And yet.
But last week E began a new habit that redeems her other-handedness entirely. She's discovered that we can each do [something] and still hold hands with each other. Her favorite instance of this occurs in the mornings, in the bathroom. Her daddy and sister have always gone downstairs first. She and I get dressed and we brush our teeth before we go downstairs. She on her blue stool with her princess toothbrush in her right hand, me on the bathmat with my generic boring adult toothbrush (soft bristles only) in my left hand, brushing our teeth and watching ourselves in the mirror, our respective non-dominant sides brushing against each other. So we take those weaker appendages and intertwine them. I brush and we hold hands and she brushes.
Dental hygiene and a little extra morning love. I guess she can be right-handed.
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3 comments:
My sister is left-handed and I'm right-handed. We always made sure to sit with the weaker appendages, as you so wisely call them, next to each other. That way we would never take the other's eye out with an elbow when trying to cut a piece of chicken. :)
Gee, do you really have "instincts to veer into opposing traffic"???
maybe that explains Ron's driving!!
I grew up as the only right handed person in a family full of lefties. My sister and I also sat with the weaker appendages next to eachother in order to maintain harmony but we never linked arms to brush our teeth...too cool!!
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