Am I the only one who loves symmetry on hand wound watches?

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Not quite the same issue, but my son wears his watch upside down to force him to go through a cognitive process of working out the time about when he looks at his watch. He started doing it because he found himself checking the time but then immediately forgetting it. Anyone else do this?
 
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he found himself checking the time but then immediately forgetting it.
I often have this problem. Mainly due to distractions.
Usually I only check the time to see if I'm way too late for something or early, if I see I have time to do something else I just get to it and trust the internal clock to be close enough. The minutes I have to do what I set out to do are more important than the exact hour and minute.

Lately I've become a bit OCD about using positional error to allow a watch that gains or loses a few seconds during the day to correct itself by morning. In the space of 8-10 hours from bedtime till dawn laying the watch flat with dial up lets a slow watch regain a few seconds, upright with crown up lets a fast watch lose a few seconds.
The amount of positional error in those positions varies widely from watch to watch but is very consistent for any particular watch.

PS
I found I can use this method to bring a non hacking second hand into line with the 12 marker, then set the hours and minutes by the NIST clock. Then whenever daily checking the time the second hand no longer lines up with the :00 of the digital display I know exactly how many seconds it gains or loses and correct by position accordingly.
Once I get the process down pat I don't have to reset the watch by means of the crown for so long as I keep it wound and running.
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