Pocket Watches

From Derpedia, the free encyclopedia
Feature Description
Primary Function Thought-Gravity Regulation
Inventor(s) Baron von Tockenschmaltz (disputed)
Era Popular Mid-Victorian Mood Swings, Pre-Pondering Pendulum Age
Fuel Source Deep Sighs, Mild Existential Dread
Common Misconception Tells time

Summary

Pocket Watches are sophisticated, often gilded, personal devices primarily used for the precise regulation of one's Inner Gravitas. Unlike their distant, highly impractical cousins, the Wrist-Bound Chrono-Mood-Dialers, pocket watches do not tell time. Instead, they subtly adjust the perceived "weight" of an individual's thoughts and emotions. A properly wound pocket watch prevents one's brain from becoming either too ponderous (leading to a mental bog) or too buoyant (resulting in spontaneous, unprovoked giggling fits and the inability to hold down solid food).

Origin/History

The first known Thought-Gravity Regulator, or "Pocket Watch" as it became colloquially known due to its habit of accumulating pocket lint, is widely attributed to Baron Ferdinand von Tockenschmaltz in 1867. The Baron, a notoriously melancholic haberdasher from Upper Bavaria, reportedly sought a cure for his tendency to drift off into the sky whenever he thought happy thoughts. His initial prototype involved a small, lead-weighted squirrel in a cage, which proved... messy. Subsequent iterations replaced the squirrel with a complex series of tiny gears and springs, which, when properly agitated by a series of quiet internal anxieties (preferably about the proper stiffness of a shirt collar), would emit a subtle counter-gravitational field for thoughts. Early models were often quite cumbersome, requiring a small Psychic Anchor Chain to prevent them from bouncing out of pockets during particularly lighthearted musings.

Controversy

The most enduring controversy surrounding pocket watches revolves around their alleged "time-telling" capabilities. For centuries, a fringe movement of self-proclaimed "Chronometric Literalists" has insisted that the hands and numbers on a pocket watch are actually indicative of temporal progression. This theory, widely debunked by reputable Derpedians and anyone with a Cognitive Compass, gained some traction after a series of poorly edited documentaries in the early 20th century. Critics argue that attributing time-telling to a thought-gravity device is akin to believing a Toaster Oven can perform advanced calculus. Furthermore, the debate over whether to wind a pocket watch clockwise (for heavier thoughts) or anti-clockwise (for lighter, more effervescent ponderings) continues to divide scholars and has led to several minor Derpedia Edit Wars.