The Man Who Moved to G-Shock Avenue

Paul McCartney once admitted that after the Beatles broke up, he couldn’t bring himself to play their songs. Too much history. Too much emotion packed into every chord. The music wasn’t just music—it was a former life. That’s how you feel about your mechanical divers. They now sit in what you’ve come to call the Box of the Abandoned Past—not discarded, not unloved, but too heavy with memory to wear without reopening old chapters.

Then the G-Shock Frogman arrived, and with it came a revelation: you hadn’t just bought a new watch—you had moved cities. For more than twenty years, you’d been living in Mechanical Town, polishing bezels and monitoring seconds like a municipal duty. Suddenly you realized you belonged somewhere else entirely. You packed your emotional bags and relocated to G-Shock Avenue. First the Frogman. Then the Rangeman. Then the high-end Square. No ceremony. No farewell speech. Just a quiet change of address.

Years passed. Occasionally, you tried to revisit the old neighborhood. You’d take out a mechanical diver, strap it on, and see if the feeling returned. But like McCartney staring at a piano and deciding “Yesterday” could stay in the past, you always drifted back to the Frogman. It was lighter. Simpler. Emotionally frictionless. The past had craftsmanship. The present had peace.

Still, you refuse to sell the mechanicals. They’re not watches anymore; they’re chapters. Expensive bookmarks in the autobiography of your former self. Once a year, you conduct the ritual. You open the Box of the Abandoned Past. You shine a small, theatrical light across the rows. You offer a quiet apology while Paul McCartney’s “Uncle Albert” plays in the background, the soundtrack of dignified transition.

Your wife and daughters evacuate the premises during this ceremony, treating it with the same enthusiasm reserved for releasing an aerosol flea bomb in the living room.

But alone in the room, you sing along, close the box, strap on the Frogman, and step back into the present—no longer a resident of the mechanical past, but a citizen, fully and permanently, of G-Shock City.

You have entered painful terrain for the watch enthusiast: Emotional Migration. It is the moment a watch enthusiast changes allegiance not by selling a collection, but by quietly moving his identity to a new territory. The old watches may still sit in the box, polished and respectable, but the emotional address has changed. What once felt essential now feels historical; what once felt like an experiment now feels like home. There is no announcement, no dramatic purge—just the slow realization that your wrist no longer reaches for the past. Emotional Migration isn’t about acquiring something new. It’s about discovering that your center of gravity has relocated, and the watches you once loved now live where you used to live.

Comments

Leave a comment