1. Between
10-12% of people on earth are “lefties.” Women are more likely to
be right-handed than men by about 4 percentage
points.
2. August
13th is “Left-Hander’s Day.” Launched in 1996, this yearly event
celebrates left-handedness and raises awareness of the difficulties
and frustrations left-handers experience every day in a world
designed for right-handers.
3. At
various times in history, left-handedness has been seen as many
things: a nasty habit, a mark of the devil, a sign of neurosis,
rebellion, criminality, and homosexuality. It has also been seen as
a trait indicating creativity and musical
abilities.
4. Some
scholars note that left-handers may be one of the last unorganized
minorities in society because they have no collective power and no
real sense of common identity. Additionally, left-handers are often
discriminated against by social, educational, and religious
institutions. Social customs and even language set the left-hander
apart as “different” and even “bad.”
5. Many
sources claim that left-handers may die as many as nine years
earlier than right-handers.
6. The
word left in English comes from the
Anglo-Saxon word lyft, which means weak
or broken. The Oxford English Dictionary defines left-handed as
meaning crippled, defective, awkward, clumsy, inapt, characterized
by underhanded dealings, ambiguous, doubtful, questionable,
ill-omened, inauspicious, and illegitimate.
7. Phrases
in English suggest a negative view of left-handedness. For example,
a “left-handed complement” is actually an insult. A “left-handed
marriage” is not a marriage but an adulterous sexual liaison, as in
a “left-handed honeymoon with someone else’s husband.” A
“left-handed wife” is actually a mistress.
8. Research
has shown a link between trauma during gestation or during birth
with an increased chance of being left-handed.
9. Tests
conducted by St. Lawrence University in New York found that there
were more left-handed people with IQs over 140 than right-handed
people. Famous left-handed intellectuals include Albert Einstein,
Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, and Benjamin
Franklin.
10. Mothers who are
over 40 at the time of a child’s birth are 128% more likely to have
a left-handed baby than a woman in her 20s.
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