Date: 30/03/2017 19:00:47
From: roughbarked
ID: 1044843
Subject: Confessions of a watch geek.

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/03/20/confessions-of-a-watch-geek

At the start of 2016, I had a bad feeling. Time was not working right. Some weeks were as snappy as days, others were as elastic as months, and the months felt as if they were either bleeding into one another three at a time—Jabruarch—or segmenting into Gregorian-calendar city-states. Feb. Rue. Airy. Something was wrong with the world.

One day in February, I took a ride on the subway. This was a rare occurrence. Since turning forty, I’d started to suffer from a heightened sense of claustrophobia. A few years ago, I was stuck for an hour in an elevator with a man who weighed about three hundred and fifty pounds and his two grocery carts crammed with bags of Tostitos and bottles of Canada Dry, an experience both frightening and lonely. The elevator had simply given up. What if a subway train also refused to move? I began walking seventy blocks at a time or splurging on taxis. But on this day I had taken the N train. Somewhere between Forty-ninth Street and Forty-second Street, a signal failed and we ground to a halt. For forty minutes, we stood still. An old man yelled at the conductor at full volume in English and Spanish. Time and space began to collapse around me. The orange seats began to march toward each other. I was no longer breathing with any regularity. This is not going to end well. None of this will end well. We will never leave here. We will always be underground. This, right here, is the rest of my life. I walked over to the conductor’s silver cabin. He was calmly explaining to the incensed passenger the scope of his duties as an M.T.A. employee. “Sir,” I said to him, “I feel like I’m dying.”

More at the link above..

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Date: 30/03/2017 19:40:18
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1044844
Subject: re: Confessions of a watch geek.

> Forty-second Street

I know a song about that.

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Date: 30/03/2017 19:41:17
From: roughbarked
ID: 1044845
Subject: re: Confessions of a watch geek.

http://www.rts.ch/archives/tv/culture/3474522-la-vallee-de-joux.html

It is a b/w film made in 1968 of an interview with one of the last peasant-watchmakers (his Nickname was “Petit-Louis”).

It’s in French – or the accent and dialect which passes for French in the Vallée de Joux – the synopsis is he gets up in the morning and milks his cows, goes to work at the AP factory until about 1.00 Then goes home for dinner and to get the hay ready for later on. Back to work at the factory until 5.00 then off to milk the cows.
He is also shown at a rehearsal of the Chorale du Brassus – the village male voice choir which even still today is one of the major European choirs.

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Date: 30/03/2017 19:44:19
From: roughbarked
ID: 1044846
Subject: re: Confessions of a watch geek.

mollwollfumble said:


> Forty-second Street

I know a song about that.

:) there are a lot of songs.

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Date: 31/03/2017 01:52:50
From: Speedy
ID: 1044896
Subject: re: Confessions of a watch geek.

roughbarked said:


At the start of 2016, I had a bad feeling. Time was not working right. Some weeks were as snappy as days, others were as elastic as months, and the months felt as if they were either bleeding into one another three at a time—Jabruarch—or segmenting into Gregorian-calendar city-states. Feb. Rue. Airy. Something was wrong with the world.

One day in February, I took a ride on the subway. This was a rare occurrence. Since turning forty, I’d started to suffer from a heightened sense of claustrophobia. A few years ago, I was stuck for an hour in an elevator with a man who weighed about three hundred and fifty pounds and his two grocery carts crammed with bags of Tostitos and bottles of Canada Dry, an experience both frightening and lonely. The elevator had simply given up. What if a subway train also refused to move? I began walking seventy blocks at a time or splurging on taxis. But on this day I had taken the N train. Somewhere between Forty-ninth Street and Forty-second Street, a signal failed and we ground to a halt. For forty minutes, we stood still. An old man yelled at the conductor at full volume in English and Spanish. Time and space began to collapse around me. The orange seats began to march toward each other. I was no longer breathing with any regularity. This is not going to end well. None of this will end well. We will never leave here. We will always be underground. This, right here, is the rest of my life. I walked over to the conductor’s silver cabin. He was calmly explaining to the incensed passenger the scope of his duties as an M.T.A. employee. “Sir,” I said to him, “I feel like I’m dying.”

It reads like the first chapter of a year 9 English novel that I already know will not interest me in the least. I check again how many pages are left. The book looks quite thick, but maybe the individual pages are thick too. Yes. No. I quickly flick to the last page and with a feeling of the deepest dread read 362. The room begins to spin. My heart begins to race. There is now sweat on my brow and my chest is heavy and hurting. I have immediate regrets about not previously alerting my teacher to my badbookaphobia. I hope I don’t embarrass myself in front of the entire class but I feel like I’m dying.

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Date: 31/03/2017 06:11:42
From: Tau.Neutrino
ID: 1045086
Subject: re: Confessions of a watch geek.

Outside, a bird started to sing.

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Date: 2/04/2017 02:52:58
From: bob(from black rock)
ID: 1045858
Subject: re: Confessions of a watch geek.

Like the kid that asked his parents for a watch for his birthday, so they let him?

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Date: 2/04/2017 02:54:22
From: furious
ID: 1045859
Subject: re: Confessions of a watch geek.

Ha! That’s terrible…

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Date: 2/04/2017 02:33:28
From: Ogmog
ID: 1045871
Subject: re: Confessions of a watch geek.

mollwollfumble said:


> Forty-second Street

I know a song about that.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pEyZxYGwlKI

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