As someone who was "convinced" by the use of a wooden stick to become
righthanded, I still have trouble deciding which hand to use.  I wear my
watch on my right hand, not the left, mostly write with my right hand,
although I can use my left hand.  My kindergarten version of revenge on the
teachers and my father, who insisted I change hands, was to learn to write
upside down and backwards, something I am still quite adept at 45 years on.
I have always been a bit accident prone, which studies have shown is
attributable to a forced change.

It has its advantages tho, as when I injured my right hand I was able to
continue on with work, writing, and hobbies with my left, my nephew refers
to it as being "handbedextrous".

Lynn Scott in Wollongong, where I am finally seeing an end to unpacking,
where I am discovering the real disadvantage to being "creative" is all the
stuff that has to be moved around and rearranged.

To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line:
unsubscribe lace-chat [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to