Dyeing with Kool-Aid

Kool Aid on wool as Caroline tries for the first time to dye wool with the drink mix

Finally, Caroline put her dyeing station to work and for the first time, she dyed wool using Kool-Aid. It’s fun watching her out there, the mad scientist at work. The giant smile on her face lets me know that she’s really loving what she’s doing. Now she yells at me from her workbench how she’s looking forward to trying the Indigo next. Seems that I missed something in preparing her birthday gifts: a salad spinner would come in handy for removing excess water from the fibers after rinsing. Well, our 14th Anniversary is coming up.

Master Cleanse

New Year’s Eve saw Caroline and I starting the Master Cleanse Fast. Our goal was a very simple one: try it for one day. Well, the first day was so easy it seemed to be a fluke, so a second day was in order. Having never missed a meal in 44 years, besides the occasional late lunch or dinner, which was made up for by snacking, the idea of not eating went hand in hand with the idea that I would be in pain, have headaches, be miserable, and get sick. None of that happened. The fasting was so easy those first two days that we had to challenge ourselves to a third, figuring that at some point, we would be overwhelmed with hunger and then stop. And so it went until the sixth day when the second bout of grumpiness convinced us that the following day, the seventh day, should be the end of our one-day fast. Of course, anyone familiar with the Master Cleanse knows that the first day after the end of the fast is not really the end yet. On Monday, January 7th, we only drank orange juice. On Tuesday, we started with OJ but were allowed vegetable broth for the rest of the day. I cheated at dinner and had four or five spoons of the veggies before guilt had me returning to the plain broth. Today we returned to “normal” eating, starting with soft boiled eggs for breakfast, veggie soup for lunch, and for dinner, we deviated from the program to split a green corn tamale plate at a local restaurant.

The fast was not undertaken to lose weight, I wanted to convince myself that I could do without food. This aspect of the fast worked; I now know I will not die missing a meal, nor will I fall sick. The second goal was to work towards portion control; if I can miss meals, then smaller meals should work fine to satisfy me; time will tell if this works out. Over the seven days, I lost approximately 20 pounds; Caroline lost about 6. Her clothes fit better and old clothes can be worn again, but I’m still too fat. Yet, I do look forward to doing this again, and if 10 pounds return but the other ten stay away, then doing this a few more times this year to drop a total of 30 pounds would be a welcome accomplishment in my world.

Optic Kiss

Klaus Singer, Caroline Engelhardt, Jo Lincke, and John Wise in Frankfurt, Germany

Here is an old photo from the time Caroline and I had a little graphic design business in Frankfurt, Germany called Optic Kiss, among other names. Our office was situated over the old “Music Hall” concert and dance venue. Over the years we saw David Lee Roth downstairs and backstage, Nine Inch Nails, Chris Isaak, and a bunch of other bands and parties that skip my mind right now. The place was a windowless dark, smoke-filled room where many a musician would stop by to see what was going on in Cyberspace. For most of this time, Caroline had a day job working on a film called Taxandria and doing animation and special effects for one of the Never Ending Stories movies. Needing some help and having some people interested in what we were trying to do, a couple of guys joined with us to learn some new skills. They were Klaus Singer and Jo Lincke – sadly we have fallen out of contact with these guys, probably because they hate me or something like that. Funny how this has happened more than once. Finally, yes, we are still fasting – Day 5.

Techno

Advertisement for old German clothing line and record store for techno music

One of our early careers was as graphic designers and wannabe artists. We did ok, creating the first commercially 3D rendered record cover in Europe (before that, 3D tools were primarily in the hands of large companies and universities). Our first record cover was for Casper Pound and his project The Hypnotist – the record entered the German charts! Initially, we worked on the Commodore Amiga with 32MB Ram and a 40GB harddrive – huge for the day. Our first 3D rendering and animation software was a product called Imagine. An acquaintance gave us an early beta of Windows 3.0 and we dumped the Amiga and grabbed Photostyler, which was eventually bought and disappeared by Adobe. Did a lot of work in Corel Draw. The ultimate was when we scored a free copy of 3D Studio from Autodesk while attending Cebit in Hannover, Germany – we’ll never forget your kindness, Bob Bennet.

Not Being a Pig

3D Pig

Third day on the fast, so far so good. The saltwater flush is no more fun today than the first day – yuck. I’m still not back in the mood for photography. I have actually been working intensively on menu planning and organizing my recipes. If I can’t eat food, I might as well think about it all the time. The image of the pig was created by Caroline in 3D Studio back in the early ’90s.

Dreamfish

Dreamfish

Happy New Year. Today’s image is from a record / CD cover Caroline and I created 15 years ago for a record called Dreamfish. Pete Namlook and Mixmaster Morris collaborated on this recording that was originally released on FAX Records and briefly features Terence McKenna. And for any of my visitors who probably never figured out why my site’s title says, Dreams, Moments, Travel – the clue is Terence McKenna. So put that in your pipe and smoke it.