Left Handed Analogies
I am left handed, and this difference in myself has been one that
I have thought about a great deal. I tend to notice the handedness of
other people, and I often try to figure out how this difference has
made me a different person in other respects. I have stumbled across
two other differences in people that are similar in many ways to
left-handedness. I should clarify that being left handed does not
necessarily mean that you cannot use your right hand. Many people
cannot use their opposite hand well at all, but some people have great
dexterity in both hands although they favor one. A very small
percentage of the population is actually 50/50 ambidextrous. Dexterity
in each hand seems somewhat independent.
About 15% of the population is left handed, and about 10% of the
population is homosexual. We have not discovered what makes people one
or the other, but it does seem clear that neither is a choice. I
discovered I was left handed as soon as I started using my hands.
Homosexual people discover their sexuality as soon as they discover
sexuality. Homosexuality is not the opposite of heterosexuality, but
instead its compliment. As most people can be dexterous with both hands
but favor one, most people are attracted to both genders but favor one.
There are very few 50/50 bisexuals. Apparently men are slightly more
likely to be left handed, and women are slightly more likely to be
closer to bisexuality. There was a time when people in this country
believed that left-handedness was a disease or a rebellious statement.
Now, fortunately, we realize that being left handed is perfectly normal
for those people that are, and we have been willing to elect two
left-handed presidents in a row. In many other countries, people have
yet to reach this enlightenment. People in this country are slowly
beginning to realize that homosexuality is not a disease or a
rebellious statement, and we can only hope that it will soon be
considered perfectly normal for those people that are.
There are some fundamental differences between men and women. Men
tend to have stronger masculine traits than women, namely: aggression,
social power, spatial relationship abilities, and viewing personal
relationships in hierarchies. Women tend to have stronger feminine
traits than men, namely: empathy, nurturing, social cohesion, and
viewing personal relationships with equality. These traits are not
opposites, they are compliments. If I could only use my left hand, and
my right hand was totally incapable of action, I would be crippled.
Equally, any person who lacks either masculine traits or feminine
traits is crippled with being unable to deal with half of the world.
Most people have traits of both genders, but favor the set belonging to
their own. A few people can interact with society from either
prospective, and a few people lack strength in either set of traits.
Since I am male, I tend to have stronger masculine traits, but I
treasure my feminine traits and the part of the world they open for me.
I may be left handed, but my right hand is absolutely essential to me,
as I type this with both hands.