Time Exposure
·In late October last year, I found myself in the position to obtain my grail watch (six years after becoming the grail). I wear it frequently. Looking for a picture but I must have erased them all but this one shown on my favorite piece of luggage. The watch is a Patek Philippe Nautilus chronograph reference 5980 (the luggage is a Holland Sport all-leather valet bag made in San Francisco California USA, from a time before they were Mulholland Brothers and began manufacturing much of their line in China):
Until that point, every watch I acquired was destined for sale or trade toward the grail. The watch fund budget was tight, and there was little hope of keeping anything of value and simply adding the grail later.
Now that the grail is on the wrist, I have no new grail. There are dozens of more expensive, grail-worthy watches, but none have become "the new focus." I am completely content with the 5980 as my greatest.
Not one to stand still with the collection, I found myself basically starting over. I had no watches I was willing to sell or trade, for the first time in 30 years of collecting. What a weird feeling!
I began buying Hamilton chronographs from grey market dealers, and even included a time-only quartz for my wife, and a 3-hander that she also likes to wear. I added some vintage Wittnauer and Longines examples, then sold all but one Longines.
Now I try to imagine what watch I want next, and (again for the first time since I started collecting watches) no watch comes to mind. I like my Hamilton family of four chronos, so I'm not inclined to sell them for a greater watch. Without watches to sell or trade, I have little cash to spend on the next (because I just spent the funds on that fourth Hamilton chrono).
Only watches that I have previously owned are even remotely blipping my radar: a Speedmaster moon watch, a Rolex Explorer II black dial 16570 (old 40mm one, with lug holes), an IWC Porsche Design Titan chrono, Daytona black dial 116520...
Two and a half weeks ago I ordered another Hamilton (non-chrono dress watch "Intra-Matic") but Jomashop has it on back order. I'm about to cancel the order so I can pay for a service on my Cartier (40th birthday present from my wife, both keepers!).
I feel like the only watch nerd who has ever felt this way. Odds-makers are giggling and guessing when I'll jump back in head-first, but I honestly don't see that happening. It hasn't happened in the eight months I've owned my grail.
Anyone else out there go through a similar feeling? That you had accomplished your goal and there was no new goal to replace it? And you were happy about it?

Until that point, every watch I acquired was destined for sale or trade toward the grail. The watch fund budget was tight, and there was little hope of keeping anything of value and simply adding the grail later.
Now that the grail is on the wrist, I have no new grail. There are dozens of more expensive, grail-worthy watches, but none have become "the new focus." I am completely content with the 5980 as my greatest.
Not one to stand still with the collection, I found myself basically starting over. I had no watches I was willing to sell or trade, for the first time in 30 years of collecting. What a weird feeling!
I began buying Hamilton chronographs from grey market dealers, and even included a time-only quartz for my wife, and a 3-hander that she also likes to wear. I added some vintage Wittnauer and Longines examples, then sold all but one Longines.
Now I try to imagine what watch I want next, and (again for the first time since I started collecting watches) no watch comes to mind. I like my Hamilton family of four chronos, so I'm not inclined to sell them for a greater watch. Without watches to sell or trade, I have little cash to spend on the next (because I just spent the funds on that fourth Hamilton chrono).
Only watches that I have previously owned are even remotely blipping my radar: a Speedmaster moon watch, a Rolex Explorer II black dial 16570 (old 40mm one, with lug holes), an IWC Porsche Design Titan chrono, Daytona black dial 116520...
Two and a half weeks ago I ordered another Hamilton (non-chrono dress watch "Intra-Matic") but Jomashop has it on back order. I'm about to cancel the order so I can pay for a service on my Cartier (40th birthday present from my wife, both keepers!).
I feel like the only watch nerd who has ever felt this way. Odds-makers are giggling and guessing when I'll jump back in head-first, but I honestly don't see that happening. It hasn't happened in the eight months I've owned my grail.
Anyone else out there go through a similar feeling? That you had accomplished your goal and there was no new goal to replace it? And you were happy about it?