Just want to see how this statistically ponders out. I have five choices, leave a comment if you go beyond.
momchild; I can so relate to that,I have a barn and 3 sheds full of shit,but it's my shit.Which just goes to show ya,you can get your shit together,just doesn't mean you can do anything with it. As far as the original question,I am right-handed.
i use both hands for everything aswell as my toes and mouth and elbows.. basicaly i'm creative.. haha it rocks
yo i am ambidextrous.. but am getting my lettering better with my right hand, since i write lefty mostly
lmao! me too am ambidextrous, but favour the right.....me folks are right and left handed (mom and dad respectively) so i musta got good bits from both their gene's or summit
I started using my right hand for everything, until I got my hand stuck in 1 of those old wringer washing machines in 4th grade. Then I learned to use both hands. The only real left-handers in the family (that I know of) is my mothers mom & 1 younger brother.
So I guess if you are right handed you think with the left side of your brain and if you are a lefty you think with the right side of your brain..who figured that one out? And really who gives a shit anyway! I'm just happy to have hands. LOL
AMBIDEXTERITY EXERCISE .....by Melvin D. Saunders ......Ambidexterity is the ability to use both your hands with equal ease or facility, but if you're armless, it could be your feet! In fact, it is quite advantageous in certain sports and martial arts to be able to use both your feet with equal facility. The Greeks encouraged and tried to promote ambidexterity because it was simply logical in sports and battle to be adept with both hands instead of one. By combining the Phoenician style of writing right to left with their own left to right system, the Greeks created a reading and writing system called boustrophedon, where the lines ran alternately right-to-left and left-to-right. With alternating sweeps of the eyes back and forth, reading was more swift and efficient. ......Michelangelo (1475-1564) was a multi-faceted genius like Leonardo da Vinci. He often painted with both hands. When one got tired, he switched to the other. British artist, Sir Edwin Henry Landseer (1802-1873) could draw with both hands simultaneously -- a horse's head with one hand and a stag's head with the other. He taught drawing and etching to Queen Victoria who was a lefty that became ambidextrous. ......Fleming, Einstein and Tesla were all ambidextrous. Benjamin Franklin was also ambidextrous and signed the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution with his left hand. U.S. 20th president, James Garfield was a well educated backwoodsman born in a log cabin. Although he could write with either hand with equal ease, he could also write Greek with his left hand and Latin with his right hand simultaneously! Harry Kahne demonstrated his mental dexterity in 1922 by performing several mental operations simultaneously. While one hand was writing mirror language, the other hand intermingled upside down and backward letters.