Mixed-handed

I write and eat right-handed.  I throw left-handed.  I kick left-footed.  This is known as mixed-handedness, or cross-dominance.

Now please note that ambidexterity—considerable fine motor skill with either side—is a rare form of cross-dominance, but it’s not what I’m talking about.  I mean I write with my right and can’t with my left.  I can’t tell you how many times I’ve said to someone “I write and eat right-handed, but I throw left-handed” and the person has replied “Oh, you’re ambidextrous!”  Uh, no.

(Before we leave ambidexterity, speaking of it—and tremendous mental capacity, I’m sure—did you know that President Garfield could write Latin with one hand and ancient Greek with the other simultaneously?)

Okay, then.  I discovered today that I have a colleague who is also mixed-handed (exactly opposite from me, though).  That I can recall, she’s the only other person I’ve ever known who is mixed-handed.

So then that got me to wondering how rare it is.  Turns out it’s uncommon, but not particularly hard to encounter.  There are millions of us.  Know who else was mixed-handed, though?  Check out this list:

  • Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Michelangelo
  • Leonardo da Vinci
  • Albert Einstein
  • Benjamin Franklin

The B-list, still quite impressive, includes Nikola Tesla, Jimi Hendrix, Oscar Wilde, and Richard Feynman.

I suddenly believe that I have, to date, massively underachieved.

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10 thoughts on “Mixed-handed”

  1. Eye dominance also plays a role. For example, I am right-handed. Yet I am totally left-eye dominant. It makes sighting in a gun tricky.

    Give me a hockey stick and I shoot lefty, though everything else is done right-wise.

    Reply
  2. My daughter is cross-dominant. She’s left-handed when it comes to writing and eating, but kicks right-footed and throws right-handed.

    BamaDan…I agree with the really poor handwriting. My daughter’s is terrible, however, her artwork is FANTASTIC!

    Reply
  3. My mother writes, drives a mouse, and golfs left-handed. She does everything else right-handed.

    I think I’m closer to ambidextrous: I can drive a mouse and do detailed graphics edits with either the right or left hand. The right hand is dominate, but the left can do as well, if a bit slower. I can shave my legs equally well with either hand. And I always wondered why the other girls didn’t just use their left hand to put mascara on their left eye instead of getting gunk all over their noses by crossing over with their right hand.

    But I write with my right hand, so I guess I’m mostly right-handed. Left-eye dominate, though.

    And my ring finger is longer than my index finger, but that’s a whole ‘nother trait discussion. ;->

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  4. When my son first started writing (or painting & coloring) he would use either hand equally well. All through kindergarten he would switch hands constantly. Then he started first grade in a backwards-a$$ school and they spent a huge amount of time getting after him for not “picking a hand”. There were calls & emails to me and it was even mentioned in conferences. Eventually he was forced to pick a hand and he went with left. He would get in trouble if he picked up a pencil with his right. We moved out of state and the teachers at his new school were surprised that it had been an issue and encouraged him to use either. Now, he writes mostly left but sometimes switches to right, eats with either (or both at the same time :)), kicks right footed and (attempts to) play guitar left handed. And his handwriting is equally atrocious with either hand.

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  5. Well, it doesn’t seem that uncommon amongst the WmWms readership, does it? 🙂

    wxchick, both of my ring fingers are longer than my index fingers (really it’s not even close). What’s that ‘posed to mean?

    I’m just pleased the boys are still learning cursive, and it appears both will. We’re probably not long from that falling out of the curriculum altogether.

    Reply
  6. I think thats really cool that there are poeple in the world that have these rare issues i myself actully write with my right hand and eat with my right but i do everything else my left side such as throwing, kicking , punching, and i also look out of my left eye first too i hardly ever use my right eye and when i play baseball im in a left handed person position so the bat is on my left shoulder before hitting. It just gets kind of hard for me because i catch the ball and throw both with my left hand so when im wearing a mitten i have to catch the ball take the glove off and throw the ball… I can actully catch with both my hands i just do it better with my left.

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  7. So if someone both preferably likes to throw and catch with their left hand how can they solve this problem in baseball? Cause im mix-handedness/cross dominance too and i have this problem becuase i also write with my right hand and eat with my right hand but i punch, kick, throw with my left side of my body i even look and listen first with the left side of my body. I just dont know if i was sappost to be born left handed or what because i do remember when i lived with my grandma she would make me write with both of my hands .

    Reply

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