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Tuesday, August 11, 2015

A Reimagined Home

From The Huffington Post - 

Swanky Shipping Container Home Is The Brilliant Result Of Up-Cycling

Try and "contain" your excitement.

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Is this a shipping container, or a penthouse?
Well technically, it's neither. It's a 2,192-square-foot shipping container house, and it's further proof that we're all doing life just plain wrong
The house is in Denver, and it's made from seven shipping containers, like the kind you'd find hauling cars on a cargo ship. But instead of looking like a pile of abandoned steel inside, this home is impossibly luxurious within. It's a brilliant result of up-cycling, aka the process of turning discarded materials into something of higher value. In this case, it's much higher value. Check out the photos below.
  • This home features a massive open-concept dining and living space, with high-tech heating and cooling systems. Natural light washes over crisp white walls, polished wood and stainless steel accents.
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  • In the kitchen, a built-in countertop stove and sleek hardwood floors make you forget you're standing in a shipping container.
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  • Three bedrooms make an amazing use of sunlight. From the master bedroom, a spiral staircase leads to a rooftop with views of the Rocky Mountains and the Denver skyline.
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  • Did we mention that all this is in a shipping container?!
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  • The home's floor plan also reveals an office, 2.5 bathrooms, a two-car garage and a backyard. It's a slice of recycled paradise.
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The LoHi Container house (aka 3538 Pecos Street) is listed through Proform Real Estate, a Denver-based management company, for $749,000. No offers have been made, but agents and potential buyers have shown interest in the property, spokesperson Aaron Weinzapfel told The Huffington Post. In other words, it's still wide open for us to place a bid.
We can hardly contain our excitement.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/shipping-container-house_55c4d6aae4b0d9b743dbe926?kvcommref=mostpopular

Where I Live


Just above the red dotted line on the left is where I live.  It is spelled "As Sila" here, but it should be "Al Sila."  You see that I'm very close (9 miles) to Saudi Arabia.  The latest census has the population of Al Sila at 7900.  That's more than seven times the size of China, Texas (population 1100), where I was born and raised.  I believe this is why I've adjust so well to being here.  I don't mind the isolation and I absolutely love the peace and quiet.  And added bonus - there's never any traffic or lines.

If you follow the coast going east (right), you come to Abu Dhabi, three hours away from Al Sila.  Keeping going for another hour, and you're in Dubai.

The little cities east (right) of Dubai are the other five emirates - Sharjah, Ajman, Umm al Quiwain, RAS Khaimah and Al Fljairah.  Abu Dhabi is the largest emirate by far, followed by Dubai.  The emirates are city/states.

Southeast of Dubai is "Al Ayn," commonly spelled as "Al Ain."  This is where I lived for two years.  It's about an hour and a half from both Abu Dhabi and Dubai.



This is a map of the Middle East.  The UAE is just south of the Persian Gulf.

I hope this helps to when someone asks, "Where in the world is she?"

Cuba . . . One More Time

This really was one of the best trips I've had.  I encourage you to add it to your bucket list.

I've included some tips to getting around.  Forgive me if I've repeated something from a previous post.

Below is a business card of a guy in Cancun who helped us tremendously navigating to Havana.  He said flights and hotel rooms could be booked ahead of time thru him. This would definitely reduce the anxiety that we experienced with so many unknowns.




There was no problem using ATMs in Cancun.

A currency converter would be helpful.  I have one on my phone that is a lifesaver. It's linked below.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/converter-plus-units-currencies/id370146222?mt=8

We had to secure Mexican pesos in cash to purchase the plane tickets to Havana.

We also needed to purchase a visa to enter Cuba.  They were $25 each.  We paid for these with US dollars.  I'm not sure if this was a requirement or not.  Assume that it is though.  Interestingly, in my experience, most visas require US currency.

Remember to bring US cash into Cuba, and convert it at the airport.  With rare exception, you'll need to pay for everything with cash.  Remember also, US credit/debit cards are currently not accepted.  Hopefully this will change soon.

We didn't even try to bring cigars back, for fear the customs agents at the gate would be smoking them instead.  In hindsight, it looks like we may have been able to. Maybe.

Check out the link below for more info.

http://qz.com/315114/americans-can-now-legally-import-cuban-cigars/

OK.

I promise.

This is the last post on Cuba . . . today.

Final thought -

Below is the airport tower in Cancun.  I love this and tried to get a photo but it was a dud.  This is one I found online.



Monday, August 10, 2015

Mac & Cheese in a Cup

Instant Mac & Cheese in a Mug
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
  • 1/3 cup small macaroni elbow noodles (uncooked)
  • a scant 1/2 cup water
  • a scant 1/4 cup milk
  • 1/2 cup pre-packaged finely shredded cheese (we like a cheddar/jack blend)
INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Put the macaroni and the water into a mug. Microwave on full power for 2 minutes. Stir. (Note: the water will boil over just a bit, that is fine)
  2. Microwave for another minute. Stir. 
  3. Microwave for a fourth minute, and then check to see that all the water has been absorbed. If not, microwave a bit more, until it is gone.
  4. Stir in the milk and shredded cheese and microwave for a final 30-60 seconds. Stir well, and enjoy.
NOTES
If you are grating your own cheese, try adding a pinch (1/8 tsp) of cornstarch to the milk.

http://theviewfromgreatisland.com/instant-microwave-macaroni-and-cheese-in-a-mug/

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Back Home

After an amazing month or so in the US, I'm back home in the UAE.

Thankfully the 15 hour flight from Houston to Dubai was great, with a seat with lots of legroom, close to the restroom, essentials for a long flight.

I've got a couple of weeks before I start work again, plenty of time to rest from my travels.

Thanks to all of you who helped to make my time in the US wonderful, especially my guys and their families.

Alternatives to Hotels

The previous post got me thinking about AirBnB, a great alternative to hotels.

Essentially it is a service where people rent rooms, apartments, or homes directly via this website.  Once you have a location, go to the website, plug that in and see what's available in the area you'll be visiting.

After you've made your selection, you indicate when you'll need it and then you'll be contacted by the owner.

I've used AirBnB twice.  Once in New York City, and again in Cape Town, South Africa.

Both were apartments and both times were great!

I've included a link to the places where I stayed.

Check them out for yourself.  This is a service worth considering.

https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/200211

https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/38707

Homes for Rent

This was kinda fun scrolling through these fabulous homes all over the US that are available for rent for large group get togethers.  Check out the insane prices for some of these places.

http://www.usatoday.com/picture-gallery/travel/destinations/2015/08/04/50-great-houses-to-rent-across-the-usa/31118487/




Thursday, August 6, 2015

Painful But Necessary?

From The Root - 

Why Black Folks Should Watch the 1st GOP Debate

It’ll be worth watching to find out if the candidates at this Cleveland debate are asked about the police shootings in Ohio that have claimed so many lives.

Posted: 
 


And then there were 10. Fox News, in all its political wisdom, finally managed to whittle a crowded circus tent of 17 Republican presidential candidates into 10 bona fide, top-polling, first-Republican-primary-debate contenders. All men and overwhelmingly white (save a retired black neurosurgeon and a onetime wunderkind Cuban American), these self-ascribed castigators of conservatism will descend upon Cleveland and engage in an epic sword-clashing fight of rhetorical barbs that may leave our throats dry once it settles.

With the gladiator straw-pick out of the way, now’s the time for black people to rearrange Thursday-night schedules, call up friends and family, and watch every minute of the most official kickoff of the 2016 presidential season we’re going to get before Labor Day.
For proud members of the active body politic, our popcorn is already picked out and debate watch parties penciled in. But for many, it will be a chore. And for others, it’s not even an option: Who wants to spend Thursday-night prime time watching mostly middle-aged white men squabble over primary turf?

Easy answer: You have no choice. If a recent Fox News poll is accurate, we have a problem if black folks are nearly 10 percentage points behind their white peers when asked about “interest” in the election. We can’t possibly make this much noise over police brutality and inequality, and yet not closely follow our national-leader selection process with the same passion with which we stalk a wack, open diss battle of questionably literate emcees. Here are five reasons you should watch the debate:

1. You need to know what they’re up to. To paraphrase Chris Rock: “Anyone who makes up their mind about an issue before they hear the issue is a fool.” Of course, we hear Republican background noise all day, even when we least expect to hear it, so we think we’ve got the GOP all summed up in one white-sheet-wrapped nutshell. Not. Because if we did, the collective black electorate would be a bit less shocked and a little more prepared when Republicans say and do things it doesn’t like. And, sure, we get it: The GOP primary will be lucky if 3 percent of Republican voters in it are black by Super Tuesday. Black people don’t vote red ...

But, honestly, you don’t have to like red to vote for it, meaning: We really should start considering how to put some skin in both the GOP and Democratic nomination games. Don’t come crying if you didn’t have some say in who picked the government-cutting, war-hawk white guy calling global shots. Ultimately, one of these 10 dudes could be the next major-party nominee for leader of the free world—along with a 50-50 chance that he’ll end up in the White House. Don’t get left out.

2. It’s in Ohio: land of police violence and bellwethers. It doesn’t go unnoticed that the first debate of the season is in the Buckeye State, arguably viewed as the biggest battleground state of them all. We also know that lead debate moderator Chris Wallace has “some doozies” planned for the Big 10, and we know debate interrogators get to ask only 20 questions during 90 minutes of yelling suits. But what we don’t know is if moderators will ask the most important question to ask while in Cleveland: We’ve had four of the most high-profile killings of unarmed African Americans by police in Ohio, with two that happened right here in Cleveland, including that of 12-year-old Tamir Rice. No one has been convicted or sent to jail yet. What would you do as president to address this?

That is really the ultimate “doozie” to ask in a room full of mostly white Republicans, since they’ve successfully skirted the so-called #BlackLivesMatter issue, thanks to a summer full of Trump. We need to assess responses, sweat levels and the number of times they reach for water if it’s posed. Now, even though it’s Fox, there’s a chance that moderators will ask a very watered-down version of the question above—but don’t hold your breath if you think they’ll mention victim names.

3. We need to see why so many white people dig Donald. As a nation, we’ve been so infatuated with Donald Trump all summer that we haven’t pressed candidates’ stands on key issues. But now black viewers should see what Trump is really like when facing adversaries—those he relentlessly clowned on the campaign trail—and gather more clues about white Republican-primary voters driving his support.  

According to recent polls, they dig him quite a bit—one reason he keeps defying gravity week after week as the present front-runner. The latest Marist College poll (pdf) shows him with 22 percent white support (along with, interestingly enough, 23 percent Latino support). Public Policy Polling shows (pdf) him with 31 percent white favorability, and YouGov gives (pdf) him 41 percent white support, while Fox News shows that 28 percent of white men, 24 percent of white women and 22 percent of white Bible-thumping evangelicals like him above everyone else. Which begs a critical question: What the hell is wrong with white people?

4. It’s pretty dead on the Dem side. Come on, admit it: Is there even a Democratic primary to watch?

This Cleveland debate helps with that, giving us the Red Bull rush of political excitement we need to stay awake. The most exciting the Democratic primary gets is watching Larry David look-alike Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-Vt.) get grumpy when punked by #BlackLivesMatter protesters. Otherwise, we’re watching a pretty stale field that’s, at the moment, simply sparring for running mate. Looking less creative than their Republican rivals, Democrats are pretty much letting the field dissolve into a Hillary Clinton coronation without any kind of fight, which is why we should appreciate the GOP fireworks, even if they look silly.

5. Go ahead and give Dr. Ben some company. So, it’s not a secret: Black folks aren’t into Ben Carson like they once were. Gone are the glory days of Gifted Hands and Cuba Gooding Jr. role plays, since Carson, in his weird Dr. Ben way, keeps slicing into beloved President Barack Obama over the Affordable Care Act. The reaction from black voters has been pretty harsh: “Don’t talk about Barack.”

As a result, Carson barely gets 29 percent favorability (pdf) from African Americans, according to Public Policy Polling, and only 37 percent, according to YouGov (pdf). But the fact that he still gets the highest black “favorables” out of all the Republican candidates still says we’re thinking about him and privately wishing the soft-spoken Detroit brother the best. So let’s make sure the white guys don’t shout all over him.

http://www.theroot.com/articles/politics/2015/08/why_black_folks_should_watch_the_1st_gop_debate.html?wpisrc=newsletter_jcr%3Acontent%26

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Einstein & The Civil Rights Movement

From Live Science - 

6 Ways Albert Einstein Fought for Civil Rights


Challenging the Whiteness of Public Radio

Yeah Maxim!

From The Huffington Post - 

Maxim makes history by putting a man on their cover for the first time 

Idris Elba covers the lad mag's September issue 

 
Maxim makes history by putting a man on their cover for the first timeIdris Elba(Credit: Maxim)
Maxim, longtime vanguard of the scantily-clad female cover star, has decided to switch things up for their September issue. For the first time ever, the magazine features a male star alone on the cover: British actor and potential future James Bond Idris Elba, looking very cozy in some sort of fuzzy, leopard print bathrobe/coat hybrid.
“For me, he was really the perfect embodiment of what I think the new Maxim man is,” editor in chief Kate Lanphear told Racked. “He’s multi-dimensional, he’s complex, he’s sophisticated, but he’s down to earth. It was funny when on set, I was like, ‘Is there anything this guy can’t do?’ He’s an award-winning actor, he’s a DJ, his capsule clothing line for Superdry is about to hit stores. The guy broke the [British] land speed record which hasn’t been touched since like 1928. He’s sort of a living, breathing superhero.”
http://www.salon.com/2015/08/05/maxim_makes_history_by_putting_a_man_on_their_cover_for_the_first_time/?source=newsletter

59

It wasn't long ago that I thought 59 years old was ANCIENT.

Seriously, it was the land of "old folks and walking sticks."

Today I turned 59, and my thoughts have changed considerably.

Now I see it as an age of comfort.

Being comfortable with who I am and what I've become.

A mother.

A grandmother.

Comfortable in my skin.

Liking myself with little regard to what others think.

There truly is a freedom that comes with age.

The older I get, the freer I become.

Here's wishing you "youngsters" wisdom that only grey hairs can bring.

May you all live to enjoy long, wisdom-filled years of comfort and peace that only "Happy Birthdays" can bring.




One Tree = 40 Kinds of Fruit

Great Reads

From The Atlantic -

Roughly 100 Fantastic Pieces of Journalism

Exceptional nonfiction stories from 2014 that are still worth encountering today
~~~~~
http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2015/07/roughly-100-fantastic-pieces-of-journalism/390318/

Lingerie in Unlikely Places

The New Yorker article linked below caught my eye because it's about Chinese-owned lingerie shops in Egypt, a predominantly Muslim country, that is traditionally very conservative.

Here's an excerpt -

Valentine’s Day is one of the few times of the year when most China Star customers are male. Usually, it’s only women in the shop, and often they buy the lightweight, form-fitting dresses that Chinese dealers refer to as suiyi, or “casual clothes.” No Upper Egyptian woman would wear such garments in public, but it’s acceptable at home. This is one reason that the market for clothing is so profitable: Egyptian women need two separate wardrobes, for their public and their private lives. Usually, they also acquire a third line of clothing, which is designed to be sexy. 

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/08/10/learning-to-speak-lingerie