My Technics 7000 Piano Keyboard. Trouble is when I am playing it the wife will pipe up "You're playing it out of tune" for which I reply " Love, I am playing all the right keys but not necessarily in the right order".
In football terms, a framed wall poster with numerous photos from the Liverpool and Chelsea cup games, including team sheets signed by our squads for both games. In life in general, my phone and folding reading glasses. Obviously I need to check my phone every 2 minutes, day and night, to see how much battery I have left. I would not be able to do this without my glasses, which fit neatly in my pocket after being folded up.
Dull answer alert! I didn't think this question would be so hard to answer, but I just can't decide. I like having things and I'm a bit of a collector/hoarder at heart, so for things I like (BFC, Batman, James Bond, various music acts, horror films, etc) I have all sorts of stuff cluttering up the house. I sometimes feel like I'm the curator of my own museum! But when it comes down to it, if the house was burning down, after rescuing everything in the house that has a heartbeat, the first things I'd go for would be our photograph albums and the hard drive I keep all the photos and videos of the kids on. Everything else can be replaced, more or less, but I couldn't take any more photos of people no longer with us or videos of the kids when they were tiny. Dunno if that makes them prized possessions in the sense that you mean though.
In terms of football I've got a pair of David Watson's signed from the PL season that he gave me. Mi mam worked down at oakwell when I was a young lad so I've got a few bits.
One handed gardening? Isn't that quite difficult? They could be used for masturbation but that would probably be even more difficult. Especially, if like me, you've got a small penis.
Why one handed? I would have thought these two David Watsons he's got would have two hands. I'm not sure I'd want a David Watson wnaking me off either.
Memories of my grandparents they've both been past away over 10 years, but still not a day goes by with out memories of them flooding back to me and making me smile.
18ct gold Omega Constellation Chronometer given to me by the ultra rich daughter of a Barclays Bank director.