I had a friend (still have the friend, though we don’t have regular access to each other anymore) who liked to “show off” how obscure some of his possessions were, possibly to achieve the “wanderlust effect” (i.e. the reaction of “how did you get these here”). Something about the anticipation that his inventory was alien to whoever he showed.

One day, he was asked to bring games and a console and he brought one of those extremely rare knock-off bootleg gaming consoles they sell in Asia, which we’re not even remotely near.

“What the heck is that” asked my other best friend?

“It’s the Mega Duck. I brought CFGP with me too.”

“Why can’t you be a normal Upstate New Yorker? We literally got Playstation.”

“What fun is that?”

It wasn’t some small quirk either. One day he took a long walk and came across a part of the area nobody had been to in decades and took pictures with my camera which he happened to have. Also having hyperthymesia, he came back and was all like “I took these photos of a place that seems like it was out of a fantasy painting and also recognized someone there who was on the missing persons list when I came back”. Like a boss.

In contrast, alas, ever since moving, my possessions have become overwhelmingly mundane enough you’d expect most of it to be in an 18th century post-colonial American home, the exception (if you could call her that), ironically, being my dog who is of a rare breed.

What’s the most wanderlusty thing you own, something that would be the absolute opposite of mundane if in your possession?

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Hmm. I have an original copy of the Space Child’s Mother Goose, and a gun cabinet my dad turned into a shelf cabinet, and a collar necklace from the 1940s from Tunisia. I think that’s about it. Unfortunately tossed the shirt I bought from Kurt Cobain when Nirvana came down here in I think 1990? 1989? From their little white van. I had no idea they would get famous!

      • ch00f@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        Yup! SN 528128 Got it off eBay. Apparently the previous owner passed away and his daughter sold it. Paid $1300 for it. It’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever spent that much money on and I regret nothing.

        It had some issues when I got it doing division. It tended to jam up turning in reverse. But I was able take it apart to get it working. One of the metal tabs wasn’t bent quite enough. Makes sense since these thing were all hand assembled and tuned.

        I looked up the serial number on curtamania, and saw some checkins from various previous owners. It was pretty wild that someone even uploaded a photo. Not of a Curta calculator, but my Curta calculator.

        • Wugmeister@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          9 days ago

          That’s cool as fuck. I showed this to my fiancée but she didn’t seem to understand how cool this is.

          I also have a much cheaper mechanical calculator, one of the ones you dial in the numbers with your pencil and only goes up to 9999 before the digits overflow. When I get up in the morning I’ll see if I can find it.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    I collect books and have a number signed by people who are no longer with us. :(

    One of the Wheel of Time books signed by Robert Jordan.

    Martian Chronicles signed by Ray Bradbury.

    X-Men #1 signed by Stan Lee.

    The early Rocketeer appearances signed by Dave Stevens.

    A Contract With God limited edition #33/125 signed by Will Eisner.

    Thieve’s World graphic novels signed by Tim Sale.

    • spankinspinach@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      I adore the wheel of time. First fantasy series I ever chewed through (and then waited about 5 or 10 years for publishing lol). Very happy for you, kudos!

    • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      My buddy has a script from the original broadway production of Beauty and the Beast, signed by Alan Menkin (he wrote the music) and several cast members.

      He found it in a Half Price Books for like $5, because nobody had noticed the signatures inside the front cover. Unfortunately, due to the fact that there’s no chain of custody, there’s no way to actually verify that it’s real. After all, anybody with a sharpie and some practice could have made the signatures. But it’s a great conversation piece.

  • NegativeLookBehind@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Idk if it fits the criteria, but I have a fairly substantial arrowhead collection. Some dating back about 10,000 years. I found them all myself.

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    9 days ago

    I use a sound mixer for my computer audio. So I have real faders to control discord, YouTube, games… It’s surprisingly great.

    • owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Sweet! Do you have a special audio interface for your PC? I’ve got a mixer as well, though only one audio output from my PC (I use it to mix my two PCs, instruments, and the baby monitor).

      • jet@hackertalks.com
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        7 days ago

        Yeah, USB audio device, the mixer shows up as 3 different devices, which makes things easy. I also mix with another computer, and the phone!

  • hansolo@lemm.ee
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    9 days ago

    I have a bunch of weird stuff, but I rarely show it off.

    Tooth from a dinosaur, not sure what kind, it was found by a herder in a remote area, but some sort of preditor as its pointy.

    Two 19th century swords that were from both sides of the French colonial expeditions in West Africa. One has magic powers (or, so the guy that sold it to me said). A number of other supposed enchanted items and charms.

    Jar of sand from the Sahara outside Timbuktu and the Playa at Burning Man. Stones from I guess around the middle of Mt Olympus, and bunch of giant quartz crystals from southern Africa. A pin given to basically every Soviet citizen that was alive during (and therefore coined as fighting in) WWII.

    Ticket to one of the Obama election night parties.

  • superkret@feddit.org
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    9 days ago

    I have a bottle of gin I distilled myself using botanicals that only grow in Patagonia.
    And a set of early modern period plate armor.

  • aramis87@fedia.io
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    9 days ago

    I have a small rock from Antarctica.

    I have a necklace with a piece of 6,000 year old bog oak on it.

    I have tiny pieces from three different meteorites: one from outer space, one from the moon, and one from Mars.

    • Uranium 🟩@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      Huh, I’ve got a collection of not necessarily dangerous, but hard to find chemicals. DCM (methylene chloride) is still something I’ve been unable to find. It’s an incredibly useful solvent especially for adhering bitumen felt to itself.

      • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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        9 days ago

        It’s not an element. It’s a chemical that was used for stripping paint, but the government banned selling it to the public as a paint stripper just because people kept dying.

        I’m a spiteful libertarian. I do not tolerate the government’s attempts to protect me from my own bad judgement. Therefore I legally bought a gallon of it from a chemical supply company. (Why did I think I would need a gallon?) I tried to make my own paint stripper from it but I couldn’t get it to form a gel. (How could I have known that randos on the internet could provide wrong directions?)

        I haven’t gotten rid of it because it was expensive so now it just sits in my freezer. I’ll give it away for free to anyone who wants to come pick it up…

        • BreadOven@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          I don’t know if it still is, but it was a suspected carcinogen at some point. It also isn’t great. For the ozone layer (but better than CHCl3 or CCl4). I think that’s the main reasons it isn’t widely available for the public now.

          It also easily permeates nitrile gloves. Can’t remember if it’s the same for latex.

  • 2ugly2live@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    I went to the Ghibli museum and watched a short while I was there. The ticket to the short was a film strip from one of the movies. I have it framed.

  • Wugmeister@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    9 days ago

    I hoard weird dice. I’ve got crystal-shaped dice that roll like pins, dodecahedral d4s, dice with Roman numerals, two d30s, two d60s, a glow-in-the-dark d100 slightly larger than a golf ball, and I have spherical dice that I pull out when i want to give somebody an aneurysm. The only ones I regularly use is my glow-in-the dark sets and my liquid core sets with a floating eyeball inside them.

    Next up is metal spinner dice and roulette wheel dice, since regular metal dice are kinda loud when you chew on fidget with them

    Most relevant to your post is that i have dozens upon dozens of d10s. I have more d10s than d6s (and I used to play 40k as Orks so that says a lot). This sometimes gets reactions out of people when they see my dice box. I wish there was a cool reason, but the reason for it is that I ran a short campaign in Engine Heart as a high schooler and got a little too excited about its dice pool system.

    • spittingimage@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Nice.

      I just bought a set of weird dice, and they’re a bit of a disappointment. Someone made them by carving the right number of facets off a sphere at random and numbering them. They couldn’t possibly roll fairly. Not what I expected from the photos.

  • Punkie@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I have a kaleidoscope for the blind.

    One of only 150 or 250 made (I forget which). The artist (Reinhold Marxhausen) got Alzheimer’s in his final years, and is probably dead now. It looks like a metal blob, but the inside is hollow and it has are springs that vibrate and make tones to the slightest touch and heat change. Just shake it and hold it to your ear. It makes different and unique sounds depending on who is holding it, the weather, the air temperature, and so on.

    I got it from a kaleidoscope collector, who sold it to me because the small handmade box it came in was damaged in shipping, and it wasn’t worth as much without the box. I keep it in a handmade suede bag.

    Edit: I made an Imgur post about it: https://imgur.com/gallery/kaleidoscope-blind-Ab8Xz