{"id":2422,"date":"2014-10-16T05:05:05","date_gmt":"2014-10-15T19:05:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.jasonshanks.com\/?p=2422"},"modified":"2014-10-16T10:16:14","modified_gmt":"2014-10-16T00:16:14","slug":"a-personal-journey-of-wrist-watch-wearing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.jasonshanks.com\/2014\/blog\/a-personal-journey-of-wrist-watch-wearing\/","title":{"rendered":"A personal journey of wrist watch wearing"},"content":{"rendered":"

I have a fickle love affair with time. Sometimes I have a burning desire to know the exact time of day. I ‘watch’ any nearby clock with breathless anticipation. Usually coupled by an impending life circumstance I anticipate with joy or dread. At other times, maybe even for an entire day or week if I’m lucky, I’ll loose all sense of it save my inherent biological clock I can’t turn away from. I know I’m not alone in this transgression.<\/p>\n

Also like many of us I was introduced to the concept of wearing a wrist-watch at an early age, likely before it was no more relevant to me than learning to understand this partly man-made measurement over the cycles of nature, at a time when my youthful abandon of necessity of this save when my body gave out from hunger or exhaustion. I’m reminded daily of this now as my 3 year old tells me it’s morning time at almost 5pm simply because it’s still light out. “No daddy, it’s morning time now!”<\/p>\n

\"Mickey<\/a>The first watch I can remember possessing was a thing of beauty for an entirely different reason. That of watching Mickey’s hands unhumanly spin around his cartoon body, managing to fix his carefree smile throughout the daily contortions.<\/p>\n

\"Casio<\/a>The second had to be my initiation into the digital world with a Casio\u00a0complete with these mind-boggling features of stop-watch, alarm clocks and even a calculator with an impossibly difficult to navigate user interface. Didn’t matter to me, it was so Dick Tracy!<\/p>\n

Wearing such devices at that time was equally about pure gadget status factor than the necessity of function. I fondle my grandfathers gold-plated pocket watch from time to time and imagine the same: 1 part time-keeper, 1 part status symbol.<\/p>\n

Later in life I waffled between the choice of analog vs. digital timepieces, caught between the representation of time as a daily cycle or the slow LED glow march to the end of time itself. But always, with my piece du jour strapped to my wrist.<\/p>\n

Then other devices came along that added time as a functional after-thought as it was back-staged by cooler tech such as pagers and later mobile phones. It was around this stage that the cracks began to appear in many of our relationships with our wristwatches. Why must I suddenly be burdened with 2, 3 devices that provided the time of day…the sexier tech prevaled. I started wearing a wrist watch less and less until about the time of my first Palm pilot it left my wrist altogether.<\/p>\n

I became quickly accustomed to the newfound freedom of the naked wrist. Complementary bracelets went by the wayside as well as they ‘threw my symmetry off’. I personally had another motivation as a musician who occasionally played percussion and keyboards and these accoutrements only got in the way, or forgotten if I took them off and left them somewhere.<\/p>\n

My new shackle was the flick of the wrist in and out of my pants pocket to quickly avail myself of the time and move on. In retrospect, this lessening of the time being so readily available without this extra friction started to have a fundamental affect on my relationship with time. I became less reliant on this acute information unless absolutely necessary. Of course this relationship differs greatly from person to person or from stages of life and responsibilities. If you’re not punching a time clock, tied to a class schedule or responsible for getting kids to a thousand different places on time or calculating yet another round of antibiotics or pain medicine for this weeks child-care bug, etc etc then this punctuality is perhaps less important to you. Then there’s vacation, especially if you’re camping for a few days or plopped on a beach \u2014\u00a0time becomes a fluid stream of consciousness.<\/p>\n

Despite my embrace of the digital world to a viral level: early adopter of personal computers, smart phones, tablets, reading ebooks for 15 years, here and there my analog brain found ways to fight back:<\/p>\n