Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm very left handed. Not even remotely ambidextrous, as some posters seem to be.
The ability to switch may depend on the degree of handedness. For my brain, it wouldn't have worked.
I lived in China for years, up until fairly recently. My teachers would have to physically look away when I worked on writing characters. I get it.
In the US, handedness doesn't matter. Except if you want to your child to be president. Then, left handed appears to be an odd advantage.
For those still in Shanghai? Honestly, screw 'em.
Screw you boo
Spoken like the ever shrinking cadre of right handers who still want to hold us down.
10% now, 10% always.
Being a xenophobic ass is trash, and that has nothing to do with right or left handedness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm very left handed. Not even remotely ambidextrous, as some posters seem to be.
The ability to switch may depend on the degree of handedness. For my brain, it wouldn't have worked.
I lived in China for years, up until fairly recently. My teachers would have to physically look away when I worked on writing characters. I get it.
In the US, handedness doesn't matter. Except if you want to your child to be president. Then, left handed appears to be an odd advantage.
For those still in Shanghai? Honestly, screw 'em.
Screw you boo
Spoken like the ever shrinking cadre of right handers who still want to hold us down.
10% now, 10% always.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm very left handed. Not even remotely ambidextrous, as some posters seem to be.
The ability to switch may depend on the degree of handedness. For my brain, it wouldn't have worked.
I lived in China for years, up until fairly recently. My teachers would have to physically look away when I worked on writing characters. I get it.
In the US, handedness doesn't matter. Except if you want to your child to be president. Then, left handed appears to be an odd advantage.
For those still in Shanghai? Honestly, screw 'em.
Screw you boo
Spoken like the ever shrinking cadre of right handers who still want to hold us down.
10% now, 10% always.
Anonymous wrote:My mom did this. I write with my right hand but use my left hand for scissors, baseball bat, gold clubs, eating utensils, almost everything with my left hand.
Nothing traumatic happened to me. I’m not psychologically damaged. It don’t remember how she did it. I kinda remember her switching the pencil when I was writing.
I kinda like it. I have beautiful hand writing. I hold a pencil like a normal person. My mom and my grandpa were also left handed and that is also how were trained back in the day. We are all normal. None of my kids are lefties. I probably wouldn’t have the patience to do it. Not sure how long it takes.
But nothing bad will happen if you decide to do it. It’s not that horrible. It will not traumatize you kid.
Anonymous wrote:OMG no. This happened to me in an evangelical school. It’s still distressing.
Anonymous wrote:OMG no. This happened to me in an evangelical school. It’s still distressing.
Anonymous wrote:There are 71 response. That does not constitute countless.
Brain damage? Really?
Maybe not ideal but it does not cause brain damage. Were you one of these lefties that was brain damaged!! You sound like an idiot.
Anonymous wrote:My mother still talks about it. Small town Canada they tied her left hand behind her. She still has bad handwriting. I remember I needed a note signed by her in high school and the teacher said his 7 year old could write better than that. It was degrading to my mother and made me feel bad.
How must it feel to have your arm tied in front of the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Left handed people should write mirror from right handed people. Especially cursive.
It's a pencil not a shovel. There's no reason to attempt to etch the paper. Apply light pressure and it works fine.
-Lefty