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Overcoming Obstacles: What’s Right with Lefties

by Janine Boylan on August 12, 2013

lefty writer, illustrating overcoming obstacles and Left-Handers' Day

© Thinkstock

Happy Left-Handers’ Day!

What is wrong with the photo above? No left-handed person would voluntarily write in a spiral notebook like that—it’s horribly uncomfortable on the hand!

About 10% of the population is left-dominant. They prefer to write, toss balls, cut paper, and open cans with their left hands. Often this means they have to overcome obstacles daily by struggling with tools, like spiral notebooks, thoughtlessly designed only for right-handed people.

About twenty years ago, a fed-up group of lefties, the Left-Hander’s Club, started International Left-Handers’ Day, which is now celebrated annually on August 13. According to the official site, the event allows left-handers to “celebrate their sinistrality and increase public awareness of the advantages and disadvantages of being left-handed.”

So, what are some of the Oh, I see advantages of being left-handed? Here are five.

1. Lefties Are in Great Company

Lefties are a rare, but spectacular, group of people. You probably have heard that four of the last five presidents are lefties: Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, George H. W. Bush, and Ronald Reagan (who was ambidextrous). Other famous lefties include:

  • Leonardo da Vinci
  • Henry Ford
  • John D. Rockefeller
  • Marie Curie
  • Albert Einstein
  • Jimi Hendrix
  • Whoopi Goldberg
  • Angelina Jolie
  • Babe Ruth
  • Ty Cobb
  • and more.

This video highlights some other powerful lefties.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k6jlsKO62ZU

If the video does not play, watch it here.

2. Lefties Get to Choose Where to Sit at the Table

The best seat is the corner seat. Without hesitation, a lefty deserves to have it. After all, if everyone else eats with their right hands, a lefty doesn’t want to constantly be hitting elbows throughout a meal.

Lefty at the dinner table, illustrating overcoming obstacles and Left-Handers' Day

No bumping elbows at the dinner table!
© Thinkstock

3. Southpaws Excel in Some Sports

It is well-known that left-handers have an advantage over right-handed competitors in numerous sports like baseball, boxing, and tennis. Left-handed players can position themselves differently and hit or throw from the side opposite of their right-handed counterparts.

For example, according to the Oxford dictionary, the term “southpaw” originated with baseball. Fields were built with home plate in the west so a southpaw pitcher was using the hand that was on the south side of the field.

lefty baseball player, illustrating overcoming obstacles and Left-Handers' Day

Throws from left-handed pitchers are actually more difficut for left-handed batters to hit than right-handed batters because of how the ball crosses the plate.
© Thinkstock

Northwestern University professor Daniel M. Abrams and his graduate student Mark J. Panaggio researched the role competition plays in relation to the ratio of left- and right-handed people. Their theory was that the more cooperative an environment is, the more single-handed it is. Conversely, the more competitive an environment is, the more even the split is between right- and left-handers.

Their research results supported their theory: the percentage of lefties in highly competitive sports is higher than the 10% in the rest of society. In fact, more than 50% of top baseball players are lefties.

4. Left Hands Can Type More Words than Right Hands

Using a standard “qwerty” keyboard and following the rules learned in keyboarding class, people can type merely 451 words with only the right hand.

Using only the left hand, however, people can type an astounding  3,403 words.

left hand on keyboard, illustrating overcoming obstacles and Left-Handers' Day

One theory is that the left-hand-dependent “qwerty” keyboard was developed
with input from telegraph operators.
© Thinkstock

Here’s a list of the awesome all-left-hand words, ranging from “ax” to “sweaterdresses.”

5. Lefties Are Faster at Using the Whole Brain 

The left side of the brain controls the muscles on the right side of the body. The right side of the brain controls the muscles on the left side of the body. As a popular saying goes, “Lefties are in their right mind.”

a brain, illustrating overcoming obstacles and Left-Handers' Day

There are two sides of a human brain. It’s important for the left and right sides to talk to each other.
© Thinkstock

In general, information from the senses crosses sides like this, too. What you see or feel on your left is processed through the right side of your brain. Language, however, is an interesting exception. The vast majority of right-handers use the left side of their brain for language; 60–70% of left-handers also use the left side of their brain for language.

Australian National University’s Dr. Nick Cherbuin determined that people who are strongly left-handed are able to process information between the two sides of their brain milliseconds more quickly than those who are right-handed.

In a BBC report about this study, psychologist Dr. Steve Williams is noted as saying, “This seems to go with evidence that left-handers use both sides of the brain for language—that they are more bicerebral. They get faster at it because they’re having to use both sides of the brain more.”

Happy Left-Handers’ Day

More informed now about the advantages of being left-handed, we salute all lefties on Left-Handers’ Day! May this world become more equally-handed so you have fewer obstacles to overcome and more time to celebrate the benefits.

But before you all go, take a moment and vote. Let’s see how the OIC community compares to the statistics.

 

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