Iam

  • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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    471 month ago

    When fencing, left-handed people have the significant advantage of being able to dramatically switch their rapier from their right hand to their left hand, mid-combat, and announce that they are not really right-handed.

    • @[email protected]
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      328 days ago

      Realistically, I found left handed opponents to be more difficult to compete against.

      It took me longer to learn their body movements that would indicate a strike, and where they are aiming. It wast just less intuitive.

      Also, fencing a little person was a somewhat unique experience. Totally threw me off my game.

    • @CaptPretentious
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      230 days ago

      I did that in badminton. I’m the beginning I swapped hands when they weren’t looking. Once they caught on, of randomly swap whenever.

  • @[email protected]
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    431 month ago

    Notable advantage in a lot of beginner and intermediate level sports. By the time you get beyond that everyone knows how to compensate for left handedness.

    Easier for you to assault a castle with spiral staircases while using a sword.

    • Captain Aggravated
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      51 month ago

      Either everyone knows how to compensate for a southpaw or everyone is a southpaw. Fencing is a lefty’s game.

    • @spittingimage
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      51 month ago

      I’m told that Ferniehurst Castle on the border between Scotland and England was built with the stairs spiralling in the opposite direction because so many of the clan that built it were left-handed.

      • SanguinePar
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        430 days ago

        May also have been a subtle way to help protect in case the castle was stormed. I’ve certainly heard of castles where the steps were sometimes irregular heights - those who lived there would be used to it, but invaders would not and would find it harder to move effectively. A differently spiralling stair might have the same effect.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      Seems that doesn’t work quite as well in tennis, where pretty much all the time 15 to 25% of the top 100 ranked players are left handed.

  • @Kintarian
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    331 month ago

    Only left-handed people are in their right mind

    • @waz
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      131 month ago

      After 30+ years, I finally bought myself a nice pair of left handed scissors.

      If I’m being honest, I’m so used to right handed ones, that the lefty ones feel wrong anyway.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        it’s actually a good idea. I once saw a store with many “for left handed” products. But most of them aren’t really necessary because you just get used to the regular ones.

    • MR_NEGATIVE OP
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      71 month ago

      Damm it now I realize why I feel too much uncomfortable with scizzor

  • @spittingimage
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    181 month ago

    A boxing coach once told me it’s harder to fight lefties because they go against what you’ve trained for.

    • @[email protected]
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      101 month ago

      It’s true of all combat sports, and, to some degree, any other sport in which you go face to face with your opponent.

      And although it might be true that at the very very top levels people both learn to be more ambidextrous (so that there’s less of a mismatch between sides whether right or left handed) and are more experienced/skilled at dealing with left handed opponents, the early years of learning the sport will weed out fewer left handed people so that the top levels have more left handed people.

      • @Goodmorningsunshine
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        11 month ago

        I once read that the more competitive a society is, the now left-handed people it will have. I never did more research to verify, but makes some kinda sense

  • Jimmybander
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    131 month ago

    You are born an outsider. This allows you to understand the world more clearly at a younger age. Not sure what advantages this may give but it’s reality.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    Due to it being a right handed world, most lefties are much better at using their non dominant hand for things. I can operate power tools, golf putt, easily drive a stick shift in any country, and do all sorts of things with my dominant or non dominant hand. Sometimes if I’m doing something that’s making my hand or arm tired, I’ll just do it with the other. Sure, it’s not as good as using my left hand, but it still gets the job done.

    Bonus points when playing pickleball or table tennis or tennis or whatever and I switch hands to reach and hit an otherwise out of reach ball in just the nick of time.

  • frustrated_phagocytosis
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    121 month ago

    Training people in surgical techniques is way easier in lefties because most have been imitating right handed people so have some degree of ambidexterity. When you tell a right handed person to do precision movements with their left hand it fucks them up for a while.

  • Swordgeek
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    121 month ago

    I fence, and lefties have a significant advantage, just because we’re used to fencing opposite-handed opponents.

  • edric
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    1 month ago

    When I play basketball, it gives a slight advantage in the beginning when opponents don’t know I’m a lefty because they automatically assume I shoot with my right.

    Also, being able to naturally drive one handed in a left-hand drive car.

  • @db2
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    91 month ago

    You get to call yourself widdershins.

  • @waz
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    81 month ago

    Back when automated toll booths had baskets to throw coins in, I could easily pay tolls at around 45 mph.

    EZ pass eventually became a thing, probably saved me from my own young stupidity.