Total Pageviews

Saturday 11 June 2016

Being left out in a right world -Toastmasters Project Speech 1

Dear readers,

At the age of 24, I've finally joined a Toastmasters club. The nervousness I felt while doing my first speech is the same as I feel before making all my speeches.
I've managed to research on my topic title and got some info from the internet. As such, I'd welcome any advice to make my other speeches better and I'm also willing to guide new speakers to gain confidence in their project speeches.

Being Left out in a Right world

Hi everyone. Who in this room can possibly suggest what do these people (places Queen Elizabeth, Steve Jobs and Barack Obama on the board) have in common? Do you know that they have invited me to their club just by waving at the camera?
We belong in an exclusive minority group where everything that is right is wrong for us.
Fellow toastmasters and guest, you’ve heard it right. Let me give you a clue. I can’t use a regular scissors, never liked a binder note book and dislike sitting on a side foldable table. Yes people, I am left handed.
I have been left handed my entire life and it has influenced my behavior, thinking pattern and maybe even how I interact with people.
What seems normal for most people becomes a challenge for a person like me. Growing up around right handers is even tougher than you think.
School was hard. When I was a kid, my teachers and parents used to reprimand me for having an almost ineligible writing until I was about 6 years old. I had to contort myself so I could write on a right-handed desk. I struggled to keep my hand clean and often ended up with ink smudges on both the paper and my hand; writing in those spiral-bound notebooks is difficult, if not impossible, for lefties. I am always stumped by pen and pencils. Thank god for the computer! No more smudges.. thank you.
While at home, can openers, ice cream scoop and scissors are always hurting my hand. Until today I struggle with the can opener. My dad’s guitar will mock me every time I try to play it.
And when eating with groups, I have to fight to sit on the far left side of the table so I don’t bump the person next to me the entire time I’m eating.

I have often wondered if I really am that unique. With an estimated 10 percent of the population being left-handed, and almost 3 million people in the country being lefties, it’s not as rare as it feels.

Aside from feeling different myself, there seems to be a history of discrimination toward my left-handed comrades, embedded in language:
·        Some common English phrases portray the left as negative — such as a “left-handed” compliment.
·        In Latin, the word for left is “sinister,” which of course means evil in English.
·        The English word for left comes from the Old English word “lyft” meaning broken or weak.
One of the things that I have also heard my whole life is that I am clumsy and have no eye-hand coordination. But over the past few years, I’ve learnt that this is probably not due to a default in my natural abilities, but in having to use right-handed tools and items that are backward for me.

Given all this negativity surrounding us, it’s hard not to feel a little slighted. But there are some really great things about being left-handed.
We are right-brain dominated. Being “right brained” comes with all kinds of positives. We tend to be visual thinkers; we are more creative, have a greater imagination, are better at expressing feelings even non-verbally, and are great at daydreaming.
In fact, I am surprisingly capable of visualizing my chemistry classes just by listening to the lecture of the day. It is why I’ve always been fascinated by science. On the other hand, I can’t seem to watch Casper the friendly ghost until I was 14 because I was too scared at night thinking he might pop up in the bathroom.
On being creative, I’d like to think that my so called left handed character allows me to draw and write.
This is one of my drawings.



 I’ve used digital art mixed with pencil drawing in this photo. I admit, it’s no Picasso but at least it’s something to look at. This could also explain why I have an affinity to listen to songs of all genre and language… I love baroque, French blues and Hindi songs. From Linkin Park to Mozart’s Piano for Two I enjoy it all.
Lefties also seem to have a better chance of having a high IQ, or being considered a genius. Twenty percent of all Mensa members say they are left-handed, and among the famous “smart” lefties:  Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, Marie Curie, and Isaac Newton.
One other thing I love about being a southpaw is that it is said that left handers are able to adjust to seeing underwater quicker. I may not be an amphibian or a sea creature, but that make me feel like I’ve got some sort of superpower. It helps me in my scuba diving too!
Lefties are better able to multitask. The theory is that being left-hand forces your brain to think more quickly. So we usually have an easier time dealing with a lot of unorganized information and are able to sort through it all.
Best part of all, there is a special day where all Left Handers celebrate our uniqueness on the 13th of August every year.

However with all that said, we don’t really know if being right is better than left or vice versa. One thing I’ve learned is that I can live in a world where everything is for the right handed and I still thrive. So embrace your left hander counterparts and let’s start campaigning for left handed tables in schools shall we J

No comments:

Post a Comment