Sitting slightly higher, moved your chair left or right, time of day, length of time the monitor has been on, what lights are turned on, age of monitor... All these factors will affect what you see on your LCD monitor so why hold your trust in a calibration.
I don't think theres anything wrong with calibrating your monitor, expecially so if you print but if thats the case it's probably more important you calibrate your printer than monitor.
You get use to what you see on your monitor and how what you see comes out in print. So I certainly don't consider it as important as what it's been blown out to be.
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