Iām a foodie, always have been. Never really been āthinā since I was in my mid teens, but Iāve taken up intermittent fasting and have lost 15% body weight since the beginning of February with an overall goal of losing 30% before taking delivery of my 2023
I am curious how you go about buying expensive used watches to fix/restore in the 10K - 50K range? I'd be scared of being scammed with fakes etc - I don't think I'd ever trust buying something for 20k+ on ebay etc, and sure as hell not on Facebook.The only thing I would really consider a Vice for me is collecting watches. While I do smoke (vape mainly), thatās a pretty cheap habit. Buying, collecting, fixing and flipping āluxuryā watches is too fun. Sometimes, you make a killing. Especially these days where people are low on cash so they sell their Rolex or whatever. I scoop em up. Fix or service them and if I donāt want to keep it, I sell for profit.
Itās a very time consuming hobby but something Iāve always enjoyed. Nothing beats the feeling you get when you reassemble a broken watch that you fixed and it starts ticking
i guess it is a bit like cars. Mechanical engineering. Just on a micro scale.
my collection is thin these days since Iām not spending as much as I used to. (had a kid 2 years ago). Still, if I see a good deal on an undervalued or easy fix piece that I know I can sell for profit easily, Iāll be perfectly happy paying $50k or whatever for a watch. Especially if I know I can sell it for $80k later after spending about $5-$10k on parts.
just like cars though, 1 simple mistake can cost you a lot of money.
Easy, i can help you quit that, lemme pull out my turbo delete kit for youBoost