most valued item

Going to Cali said:
This is an awful thread. Think about it when you lose someone you love. You'll realise how worthless these items really are then.

sorry, some people may know how that feels...

i know...

but they arent items really... dont want to sound rude.. but the thread is "most valued item"
 
Going to Cali said:
This is an awful thread. Think about it when you lose someone you love. You'll realise how worthless these items really are then.

The thread explicitly states items that we have bought or own. We would hate to lose loved ones, but we do not own them.

There's nothing wrong with being attached to things that are materialistic in nature; like watches, cars, instruments etc. If people see sentimental value in them, what's to criticise?
 
I suppose my most valued items I own are pictures of me and my ex girlfriend and cards and stuff from her. They are in a box which is took out once and a while. Would hate to lose them.

Gareth
 
Fair play, the thread title is explicit. My own personal belief is that people are too attached to material posessions. Feel free to disagree, but car's, computer's and watches are replacable.
 
hmmm it appears there are more valued items than my guitars now...

sentimental.. and valued... i dunno

if we are going down the sentimental route.. if thats the right term...

then my late grandfathers certificate for the longest employee at shildon shops (for british rail.. in ye olde days) is the most "valued" item i have... i know its not like a world cup or anything, but its one of them personal things.

other than that.. my guitars finally rule all
 
I'm not sure I could specify one item.

Most valuable (monetarily), my home. It also has a very personal value, as much of the design was my own. It is, in that sense, unique.

Most valued, well, depends. I have a number of items that have incredible sentimental value, including some of my mother's jewelry, my father's war medals, and my grandmother's furniture. I can't think of any realistic circumstances under which I could be convinced to part with any of them, and I'd be very upset if they were lost or stolen. Their monetary value, I neither know nor care.

Most prized possession .... that's hard. I have some first editions of books that are either irreplaceable, or close to it. Some are also quite valuable. I also have some works of art that are also rare or irreplaceable. These include works by Renoir, Munch, Cezanne, Matisse, Dali, Whistler and so forth. Note, I'm talking about contemporary prints, and even in some cases signed prints, not original oils. The prints are quite valuable, monetarily, because they are in some cases, literally irreplaceable, but if they were oils, we'd be talking about hundreds of millions. I'm not talking about anything remotely in that league. I do also have some oils, and while they're quite expensive, they are not from artists in the class of the ones mentioned above.

I'm not sure I could pick out a single item as the most valued, though, because many of these items are valued in different ways. How do you compare an irreplaceable (one-off original) piece of art, with a very rare Dickens first edition, with your father's medals? I rather suspect, however, that what would upset me the most if I lost them would be the sentimental family items, but until or unless it happens, I can't be sure.
 
Assuming we're talking material possessions, would take too long for the things that money can't buy:


My GT LTS1 - ancient mountain bike but matches my personality and allows me to experience things I couldn't have anywhere else.
 
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