My mechanical watches sit in their box like retired athletes—well-kept, occasionally exercised, no longer in the game. Every so often I take one out, give it a few dutiful shakes, wind it like a ritual I don’t quite believe in, and return it to its padded cell. The magic has evaporated. In its place: the afterimage of a fever swamp—a mind that mistook obsession for discernment, a man who let proportion slip while calling it passion.
Did I quit watches? No. I still strap one on every day. I rotate between two Tough Solar, Multiband-6 G-Shocks—the Frogman and the Rescue—and they do the one thing I apparently wanted all along: tell the correct time without drama. Precision, delivered nightly from a radio tower, not coaxed from springs and sentiment.
The question nags: are these G-Shocks the nicotine patch—same habit, fewer toxins? A maintenance dose that keeps the shakes at bay while I detox from romance? Or have I simply traded one dependency for another, swapping lacquered nostalgia for resin certainty? I can imagine a small, sane G-Shock lineup—four, maybe five—but I recoil at the thought of a sprawling collection that demands wardrobe changes, spreadsheets, and a personality built around rotation schedules.
I’m not selling the mechanicals. Not yet. A month is not a verdict; it’s a mood with good PR. I’ve undergone what I’m tempted to call a conversion—G-Shockification—but I don’t trust conversions. They arrive like thunder and leave like weather. If this holds, time will tell me so—accurately, for once.
There’s also the quieter force at work: the sunk-cost instinct dressed up as dignity. When you’ve poured money, hours, and a piece of your identity into something, you don’t walk away—you renegotiate with yourself. You call it loyalty. You call it patience. You call it anything but regret.
Let’s keep perspective. I own four mechanical divers and one quartz. This isn’t a warehouse liquidation. I’m not torching a museum. I’m a man with a small box and a slightly embarrassed past.
So the divers stay—for now—on the shelf to my upper left as I type. They used to summon me: strap changes, wrist rotations, the ceremonial wipe-down. Now they sit in a quiet that feels less like neglect and more like clarity. The box hasn’t moved. I have.

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