Rolfe
Adult human female
I read the Commentary about the guy who seriously believed he broke computers by his presence.
Reminds me of when I was a schoolkid, and there were occasional stories about people who coudn't wear watches because they always stopped.
Well, I seemed to be one. I had to wear a watch for school, because there were trains to catch. And school rules said they had to be engraved with your name, so it was a pain every time I needed a new one. They weren't hard to come by though, because my Dad was industrial chaplain to Smiths Clocks and entitled to use the staff discount shop. Just as well! I was always in trouble because my watch had stopped. And for no reason that I could fathom. I remember once my mother saying that I'd have to wear her watch, that she's had for ages, and if I broke that there's be real trouble. It lasted 36 hours.
In the end I demanded Dad get me a nurse's watch that pinned on, and wore it inside a pocket. No problem, apart from a couple of nasty accidents when the safety pin came loose and the watch plummeted about four feet to the pavement, but no unexplained stoppages at all.
Then in about 1978, quartz watches were all the thing. I demanded a quartz wristwatch, and got it. No problem. Lasted for about 20 years, and finally stopped when I went swimming in Lake Thun at about 4<SUP>o</SUP>C. Replacement still going strong.
I sort of assumed that I was having some influence over these watches to keep stopping them. Whatever it was, it didn't affect a mechanical watch that wasn't on my wrist, or a quartz watch.
But is there no known mechanism? Was I just unlucky? Or much rougher with the watches than I realised?
Rolfe.
Reminds me of when I was a schoolkid, and there were occasional stories about people who coudn't wear watches because they always stopped.
Well, I seemed to be one. I had to wear a watch for school, because there were trains to catch. And school rules said they had to be engraved with your name, so it was a pain every time I needed a new one. They weren't hard to come by though, because my Dad was industrial chaplain to Smiths Clocks and entitled to use the staff discount shop. Just as well! I was always in trouble because my watch had stopped. And for no reason that I could fathom. I remember once my mother saying that I'd have to wear her watch, that she's had for ages, and if I broke that there's be real trouble. It lasted 36 hours.
In the end I demanded Dad get me a nurse's watch that pinned on, and wore it inside a pocket. No problem, apart from a couple of nasty accidents when the safety pin came loose and the watch plummeted about four feet to the pavement, but no unexplained stoppages at all.
Then in about 1978, quartz watches were all the thing. I demanded a quartz wristwatch, and got it. No problem. Lasted for about 20 years, and finally stopped when I went swimming in Lake Thun at about 4<SUP>o</SUP>C. Replacement still going strong.
I sort of assumed that I was having some influence over these watches to keep stopping them. Whatever it was, it didn't affect a mechanical watch that wasn't on my wrist, or a quartz watch.
But is there no known mechanism? Was I just unlucky? Or much rougher with the watches than I realised?
Rolfe.