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Do you have an emotional attachment to an ordinary, everyday, easily replaceable object and you'd be genuinely distressed if anything ever happened to it?
For me it would be my lunch box.
I was given it as part of a present from a friend's uncle when I moved into my first house.
He filled a big cardboard box full of general kitchen and household items that i'd never have thought to buy myself and included in the box was this.....
[url= https://c1.staticflickr.com/9/8188/28865596920_7c15d7376d_k.jp g" target="_blank">https://c1.staticflickr.com/9/8188/28865596920_7c15d7376d_k.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/KYKJiw ]Box of delights[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/140975292@N04/ ]Perchy Panther[/url], on Flickr
I've used it for taking my lunch to work almost every day in the 20 years since.
I'd be gutted if anything happened to it. ๐
I have a few, but my Kindle is one such item that springs to mind. Not that cheap to replace, but it's a really important item and yes, I was properly gutted when I lost my first one.
Also a few articles of MTB clothing from way back.
i dont care for anything that can be bought by cash. my health and the love of my family are the only 2 things i never want to lose.
This stapler was given to me, when I started my first office job with General Accident over 25 years ago, by a lovely girl called Isla. It's been through a lot with me over the years. It's only a stapler, but I'd be gutted if something happened to it.
[url= https://c5.staticflickr.com/9/8451/28531128124_6af347be5b_k.jp g" target="_blank">https://c5.staticflickr.com/9/8451/28531128124_6af347be5b_k.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/Ktcuo9 ]Untitled[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/46070670@N08/ ]Graeme Matheson[/url], on Flickr
the ikea spoon* i eat my muesli with.
(even though we were given a lovely set of sheffield cutlery for our wedding, a beautiful thoughtful gift, which i dispassionately ignore every morning as I rummage around for the *correct* spoon)
(*ikea 365 - now sadly discontinued)
The bureau I inherited from my nana.
And the Ercol table and chairs my grandad paid for.
Oh ,also my grandads belts.
ikea 365 - now sadly discontinued
๐ฅ that's most of my kitchen.
For me it's my STW Mug. Got it when I first joined the forum many years ago (under a different user name). It's just the right size for a coffee and to eat muesli breakfast out of too.
loads! My old issue thermal top amongst other stuff and the only tool I haven't replaced from my time getting my hands dirty is an old brass schreader removal tool with a screw off cap for spare cores to go in.
My wife....
Dinner service or any part of it. It was my grandma's who got it as a wedding present. Not sure of the exact age but certainly over 100. Also my mum's old cheap aluminium soup ladle.
The keyring on my car key.....I bought it when I worked at Airbus in Hamburg; they had a little shop you could get all sorts of Airbus branded stuff from.
It's a 'Remove Before Flight style tag with Airbus (barely) written on one side.
I could replace it for a few quid, but I don't want it. It's coming apart at the edges & the embroidered letters are barely there anymore, but I don't want a new one.... ๐
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I've also got a generic extruded alu bottle opener keyring (on my door keys) that was free in a bag at a recruitment fair from the Agilent Technology stand. It's been on my keyring since 2000 and has come in handy at many a camping trip/house party/BBQ when no one could find a bottle opener. Worth pennies, but I wouldn't want to lose it....
My leather belt. Hand made for me when I was 12 at a craft fair thing by a moody fellow with a beard.
27 years later it still fits and I am irrationally attached to it.
Lol @ DrP
I'm attached to things I got bought by Grandparents who are no longer with us. In particular a pot gorilla and my DMR Vaults (bought years apart). My Vaults have made me bleed numerous times and the paint has rubbed off but I'll not get rid, I'd not even swap them for new ones!
My leather belt. Hand made for me when I was 12 at a craft fair thing by a moody fellow with a beard.27 years later it still fits and I am irrationally attached to it.
My great granddads wolf cubs belt, still in my drawer, although I'm about 3 jeans sized too big now, plus a fair bit of vanity sizing!
My original Animal watch.
Its the first design they released and doesn't even look that special, plus it's very much Triggers broom, but I love it.
I've had it almost 22 years and in that time its been with me for leaving school, interviews (job and police), weddings (including my own), funerals, bike races, injuries, holidays, the birth of my kids and virtually anything else thats happened in the last twenty years of my life.
There's not a lot of 'stuff' that can claim that.
Plus, my folks gave it to me ๐
About 8 years ago, I was working at a music festival (as I did quite a lot at the time) and I had quite a lot of time between two shifts before the festival started. I'd been seeing a girl I'd met at a festival on and off but we lived at opposite ends of the country and it wasn't really working. I realised I was much nearer to here than usual and could just about fit in an an impromptu visit for the evening, and to my surprise, she reluctantly agreed. I honestly thought it'd be the last time I ever saw her.
At some point I mentioned I'd forgotten to bring a cup with me to the festival so had nothing to drink out of. She gave me a mug, a freebie from Waterstones with some philosophical quote on it.
I kept the mug after the festival in the hope that we'd see each other again. We've been together for about 5 or 6 years now and living together for the last two. The mug is on my desk at work and I have my coffee in it every day. It's a bit stained, the handle looks like it's going to fall off any minute and it's way too big considering I usually drink espresso out of it, but I'd be gutted if I lost it.
The ancient Hammer of Thor that I stole from my grandad. It's a really nice weight, the head is black with age and the haft is as smooth as glass with use and beautifully stained dark with 60 years of use. If my garage was to burn down, there's lots of stuff I'd miss but that'd be kind of hearbreaking tbh.
He was gutted when something happened to it, ie, me. But he stole it from the RAF when he demobbed so it felt appropriate. I hope some day my son steals it from me.
My North Face 2 man (but mainly x1 man and x1 lady) tent which is now 20 years old.
Kids and family life have got in the way of me using it for many years but got it out yesterday ready for a trip and I thought about how many adventures it has been part of.
My Beastway glass,made by Tom Eisl.
If it ever gets broken,I will cry.
All the family know not to use it as it's 'Dad's special glass' ๐ณ ๐ฏ
genuine LOL @ Dr. P - class!
I've a little tupperware box that I keep my iPhone cables and the like in for when I travel. Its just the right size, closes nice and firmly, and says 'Lasagne' on the top. Perfect. ๐
genuine LOL @ Dr. P - class!
Really!
You think it funny a man can destroy a perfectly good pen for a cheap laugh.
Harold Shipman didn't start by killing patients you know, he worked his way up. You really wouldn't want an elderly relative visiting him, well not if there was any chance they'd be leaving you anything in their will.
And having worked on pharmaceutical exhibitions stands for many years I can also guarantee that as a doctor he will have stolen that pen. Trust me they can be the highest paid brain surgeon in the world but put a pen anywhere in their vision and they all become out of control kleptomaniacs.
@avdave2 - You know it's not the same pen don't you?
There's no way DrP would destroy his lucky pen. He loves it too much and would be devastated.
He's switched it for a pen that died of natural causes just to play a trick on us. Doctors have access to all sorts of dead bodies and shit.
The cheeky scamp.
My dad's old Ping A-blade putter.
He bought it, new, in about 1960 and used it up until he died in '07. It's right handed, I'm left, so it's of no use to me but whenever I manage to get a round in it goes in the bag so that he's "with me" on the course ๐
BigGAre you really Milton?
I swear if they move my desk one more time I'll quit.. #niche
I was given it as part of a present from a friend's uncle
mmm bit weird ! did he let you sit on his lap with a worthers mint?
Anyway you lot need to man up a bit
this is the correct answer
.ton - Member
i dont care for anything that can be bought by cash. my health and the love of my family are the only 2 things i never want to lose
Really!
You think it funny a man can destroy a perfectly good pen for a cheap laugh.
It was going so well, don't start Bickering.
Anyway you lot need to man up a bit
says the expert
stumpy01 - Member
The keyring on my car key.....I bought it when I worked at Airbus in Hamburg; they had a little shop you could get all sorts of Airbus branded stuff from.
Should you ever require a new one, or even just wish to give it a viking style sendoff, just holler and I'll get you another.
@ perchpanther, well he's even more devious and underhand than I expected. Just ask yourself is this a man in who's hands you would want to deposit your testicles and then cough. No I thought not
Daffy - MemberShould you ever require a new one, or even just wish to give it a viking style sendoff, just holler and I'll get you another.
Oooooh, Ta!
A penknife my Dad bought for me on my first promotion and a wallet that my Mum (that cut all ties from her family, including me) bought me. Many years old and with me every day.
Both in the car that was stolen off my drive and found torched 4 hours later.
Bastards.
On a lighter note, I'll kill anyone that is responsible for anything happening to my cheap lunchbox fork.
Loads: penknives, 25 year old jack wolfskin rucksack, my oldest (again 25 year+) Petes Eats big mugs, a small blue baby spoon my son had that we now use to measure out spices...i could go on for ages
For me it would be my lunch box.
I was given it as part of a present from a friend's uncle when I moved into my first house.
What a great guy. A friend did this for us with our first baby and it was a real sign of thoughtfulness.
Mine is probably a set of Gravity Randall aluminium stepladders that my dad aquired before I was born. Over 40 years old and still rattle and wobble free. I pinched them when I left home as my mum is not mobile enough to use them and they have been so useful. Most importantly it reminds me of my late dad when he was young - that's what's priceless about them.
rolling pin that was my Grans
He bought it, new, in about 1960 and used it up until he died in '07. It's right handed, I'm left, so it's of no use to me but whenever I manage to get a round in it goes in the bag so that he's "with me" on the course
Lovely idea stevie - I do the same with my late father's watch and cufflinks and important meetings. Give the cufflinks a little rub when I need some inspiration!!
A teaspoon made by Nest. Picked it up in Nz in 1999. Its been round the world a couple of times and 90% of the yoghurt and other desserts I've eaten in that time have been using that spoon.
When I left my first real (geeky) place of employ, my leaving gift was a big Swiss Army Knife. At the time I thought "sweet idea but I'll never use it" and it was my daily companion for the best part of two decades. When it disappeared I was truly gutted, so in a sense it's already happened.
I got married last year, and my Best Man bought me a new one (on the back of that tale). It's taken the old one's place for entirely different reasons but again, I'd be devastated if I lost it.
My Armstrong-Siddeley keyring. It came with my Armstrong-Siddeley Hurricane DHC in 1967.
I have a rather tatty wooden coat hanger. It's a bit small to use, but written on it is my grandfathers name, and his army number.
My Beastway glass,made by Tom Eisl.If it ever gets broken,I will cry.
All the family know not to use it as it's 'Dad's special glass'
Spare a thought for the winner of Beastway regular Grayson Perry's custom plate that was awarded in the late 90s. The same winner who left it with some other old trophies when he moved house not realising exactly what it was...




