beach minus the ocean.  

To see the photos,
http://www.flickr.com/photos/75661280@N07/

Let me know ahead of time, so that I can put you on the friends list to access the photos.
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Letter to:  ******

Sup dude.  Hope everything is going well back in H-town.  I saw that you all did the 10k, I'm jealous.  I don't have too much motivation to run, but I still try to run at least the 5k.  I can't think of too much to say right now, but that I'm doing ok over here.  Getting adjusted pretty well, things are still kinda sur-real mostly, and I'm enjoying the fact that everything here is different and new, even if it's boring things that other people do every day.  One more month, and I'll either be doing start-up work, or on vacation for travel, so it'll be cool either way.  I definitely miss family dinner, the fact that Saturdays are my Mondays, and my Mondays are Wednesdays still confuses the heck out of me, but it's cool anyways. That's all I can think about right now, keep cool, keep losin weight, keep kicking ass, and I'll see you in 1-3 months, haha.  Send my best to the fam, and talk to you later.

-Huy