sky to heaven - the invisible life.

July 15, 2004

I lost a rolex

Filed under: I lost a rolex - sky2evan @ 5:19 pm

*

I once spent nearly $3,000 to buy a rolex. It was three months of my salary.

I believed that a man’s most precious possession was his time – because how a man uses his time, reflects his life. Perhaps this is one reason why people say, “Time is money.” So I wanted to buy a good watch, so that I would always be reminded to cherish my time. I had never owned any kind of jewelry before, and I had never bought anything so expensive - so I splurged.

After I bought it, I wore it every day. My time was literally my money: $3,000 of it, right on my hand. And it was a terrific feeling – because it was a terrific watch. Sometimes I’d take a break during my day, and just look at it. In many ways, if I compared myself to the rolex, it was much better than me. The rolex would never be late, and it never needed to rest. It was nearly impossible to break, and it’d probably live much longer than me - and it would always look good. It was hard to believe that something so fragile as a human being could create something so nearly perfect and eternal as that watch. A lot of people would notice it and ask me, “What kind of watch is that? It looks really nice – and expensive.” After I told them, they’d go into shock. I didn’t have to show the watch off, because the watch showed itself off, all by itself. I enjoyed wearing that watch every day for three months.

And then one day, I lost it. I put it down for a moment, and the next moment it was gone. I looked everywhere for it, but somebody else had taken it. But no matter who or how, it was gone. It had disappeared from my life. Suddenly and completely.

That night before I went to sleep, I hung on to an irrational, impossible hope: that it would somehow return back to me the next day. That when I woke up the next morning, this would have all just been a bad dream - in my heart, I was hoping for a miracle. The next morning, I searched for it slowly and methodically, to give my miracle time to happen. I searched all over my room, my bag, my clothes, my bed, and even in places where I knew I had not been the day before.

But of course, the miracle never happened - only reality did. I sighed, and decided to go shopping that day to buy another watch… this time, a Swatch. As I rode the bus without the rolex, I felt almost naked – as if I’d lost an important part of me. A new watch was never going to be able to replace the rolex. I’d never be able to wear perfection on my hand again. I began to feel miserable and depressed. I started to criticize myself: I thought, “How stupid can you be?” “Maybe you don’t have it anymore because you don’t deserve it.” “Maybe your whole life will be like this – about getting precious things, and then losing them.” I only had it for three months. Three short months, and it was gone. One, two, three - gone.

And that’s when I realized something. Was I truly such a different person three months ago? No, I wasn’t. I wasn’t a better man or a better person because I wore a better watch. But during those three months, I felt as if I was – and that’s how powerful the illusion was. Wearing a better watch, made me feel better about myself. It made me feel like I was worth more. And if it could make me feel better about myself - that meant in some deep inner space of my heart, without even knowing it, I felt bad about myself. Perhaps that’s why many people often want better clothes, cars, and houses – because having better things will make them feel better about themselves. Because our things are valuable, we feel valuable.

But the more we use our cars, our clothes, our houses, and our other things to make us feel better about ourselves, the more dependent on them we become to feel good about ourselves - and to feel happy about our life. We sink to a state where we are no longer able to feel better about ourselves unless we have those better things. We get so used to having our things represent us, we begin to lose ourselves in our things. And when we eventually lose our things, we feel lost as well.

People looked at my rolex, and they thought certain things about me. Perhaps they thought I was rich, successful, or higher class - none of which I am. But whatever positive things they thought, I knew it was just an illusion. They were looking at the rolex, and it was the rolex that was making a good impression on other people - and not me. It was the power of the rolex and the power of money–not my power. And if I needed a rolex to make a good impression for other people, then how truly poor or weak I have must have been.

But I know that I am not the watch or clothes I wear, the car I drive, or the house I live in – and neither are you. I know this now, thoroughly and completely, because the rolex is gone – and I am still here. What we have within ourselves is so much more than what we own in the outside world. No matter how nice a rolex is, it can never love, have courage, realize a dream, create, improve itself, evolve, or live – but I can, and so can you. In losing something I thought I’d never want to lose, I gained something back I hadn’t even realized I’d lost - myself.

*

*

*

3 Comments »

The URI to TrackBack this entry is: http://skytoheaven.blogsome.com/2004/07/15/i-lost-a-rolex/trackback/

  1. This is the first essay that caught my eye.
    Perhaps it is that everyone knows what a rolex is, that it’s expensive and that it is usually treasured. What would I do if I lost something I treasured? I wanted to find out what you did.
    It’s hard to separate yourself from the material world, though. Do the clothes make the man, or the other way around?
    For the rolex, perhaps it is the artistry and workmanship that is appreciated, or is it the status that it represents… do we help people because we are concerned about those in need, or about how people perceive us?
    Perhaps the value of the rolex is not just the status, but it represents the 3 months of work, 3 months of your life all captured around your wrist. What does it mean for something to represent something else. Is it a shackle? An illusion? Or a means for focus? Like a holy cross.
    In any case, I’m glad you’re still whole… perhaps we are like earthworms, we can lose a piece of ourselves, yet continue to be whole…

    Comment by Dyrnwyn — October 4, 2005 @ 6:00 pm

  2. This is an interesting entry.

    Even though I didn’t own a Rolex (couldn’t bring myself to spend that amount of money), I know what you mean. I used to care too much about fashion brands, and what people think about wearing cheap, no brand clothing. Deep within, the branded goods didn’t make any difference to my life. If anything, it had made me more material-dependent and swallow.

    I used to be a Swatch watch collector too. Now, my current watch is a $10, no-brand one which lasted me for more than 2 years. Haha. :)

    Comment by Ange — October 13, 2005 @ 9:51 pm

  3. A person who can feel confident wearing a Swatch and another person who can only feel confident wearing a rolex - I believe the first one is better off than the latter. If confidence depends on money and outer wealth, that confidence is much weaker and more vulnerable than confidence based on inner wealth.

    I am not against buying branded goods per se - I myself still some branded goods because for certain items, I prefer higher quality that lasts longer. Stuff that’s cheap & needs to be constantly replaced is, in my opinion, somewhat wasteful & not environmentally friendly. Shoes, for example: I’d rather buy slightly more expensive shoes that can last 3-5 years, rather than buy cheaper shoes that need to be replaced every 1-2 years.

    On the other hand, I think it’s probably not very healthy to only buy branded goods for the sake of brand or status. According to some (or many) people, that status reflects “success” or “having it all”. But in my opinion, success in life is not defined by material success, and having lots of money is not the same thing as having everything. Being rich in money does not mean being rich in heart, mind, love, wisdom, happiness, or life. This is why I believe that status symbols are an illusion - they do not reflect true success or wealth at all.

    I never ended up buying a Swatch. Ever since I lost the rolex, I haven’t bothered to wear a watch at all - I just use the clock on my cellphone. I like the freer feeling of not having anything on my wrists.

    Comment by sky2evan — December 7, 2005 @ 11:58 am

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>


Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome | Theme designs available here