The Expensive Lie of the Mechanical Second Hand
A meditation on permanence, artificiality, and the 333 parts that refuse to be part of the “now.”
Eli K. stands in front of his bathroom mirror at , his eyes slightly bloodshot from a late-night descent into a Wikipedia rabbit hole regarding the Longitude Act. He is a food stylist by trade, a man whose professional existence is defined by the hyper-real and the temporary. He spends a day making sure a hamburger looks like a promise while knowing full well the meat is cold and the “milkshake” is actually dyed mashed potatoes. For Eli, the world is a series of beautiful deceptions. But on his left wrist, he is currently strapping on a piece of engineering that contains 333 micro-components, none of which are pretending to be anything other than what they are.
The watch cost him $13,543. His car, a reliable if uninspired crossover, carries a monthly payment that is significantly less than the insurance premium on the timepiece. To any rational observer-the kind of person who buys clothes for their utility and views a phone as a tool-Eli has lost his mind. He has spent the equivalent of a down payment on a small house in the Midwest on a mechanical object that is objectively worse at its primary job than the $13 quartz watch he bought for his nephew’s birthday.
