• 46_and_2
    4724 days ago
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    24 days ago
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    Was surprised I started mixing up left and right after I broke my right-hand wrist while biking.

    Turns out I subconsciously associated “right” for the direction my stronger hand was on, and once my left hand started feeling like the more dominant one during recovery - my brain would automatically choose that “right” should be on my left-hand side instead, until I actively thought about which direction is which.

    This gradually decreased out as my right hand recovered and got back to being the dominant one over the next few years, but was eye-opening what shortcuts my brain uses for such basic things.

    • fluxEnglish
      2224 days ago
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      Wait, are you saying you didn’t have to actively think about which is right or left before? I’ve always had to think about it, only for a second, but it’s definitely an active thought thing for me.

        • fluxEnglish
          1024 days ago
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          Yeah, definitely. I didn’t know people didn’t have to think about it for a second.

          • baconsanga
            923 days ago
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            You’re not the only one, it takes me a second or two. Sometimes I make an L shape with my hands to see which way is left. Then again, sometimes I forget my age and name haha.

            • newbeni
              423 days ago
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              I always look for my ring, then I know which hand is left.

            • Hadriscus
              323 days ago
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              My wife has trouble with this as well. She’s also not very good with spatial reasoning, I wonder if those are linked

              • ngprc
                421 days ago
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                I am pretty alright with spatial reasoning but have a hard time with left and right. Especially in multitasking scenarios. When driving during complicated situations and in unknown environments for example. I always get my guide to point or have a look at the nav.

              • fine_sandy_bottom
                323 days ago
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                Do you have to herd her around the supermarket? I’m forever guiding my mrs out of the way of other shoppers. No spatial awareness bless her.

                • Hadriscus
                  122 days ago
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                  Lmao it’s not that bad. Or rather, it manifests at a larger scale : she’ll wonder how we came to face this way by taking that route, or how we’re able to see our home from some vantage point. She isn’t very agile but I wouldn’t say she’s dyspraxic either.

                  Is it ever an issue for you both ?

                  • fine_sandy_bottom
                    222 days ago
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                    No it’s not an issue. It’s probably more a me thing than a her thing. I’m probably hyperaware of avoiding the personal space of others.

          • ilhamagh
            423 days ago
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            This is wild and I genuinely can’t wrap my head around it.

            So say, if you were blindfolded and run, if I give you command a la those rally drivers you will have a noticeable lag to my cue ? Like not instant ?

            • fluxEnglish
              723 days ago
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              I mean, it’s a split second, but yeah, I gotta think about it. I don’t think there would be noticeable lag, but it’s definitely a conscious thought. I just thought everyone had to have the thought go through their head, it’s not just like an instinct or anything.

            • grrgyle
              623 days ago
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              Now that you mention it, it’s odd that some people (like myself) have to think about it. Like I wouldn’t have to hardly think about what you meant if you said “up” or “down.

              Think of it like telling someone the directions like “twelve o’clock” versus “six o’clock” or “three o’clock” - you probably have to take a tic (heh) to picture it.

              • ilhamagh
                323 days ago
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                Yeah, the BBC article I posted above also mentions that.

                At first I thought it would be like if someone told me to touch my nose and I have to consider which part of my face it is, because for me my body is split in the middle the left and right feel distinctly different I can’t confuse one with the other. Fascinating.

                Are you ambidextrous by any chance?

      • 46_and_2
        119 days ago
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        I guess I just felt that “right” is my stronger hand direction, “left” is my weaker hand one. Now, after several years of recovery I feel it almost the same way as before, so my mind makes the same shortcut instead of thinking for a second about it. But if I ever feel the balance of my stronger-weaker side tipped (e.g. right hand has fallen asleep) I guess it’s thinking time again.

    • darvit
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      524 days ago
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      That’s really interesting. There are probably more people like you, but who will never know if nothing happens to their dominant hand.

    • AlligatorBlizzard
      524 days ago
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      Funny enough, I stopped mixing up my left and right after I broke my arm roller blading (on another occasion I broke my arm while biking). I didn’t have a way to mentally keep track until the doctor set the arm slightly off with the bone bowing out a bit - it feels slightly different now, but visually you can’t tell.