The dominant hand thing is just what you get used to. In the old days,
left-handedness was not allowed - my left handed grandfather had to
learn to write with his right hand. Also, although I am right handed, I
always brush my teeth with my left hand - this is because the cold tap
in my parents house is (as is the standard) on the right side of the
basin. So I grew up driving the tap with my right hand and brushing with
my left - I find it really awkward to swap.
Neil
On 06/12/2012 23:29, Jim Franklin wrote:
> On Dec 5, 2012, at 10:46 PM, Jeff Scarbrough wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 9:57 PM, John Niolon <jniolon@att.net> wrote:
>>> I know lots of you guys are as active and probably a few that are a clumsy
> and
>>> accident prone as I am. I'm wondering if any of you guys have had this
>>> surgery on their dominant arm ( surely there are a few) and what exactly
> were
>>> your limitations and your ways of overcoming.
>> All the things you
>> normally do with your dominant hand, you can learn to do with your
>> other hand. If not, I'd still be sitting on the toilet.
> And to that and other bathroom activities, start NOW using your non-dominant
> hand, not the first day post-op. You will be spastic at first but you'll
> learn.
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