Eleven Months of Magic
Seven Weeks of Sobriety*
Dedicated to the premise that life would be better if we all took ourselves a little less seriously.
rob gave me one of these |
Name the album cover |
Broadway Joe has your 12 right here |
rob's The Things We'd Carry post posits "I'm not one to spend a lot of money on cars or fancy watches or other ostentatious trappings of success." If you read my posts you know I like cars and watches so color me ostentatious. And I posit that fancy watches can hold memories just like the stuff in rob's post. For example, go to 6:15 in this interview with Alton Brown. Or this clip from Pulp Fiction.
This is my 1965 Omega Seamaster Chronograph, reference 143.646. It's a special watch, if you're into watches, because it has a 321 movement, the same movement in the Omega Speedmasters worn by the Apollo 11 astronauts, which is also known as the Moonwatch. The only movement certified for use on the moon! It's sort of like an air-cooled flat-six, if that means anything to you.
Aesthetically, I love the domed crystal, small (by modern standards) size, and the way the 3-6-9 markers are cut away by the chronograph registers. I like to imagine some apprentice who was too junior to be allowed to touch a dial, let alone a movement, cropping them with giant shears so that they fit perfectly with the subdials. There's a whole online fetish around cropped numerals, if you're into that.
It's also a special watch because my father received it as a high school graduation present from our Mitsu Bacsi (or our Uncle Nick for you Muricans). Mitsu Bacsi wasn't really our uncle, he was my grandfather's best friend but we called him Bacsi anyway because Hungarians like to appropriate people into their family, it's a cultural thing. Mitsu's wife was Swiss and during a trip back to her motherland they got watches for all the zfamily. I think this was a much cheaper proposition in the 1960s than it is today. The Seamaster originally came on a beads of rice bracelet but it pulled the (copious) hair on my father's wrist so he threw it out (they now sell for hundreds of dollars) and wore it daily for about 20 years until he did some business with Seiko and wound up with one of their watches. He pulled the Seamaster out of a drawer another 20 years later, had it serviced in Switzerland, and gave it to me for my 31st birthday. I wore it daily for about 10 years until I realized that it's a relatively valuable (maybe $5k-$6k) and elderly timepiece, and got some newer watches to wear daily. It's now a special occasion type of thing, or I wear it if I feel like I need a little extra oomph to get something done--I have Dad and Mitsu Bacsi with me while I negotiate with some jerk or interview for a job.
Dedicated GTB readers will recall the story of Mike's watch. Mike mentioned giving the watch to zson, but eventually all those involved agreed that it made more sense for Shirley to have the cash than for my half-man-half-monkey son to have a $150,000 watch. So I bought this Tudor Black Bay 36 that I will give zson at some point.
Tudor is a Rolex affiliate, sort of the Chevrolet to Rolex's Cadillac, so it follows the spirit of Mike's intent. The size, handset, and dial color are all great, the ETA movement is reliable and easy to service, and it's an automatic so you don't have to wind it, just wear it. I wear it regularly so it will have a few dings when I hand it over.
To commemorate leaving a miserable job, I bought myself a Sinn 756 Diapal. It's a chronograph that also tracks time in two time zones. It isn't a proper GMT, the second hour hand is based on 12 hours, but if you work with people in another country (which I've done) and wanted to time things like the number of hours you've been on the record in a deposition (which I've done) and you want a durable travel watch that can do both things, this is your huckleberry.
Sinn is a German company with a reputation for rugged tool watches but they don't have much name recognition in the US. The 756 features a modified Valjoux 7750 movement so it has some Swiss engineering, but its design and materials are very Germanic--the German navy makes submarines using the same steel that Sinn uses for their watches. It's not super wide, 40 mm, but it's stupidly thick at 14 mm. It wears well but it doesn't like to stay under your cuff so it's prominent. I'm giving this one to zdaughter someday because a girl named Esme should have an oversized watch from her father.
You may think that mechanical watches are frivolous and wasteful, and I see where you're coming from. But I promise you that your kids and grandkids aren't going to cherish your Apple Watch or Casio G-Shock. Hopefully mine will rely on these when they need a little extra oomph as I have with the Seamaster. I'm taking them with me.
rob had a lot of photos in his bag of holding. I'm not into them. It rarely occurs to me to photograph something other than food and zcats. That said, almost all of the art in zhome is photographs taken by my other Hungarian fugazi uncle, Bela Bacsi. His brother married my grandfather's sister, which makes us absolutely nothing.
But he was a righteous dude and a nominally famous photographer. This interview involves a photo he took in Chicago for Life Magazine. Go ahead and read it, I'll wait. I have that same photo in my dining room and it's important to me for several reasons.
First, it's a damn good photo. Many people have commented on it, it's striking in person and gives off a strong communal vibe. The details are great. At most two of the chairs are the same. Everyone holds their knife Euro-style. It's hard to see below, but the three boys at the bottom of the image are sharing two chairs. The baby is mischievous.
The tub is in great condition. The floors were replaced. No rust. Nice interior. All gauges work. Paint is old with scratches and dents. Engine and trans are from a 1975 Spitfire. Differential is from a a GT6 with 3.27 gears so cruising on the highway is comfortable. 70 mph at 3400 RPM. Weber 32/36 carb and manifold with a powermaster tubular exhaust manifold. GT6 front springs cut down to lower suspension. Heavy duty sway bar. Wire wheels with good tires. NOS soft top that fits well.
I confess that I've been guilty throughout my life of a certain degree of low-grade materialism. I'm not one to spend a lot of money on cars or fancy watches or other ostentatious trappings of success, but I've spent way too much on clothes, shoes, random art, and baseball hats. Man, do I have a lot of hats.
While in temporary financial limbo I've become significantly less materialistic. Would've been hard to be moreso, honestly. I haven't purchased anything material for myself that cost more than 30 bucks or so in over a year, save a pair of shoes I needed to coach soccer. I've learned what I can do without, and I've had a chance to think about things that matter to me. Which leads me to the idea of this post.
What if something happened that required you to get rid of almost all of your *stuff*. What would you keep? For the purpose of our exercise, you can have essentials (basic clothing, food, lodging, vehicle). You don't have to give up your pets (sorry, zman). Size and weight don't matter - assume you have a bag like Hermione did in the Deathly Hallows and you can carry anything. It's not an ascetic purity test, man - we're just flexing our intellect here. What non-essentials matter to you?Marie Kondo might ask: what sparks joy? For me, it's more about what sparks memory.
As I started thinking about my own answers, I pretty quickly realized that there aren't that many things in my life that I couldn't or wouldn't want to live without, even things that I really enjoy, like my Gheorghe Muresan bobblehead or my seven (count 'em) different Boston Red Sox hats. If I'm being really honest, there's no *thing* I couldn't say goodbye to if pressed. But that really defeats the purpose of this post concept, so I will highlight some of the stuff that makes me really happy.
It won't really be a surprise to you that, with one exception, the things I'd want along with me for the ride are associated with my people. Many of them are framed pictures of family and friends, including these (while I could obviously just keep the digital versions, I think I want the physical, and the bag is limitless, after all):
W&M Graduation 1992; My wedding, 1999 |
My then-fiancee/now-wife and me, Richmond, VA, late 1990s - note the Cowboy Cafe t-shirt |
Back in the late 60s, my Mom knitted two sweaters for my Dad. I have them both to this day. One of them is fraying a bit around the collar, but the other is in pristine condition, and it's warm, comfortable, and stylish. I'll be taking both of them with me.
The sweater looks particularly dope under the flannel-lined wax trucker jacket I got from Huckberry a few years back. I owned it before Pedro Pascal made it famous in The Last of Us. It's badass - definitely coming along. Never know when you'll need proper gear with which to fight off mushroom zombies.