Los Angeles Times

Left-handed and loving it

Re “Is the best of all possible worlds left-handed?” Opinion, Nov. 24

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As a left-hander who can, figurative­ly, bat from both sides of the plate, I greatly enjoyed David Ulin’s op-ed article about southpaws representi­ng the best of all possible worlds.

In high school, while doodling during a boring lecture, I noticed that I had written the alphabet backward, which led me to realize I can write fluently in script backward. I later learned this was how Leonardo da Vinci wrote all his notes.

While that’s pretty much where any other similariti­es between the two of us stop, it still fills me with a smug satisfacti­on. Plus, it’s a great party trick.

In the words I saw on a T-shirt once: “Everyone is born right-handed. Only the gifted overcome it.”

Babs Greyhosky

Los Angeles

Thanks to Ulin for giving us lefties our due.

My mother was lefthanded. In school they tied her left hand to the desk chair with a rope to force her to write right-handed. She never did.

When my turn came, I began writing left-handed with a pen and ink bottle. What a mess. Thank God for the ball point pen.

I became a school librarian, and all the computers were set up with the mouse on the right side. So I learned to use it with my right hand, but I prefer using my left.

My wife was left-handed. We had two girls. They are both right-handed. Go figure.

Carl Martz Redlands

How about an article on those of us who are bidextrous, who naturally use the left hand for one common task and right hand for another common task?

In my case I write lefthanded and throw righthande­d, and in doing the reverse, I fare no better than anyone else using their “off hand.”

John Whiteman San Diego

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