Do you wear a wrist watch?

37, and I don’t wear a watch, but actually, I do want one. Something basic and digital, with a back-light.

I think I mentioned this in another thread, but I went to the local jeweler to have a link removed. The place was empty, and there was a coffin in the middle of the floor. Apparently, the place closed at the end of April due to the owner’s cancer.

Anyway, I went elsewhere and had a link removed from my GMT Master II. Those things cost like $50 or $60 each, so I need to make sure I don’t lose it. I thought I’d adjusted the Sub and the Seiko as far as they would go, but I was mistaken. They were adjusted, and all of my watches fit now.

  1. Stopped wearing watches when I started carrying a smartphone all the time. Then started again when they invented the smart watch. I currently wear a Garmin Fenix 3HR all the time, except when taking a bath or shower. (I could wear it in the shower, but that’s when I charge the watch.)

I also have a nice Omega that was a graduation gift from my parents. But I can’t remember the last time I wore it. Whenever I last wore a suit, probably.

Interesting! And when you imagine the tooling that had to be invented to even make the parts to the watch. Again, a testament to human ingenuity.

Age 58 going on 13.
Rolex GMT Master with “Pepsi” bezel. Goes on first thing in the morning and onto the bedside table at lights out. Yes there are others that are more accurate but it’s a Rolex. (a gift from my parents as a reward for reaching my career job) Apart from a couple of tuneups over the years is still a classic. Waterproof and has taken a lot of abuse over the years. Maybe even bulletproof for all I know.

This thread makes me think of my first watch, which my parents gave me for Christmas in elementary school. It was a Flipper watch. Just a regular cheap watch with an image of the porpoise on the face. I thought it was cool as hell.

52, no, never wore one.

Well past 50.
My lock screen has an analog clock display on it, so I don’t have to unlock the phone to read the time. However even so it can be hard to read in bright daylight, or I have to wait for the screen to auto-adjust the brightness. It’s like having an awkwardly sized pocket watch that can be hard to read in the ambient light.
So my wife and I both gave each other decent-ish watches last Christmas and I’ve been wearing mine daily ever since. It’s a lifesaver for me especially when driving, because the car stereo we recently bought eliminated the digital clock that used to be there.