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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsDo you wear a wristwatch? Why?
There are clocks everywhere. Your cellphone is a watch, among other things. There is a clock displayed on the dash of your car. Your microwave has a clock. So do your TV, your laptop computer, your kitchen stove, your VCR if you still use one, many of the appliances in your house. There are clocks on the wall all over the place. Your bank displays time and temperature as you drive by. What does anybody need a watch for any more? They seem completely redundant to me. Yet lots of people still wear them.
I haven't worn a watch since 1989, when I inherited one from a recently deceased uncle. Relatives who were raiding his belongings held his watch for me because they knew I didn't wear one. They didn't know that the reason I didn't wear one was because I didn't want one. The things are just useless dead weights on my wrist. Still, I suddenly had that one, so I wore it until it stopped working -- which didn't take long. An old-fashioned spring-driven wind-up watch. They told me it was a nice one, expensive and well-crafted. But when it stopped working, I didn't care. The things are totally useless to me.
In the words of the immortal Linda Richman of Saturday Night Live fame, I've given y'all a topic, now, discuss!
-- Ron
hlthe2b
(107,226 posts)I wear an Apple watch (previously a Fitbit) but have two really nice Tag Heuer watches that I still like to wear with dressy clothing from time to time. Glancing down at a watch is a lot less obvious than pulling out your cell phone--especially in a (boring) meeting or discussion with someone droning on... And they look nice.
spooky3
(36,606 posts)are the potential call for help ability if I experience a fall (I live alone) and the sleep and exercise tracking functions.
True Dough
(21,294 posts)But I was outfitted with an ankle bracelet a few months ago. Still trying to figure out why. I'll get to the bottom of it and report back.
Jeebo
(2,345 posts)If I understand your comments correctly. Thanks for the laugh.
-- Ron
True Dough
(21,294 posts)it's criminal, Ron!
BOSSHOG
(40,544 posts)True Dough
(21,294 posts)I can vaguely remember what I was wearing at the time.
AllaN01Bear
(23,577 posts)Conjuay
(2,226 posts)Said whenever he drank, he'd wake up in handcuffs 😁
Rigpa108
(37 posts)If my dive computer goes out I can use the dive watch and dive tables to calculate residual nitrogen for a second dive.
bottomofthehill
(8,943 posts)In the past 40 years I have had 3 watches. The first one, a Seiko dive master. It lasted nearly 20 years and then the next 2 were Seiko automatics. In my younger days I had a couple hundred real (in my journals) dives and hundreds of other puttering around pulling lobsters. Residual nitrogen, ouch. I loved to dive in the shallows, rarely much past 30 feet. I had my deeper dives as a young person, but found I enjoy the "shallows". 30/40 feet is the sweet spot for me. Better visibility, mort time puttering around, less time getting up and down, less pressure on the body. Unfortunately as I have grown older, I moved away from the ocean and dove in a quary one time but it was not the same. To many artificialities.
mucifer
(24,949 posts)Enter stage left
(3,881 posts)It was a Timex. Paid almost $20.00 for it. My current watch is a Timex Expedition, accurate to within 5 seconds a month. It cost me just under $60.00. I'll wear watches until I die.
I also read paperback books, and call my children, rather than texting them.
Call me old fashioned, I like to think I'm still living in a better time.
Jeebo
(2,345 posts)I still read paperbacks, too, as well as hardcovers. And if you text me, I'll never see it. It'll be just like hiding it from me.
-- Ron
Enter stage left
(3,881 posts)Shermann
(8,755 posts)I went through a series of everyday watches and they seemed to break frequently. I can't imagine wrecking an expensive one. As soon as I got my first cell phone, I never looked back. I don't see the attraction.
CaliforniaPeggy
(152,673 posts)However, sometimes I'm not near any of those, and I have my watch on.
I turn my wrist, and there it is.
Besides, my husband gave it to me when I was entering nursing school; we were supposed to wear watches with a sweep second hand, and this watch has one.
So there you have it.
3catwoman3
(25,868 posts)When I was stationed in Japan with the Air Force nurse corps, digital watches were all the rage, so I got one. Big mistake. It was impossible to count heart rates with the damned thing. No sweep second hand. There were 6 little dots that blinked - first just one, and then every 10 seconds another one would start until all 6 were blinking by the end of each minute.
I couldn't watch the dots and count a pulse at the same time. Too confusing. As you would know, with the sweep second hand you don't have to count the seconds, just watch for the second hand to move 1/4, 1/2 or all the way around the watch face.
CaliforniaPeggy
(152,673 posts)I did several different kinds of nursing: regular floor nursing, psychiatric and alcohol rehab nursing, critical care nursing! Then I got out of the hospital environment, and went to work for the American Red Cross in blood banking. My last several years were spent doing apheresis-cell separation, where we separated the blood components and harvested different parts. Platelets and plasma pheresis were specialties of mine.
I love my Seiko watch with its sweep second hand and the date!
I hope your smart watch went to a good home!
multigraincracker
(34,555 posts)She has saved my life several times.
The collectible market is about dead. Except for quality watches. Even non working quality watches have value.
BOSSHOG
(40,544 posts)I wear an Ironman to time my walks. And I wear an awesome Seiko my wife got me as a Wedding Present 51 years ago. It works fine and looks great. You are right, we have indications of time all around us. We have a big bank time and temperature display on Main Street you can see blocks away. I find it easier to flip my wrist than to dig my phone out of my pocket. Being retired, time is somewhat irrelevant to me other than when its time to eat. I dont want to miss a meal. Theyll get my watch when they pry it from my cold dead wrist.
On a related note, I have two calendars in the garage, six in the basement, three in my office and one in our outbuilding. Every month new pictures on display.
Thank You for the intermission. Its refreshing compared to the Hedgeseth horror show. Well I just checked my watch, time to return to general discussion.
rsdsharp
(10,366 posts)Ive continuously worn it, with a few breaks for service or when hospitalized, for more than 45 years. I appreciate the quality, craftsmanship, durability and accuracy (for a mechanical watch). Its a part of me.
doc03
(37,116 posts)at least 65 years, would feal naked without one. When I go out most of the time I leave my cell phone in the car.
My question why do we have to carry a cell phone all the time? I lived without one most of my life, why do we have to
be in constant contact 24/7? The most annoying are the ones that are on their phone all the time, it is fucking rude.
That is probably why this country is so f----up, instead of talking to someone people watch Tic Tok or Facebook.
zanana1
(6,320 posts)Without my cell phone, I'm more aware of my surroundings (and I'm not annoying).
doc03
(37,116 posts)Fla Dem
(26,017 posts)Although I do have my cell phone all the time with me for emergencies. More so the past couple of years.
So much easier to just look at my wristwatch than to dig out my cell phone to check on the time. I have quite a collection of watches from over the years.
Happy Birthday!!
FloridaBlues
(4,406 posts)Wifes husband
(142 posts)There is not a clock every where.
I wear an Ironman. Unbelievably accurate, waterproof, damn near indestructible, calendar, alarm, stopwatch, countdown timer. Multiple time zones.
Last about 3-5 years, $75.
What is not to like?
3catwoman3
(25,868 posts)It also keeps me accountable for meeting daily activity goals.
sdfernando
(5,473 posts)Rarely wore one anyway, even before cell phones. I always hated the tanline on my wrist. I am pale olive-skinned but tan dark very easily.
Clouds Passing
(3,174 posts)Plus wrist jewelry bugs me.
Ptah
(33,566 posts)Solly Mack
(93,339 posts)I don't have clocks all over my house and they aren't always nearby when out. My wrist is though.
AllaN01Bear
(23,577 posts)wore a fitbit before they got bought out and none of my gear was compatable . havent worn one since .i think when stores stopped installing new batteries for my watch is when i gave up.
claudette
(4,777 posts)I bought a cell phone.
Docreed2003
(17,955 posts)I love and collect wristwatches. They are a staple in my wardrobe and I prefer to look at my wrist for the time rather than dig out my phone.
DetroitLegalBeagle
(2,231 posts)Easier to check my wrist quickly to see texts, emails, and calls then to dig the phone out of my pocket.
For fancy occasions I have this disgustingly expensive watch my wifes grandfather gave me when we got married that I'll wear simply because he gave it to me, I may as well wear it. Also, it's odd to be basically wearing a car on your wrist.
TBF
(34,867 posts)I don't always have my phone with me (unlike my kids who can't move without it!) but I can call on the watch if I need to.
woodsprite
(12,268 posts)Its a FitBit. I dont have to dig my phone out of my pocket to see the time. It buzzes when I get a cell call. Most of the time my phone is on silent. I keep it in my jeans pocket and after several abdominal surgeries, I cant feel it vibrate at all so its great the watch lets me know I have a call or text and who its from. Great when Im in a meeting and dont want to be looking at my phone. I also use the timers when Im cooking, exercising, etc. I wear it on my non-dominant hand so I can see the face when Im writing (a habit I got into with the old analog watches when I was a student). Its also bright enough that I can light up my nightstand without bothering hubby.
I dont know if Id ever upgrade to an Apple Watch. My son said as long as Im not needing/wanting to use Apple specific apps, I get better length of charge and about $400-600 cheaper.
And before Fitbit, it was always the Timex nurses version with real numbers, second hand, and date, with a lighter dial.
chouchou
(1,510 posts)Ferrets are Cool
(22,060 posts)I love when it indicates that I have reached my daily walking goal.
Keepthesoulalive
(872 posts)Need to be reminded to get off my rear and keep moving. Speaking of wristwatches I once saw a 14 thousand dollar Versace watch, it made a statement.
EYESORE 9001
(27,677 posts)until cell phones became commonplace. I work around rotating machinery, where a watchband presents a hazard. I wear no ring for that reason as well.
Aristus
(68,789 posts)Its like an accessory; a piece of jewelry.
Plus, my brother likes giving me expensive watches as gifts. What am I supposed to do? Not wear them?
Skittles
(160,767 posts)I NEVER have a phone with me.
UTUSN
(72,921 posts)LogDog75
(226 posts)I've always worn a wristwatch and will continue to wear one. I have a "dumb" watch which runs off a battery and tells the time and date; nothing else. That one is my backup watch. The one I wear is an inexpensive smartwatch which tells time, date, takes my blood pressure, pulse, and a host of other things. I wear a wristwatch because it's more convenient than pulling out my phone.
In addition to those two watches, I have an aluminum pocket watch with chain I bought from a street stall in Berlin by the Brandenburg Gate in the early 90s. On the cover it says MBд which Google says is MBD KGB USSR Special Forces Paratroopers. The insides says 75 and in translated Russian Criminal Investigation. It's still works, keeps time accurately, and is a good conversational item.
nostalgia.su offers the watch at $200 or about 10 times what I paid for it.
https://nostalgia.su/en/karmannye-chasy-molniya-mvd--nagradnye-za-zaslugi-novye/
LeftInTX
(31,292 posts)And I don't feel like carrying my phone everywhere!
When clocks break these days, they don't replace them, they remove them.
I buy cheap waterproof timex watches. Unfortunately, when the wrist band breaks, they can't be repair. I never remove my watch. No do I change the time once I set it.
When the electricity goes out, my microwave and oven clocks are wrong. I don't feel like resetting them. The clock in my car isn't visible during daylight.
hot2na
(408 posts)Until I had a heart attack in 2021, I hadnt wore a watch in over 20 years. The Apple Watch was a game changer for my health. It tracks and logs my heart rate, blood oxygen levels, steps, sleep patterns, among its many health tracking features. I can pull ECG any time. If you have any type of heart problem, you should cosider a smart watch.
I wear it all the time except when Im charging because it is continuously collecting data. Even when you are sleeping.
LetsGetSmartAboutIt
(42 posts)I have an odd mind, I like that I can glance at my watch and:
Know when the sun is rising or setting next
What the current temperature is and what the range will be today
What the current forecast is
What the next scheduled event I have is
Be able to initiate a 10 minute timer
Know what the next turn I need to make on my route is
Know who is calling me or texting me
Check my heart rate, blood oxygen and do a quick ECG and see how I slept last night.
Oh, and what time it is.
Do I need to know all those things all the time ?
No, but I like to know.
Didn't wear a watch for years after having one my whole life, because I could look at my phone, but this gives me so much more info that I couldn't resist !
If you don't need all that, by all means keep your wrist bare.
Paladin
(29,094 posts)My wife and I had been married a couple of years, no kids yet; we were just starting to make a little money from our first for-real jobs. I came in the house after work that day, and displayed on the kitchen table was a Rolex watch, a steel-and-gold Oyster Perpetual Datejust. It wasn't Christmas, it wasn't my birthday, it was just a Wednesday. I turned to my wife, too stunned to say a word. She gave me a look, then said to me: "It's the only thing you've ever said you really wanted, and you're so damned hard to buy for."
That's why I wear a wristwatch. I'm wearing it now, as I type this reply. I trust that's alright with you.
Luciferous
(6,326 posts)I wouldn't bother wearing just a regular watch.
Emile
(31,410 posts)Liberal In Texas
(14,749 posts)I don't want to have to pull a cell phone out of my pocket to see what time it is, like my kids do. And there aren't always clocks around somewhere.
I'm wearing a Luminox with self-glowing lights that make it easy to read the time even in total darkness. It's cool:
Nittersing
(6,970 posts)I did HVAC for a living and both hands were frequently busy with a task. So much easier to just look at my wrist.
It probably took a couple of years for me to stop wearing one... it was just out of habit and eventually I just quit.
no_hypocrisy
(49,492 posts)I still have both my mother's wristwatches because I always thought they were cool.
They have hands, but no numbers. Not even notches to designate the numbers. I thought my mother was a rocket scientist when I was a child because she could tell time without numbers.
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Attilatheblond
(4,855 posts)At my age now, time is mostly irrelevant. What few occasions when I need to know the time, my dogs and the cat are accurate to the minute, telling me when meal and snack time come around.
Easterncedar
(3,700 posts)Obviously
Diamond_Dog
(35,461 posts)I used to wear a watch all the time but abandoned that, too.
If Im out and need to know the time, I have to dig my phone out of my bag and turn it on. A pain in the arse.
The biggest dilemma is when Im out in the garden doing something and lose track of time. Then I have no source to look at. Im thinking of buying a large indoor-outdoor clock and hanging it up somewhere where its visible from all over my yard. Mr. Diamond is even worse. He asks ME what time it is. And yes we have clocks in the house.
genxlib
(5,733 posts)I wear it 24 hours a day and the night time is probably the most important for me.
I have a clock in the room but I like to keep it out of line of sight. The LED is just distracting. So I like to be able to tell what time it is when I wake up without getting out of bed. The best sleep in the world is after you wake up and realize you don't have to get out of bed for hours.
But that's just me
Midnight Writer
(23,248 posts)I interrupted my work so often to check my watch that it actually hurt my job performance.
I stopped wearing a watch and concentrated instead on just doing the work as well as I can and completing it in a timely manner.
Now I am retired and am slave to neither watch nor cellphone. I don't carry either, and I follow no schedule. I just do what I want when I want and don't worry much about the time.
Layzeebeaver
(1,878 posts)Worn a watch most of my life.
Most recently, in 2004 I purchased a longines classic automatic when I was passing through Zurich. Its a good friend.
https://www.longines.com/en-gb/p/watch-la-grande-classique-de-longines-l4-918-1-91-2
Smart phones, fit bits, dive computers, pocket watches, smart watches
they are all tools for their purpose.
justaprogressive
(2,612 posts)Seiko chronograhs last 25 years...
my latest:
mnhtnbb
(32,204 posts)every day. I consider them part of my wardrobe, like jewelry. Each is different and is worn for different reasons, from working in the garden ( a Fossil) to everyday ( Seiko)to being a bit more dressed up ( vintage Ebel with a diamond face).
area51
(12,213 posts)it's quicker to look at my wrist to find out the time than to pull out my phone. There aren't always clocks everywhere.
Eugene
(62,831 posts)Non-stop wristwatch user since the 1970s. I use the clock on the smartphone mainly to set the watch.
drmeow
(5,374 posts)has a vibrating timer and a vibrating alarm clock. It wakes me up without a loud alarm. I can easily set a countdown timer without having to fumble for my phone, find the clock app, switch it to the timer mode, and set it. I don't necessarily want to be tied to my phone at all times. I don't have a clock in every room of my house - in fact, the only rooms in my house that have clocks are the kitchen, the bedroom, and the TV/game room in the basement (I refuse to have a TV in my living room - it is for living). If my computer is on, there is technically a clock in office/craft room but I can't see the time from across the room. I don't have to pull my phone out of my pocket just to check the time (especially nice in the winter when I'm wearing gloves). I used to walk to and from work which never took me past a bank with the time and temp.
I stopped wearing a watch for a while - and I got really, really good at telling what time it was without having to check a clock and to have a good sense of how much time had gone by. But when I needed to become extra reliable about time, I found I needed a watch. Since this was well before cell phones, I got used to checking my wrist of the time. I find it WAY, WAY, WAY more convenient to lift my wrist to see the time than to deal with a phone.
ailsagirl
(23,935 posts)Iggo
(48,655 posts)Cardiac rehab. Four more weeks.
Cant wait to get rid of it.
beaglelover
(4,149 posts)went in this purchase.
As to why I wear a watch? I always have. I see it as a nice piece of jewelry a man can wear and still be a man.
ProfessorGAC
(71,051 posts)I have 3 good watches, one of them very good.
I consider them ornamental.
I've got this one, but the band has the interior links in 10k gold.
It doesn't even have a second hand, so it's not about knowing the exact time. I just like the way it looks.
https://www.movado.com/us/en/shop-watches/faceto-0607482.html?country=US&gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQiA-aK8BhCDARIsAL_-H9n7WwjL5Odck2Yg85XuSFb6SLCqizJJMSnFdqtXdnrBdMFAyVYEtJ4aAurQEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds
I used to wear a 'backwards Goofy ' watch that ran COUNTER clockwise and the numbers were reversed as well. So if you glanced at it, one o'clock was actually eleven o'clock. I got so used to that watch, that I would have to stop and think when I looked at a wall clock.
WATCHES are ART!
My present watch is a very tacky and cheap Chinese art piece - crystal face and back with a huge 'G' clef and loopy staff on the face.
I have several items that would be considered "slob art", and my cleft watch is a prize in that collection.