Thursday, May 3, 2018

Always in my right mind



            A longtime friend of mine recently asked the question on his social media page, of all his left handed friends and family, “When you shake hands, do you prefer to use your dominant hand or do you automatically go righty because it's considered the norm?”. I have a handful of things that I am really passionate about. One of those things is left-handedness.  In my opinion (and that’s all it is) most of the things that lefties do with their right hand isn’t out of comfort or “etiquette”, but out of adapting to a right handed dominated society. His question “left” me wanting to offer my two cents on the subject.
             When I was young, I didn’t have any left handed friends. I had two uncles that were left handed in my family that I knew of. Growing up I had several people, teachers, family members, etc. that would give me grief about being left handed. I remember in school, if my paper was smudged, points were taken off my grade. If I used my left hand to try to complete various tasks, and was having a difficult time completing said task because it was geared more toward a right handed person, I would be yelled at or told “Why don’t you use your right hand? Why don’t you use the "correct" hand?”. I remember in grade school when it was time for arts and crafts, everyone would get out their scissors, construction paper and glue etc. and start to cut the construction paper. What did this guy pull out? Yep, you know it, those pair of scissors with the green rubber grips and the word LEFTY in bold letters going down the sides of the blades. They just screamed “LOOK AT ME”. If you tried to use the right handed scissors the paper would end up looking like a cat used it as a scratching post.
              Some of the teachers would try to make me bend my hand all goofy looking when I write to not smudge my writing. But I could not do that. It ended up hurting my wrist. So I would just write how it felt comfortable to me. It all worked out. But as I was growing up I just put all that aside and didn’t worry about it. Can’t you tell it doesn’t bother me? Here I am 43 and I’m still talking about it. Lol As I grew older I started noticing more and more left handed people. I started noticing more left handed sports stars, movie and television stars, etc. So I would think, wow more and more lefties are around now, maybe it will be more accepted. Boy was I wrong.
              It wasn’t until years later that what I call the “lefty hate” really started to bother me more and more. Though left handedness was seemingly becoming more common, (I’ve read anywhere from 6-10% of the world is left handed) society is still dominated by the right handed mentality. Most of everything you do is geared toward the right handed person. A few examples are using a screw driver, tightening a bolt, using a hand can opener, and even most doors on your house are made for the right handed person. I didn’t realize it until the other night, but even the lawn mower. The rope you pull to start it is on the right side of the mower. But most people don’t think about these types of things because either A) You’re a righty and if it doesn’t affect you then why would you think about it or B) you’ve adapted to using your right hand for various right handed things and it’s become second nature to you now.
                But there are people out there, like me, that are very passionate on the subject as well. Some have even made websites, Facebook pages, and newsletters. One that I read all the time is called Anything Left Handed. If you sign up for their newsletter they send out left handed facts, history, and information. They also sell left handed merchandise. But they are in the UK, so shipping may be a little costly if you are not. So I found this place in Florida called Lefty’s: The Left Hand Store. I believe they also have a location in San Francisco too. I had to make a trip to their store in Florida when I visited a couple years ago. I wish they had some of those things when I was younger.
                One of the points I like to make is, if you have a child who is left handed, do not attempt to make him/her right handed. Do not try to change them or make them feel like they are wrong for being left handed. Even if you say you’re “joking”. You’re not joking, you’re being a jerk. Oh to answer my friend Mike’s original question, I mainly use my right hand. Like I said earlier I believe it’s because of adaptation. But I do use my left on occasion. It does feel more comfortable and it also creates an awkward moment from the recipient because it throws them off a little. Ha! Remember fellow lefties, August 13th is International Lefthanders Day. 






6 comments:

  1. Great post! My wife is left-handed, and we've been to a Lefty store in downtown St. Louis. While there, we bought a spiral notebook with the spiral on the right side, a pair of scissors, and either a pen or pencil with the ink/lead favoring a left-handed person. It was a really neat store...sad, though, that there has to be a specialized store for left-handers. Becauase of your examples of the lawn mower starter pull, and other right hand dominant tasks, many left-handers are ambidextrous in sports and other everyday tasks.

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    1. Thank you so much for giving it a read. I always try to help others who don't really give it much thought think about it (if that make sense lol) If you know anyone that you think might like it, share it with them. Thank you and happy new year.

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  2. Thanks for sharing. I grew up much the same as you, always feeling different and alone until I got older. I'm 40 bow and about 10 years or so ago I decided to embrace my left handed Ness and when people treat me different because they are right handed i simply laugh and remind them I may be different than you but at least I'm in my right mind all the time. L.O.L

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    1. Thank you for giving it a read Christina. I am glad you liked it. If you think others might as well, feel free to share it with them. Have a Happy New Year fellow lefty.

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  3. Hi. Whilst I agree with a lot of your points, I have to say that I prefer to focus on the positives. I am great at undoing tight screws for example.
    I also used to find it "handy' when talking to girls, it's a conversation starter and is handy in bed (you're a lefty, she's a righty - draw your own picture).
    So much is said about how we're "different" or "odd" or even "persecuted". We're not, we're special, adaptable and fascinating.
    Left on, good people. X

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  4. I don't usually participate in these sorts of things, but I am feeling particularly enraged today. This a result of a comment from the Everthing Left Handed Facebook page from a left handed teacher no less. She commented on the left handed Presidents indicating that only Bill Clinton was holding his pen "correctly." I am incapable of writing without hooking my hand, as are numerous other lefties, although I am extremely multihanded in almost every other way except food consumption. After reading your blog, I wonder how much of my right handedness is inate and how much is adaptation. I suspect both. I, like, Dai, in the previous comment have prefered to celebrate my left handedness as special, but I do remember writing class as a child and feeling a Mt. Everest amount of angst and pressure to try and write "correctly" without the hook and the paper facing the "right" way. I am 62 and vivdly remember that horror. You are not the only one who still feels the pain.

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