Changing the subject from wonky humans and back to the thread title for a sec.. Ricky Holmes looks so effective at this level, you wonder what he was was doing in League 2 for so long?
He looks to me like he would probably even just about hold his own in the Championship, when you consider someone like Harriott.
Did he have a huge injury at some point? Or maybe does his small build hold him back?
Ricky puts it down to being small. Perhaps the deluge of foreign players in the English game held him back too.
Being right handed and footed, I have always eaten with the most useful implement, the fork, in my right hand not the left, which seems to be the standard, yet illogical way for most right handed people.
Being right handed and footed, I have always eaten with the most useful implement, the fork, in my right hand not the left, which seems to be the standard, yet illogical way for most right handed people.
The standard way would be to have the fork in your left hand unless you were American ?
Being right handed and footed, I have always eaten with the most useful implement, the fork, in my right hand not the left, which seems to be the standard, yet illogical way for most right handed people.
Because the fork is not the primary implement for dexterity - you are merely using it to hold your food in place whilst cutting it and to ferry the meal into your mouth. The knife is the implement you ought to be using with your stronger hand since you are trying to dice your food with it. Since you more or less only using a fork when eating, whereas knives are used for many other things, it is natural for you to be always holding the knife in your dominant hand.
Funnily enough I am left-handed for using a knife ordinarily (such as peeling potatoes, chopping vegetables, opening letters, sawing wood (with a saw, not a knife but still it's a bladed instrument), carving meat etc.) but I eat with the fork in the left hand and the knife in the right hand. So I'm the illogical one here. As I mentioned before, I am ambisinistrous, or cross-dominant, so to be honest it is always a bit of a lottery how I decide to approach an activity.
Being right handed and footed, I have always eaten with the most useful implement, the fork, in my right hand not the left, which seems to be the standard, yet illogical way for most right handed people.
Because the fork is not the primary implement for dexterity - you are merely using it to hold your food in place whilst cutting it and to ferry the meal into your mouth. The knife is the implement you ought to be using with your stronger hand since you are trying to dice your food with it. Since you more or less only using a fork when eating, whereas knives are used for many other things, it is natural for you to be always holding the knife in your dominant hand.
Funnily enough I am left-handed for using a knife ordinarily (such as peeling potatoes, chopping vegetables, opening letters, sawing wood, carving meat etc.) but I eat with the fork in the left hand and the knife in the right hand. So I'm the illogical one here. As I mentioned before, I am ambisinistrous, or cross-dominant, so to be honest it is always a bit of a lottery how I decide to approach an activity.
Agree with this. The art in eating is always in your knife work. I cant imagine using a knife in my left hand to cut a tough steak for instance. The fork just prongs the food and you put it in your mouth. No finesse is required and you can use a fork just as well with both hands!
We mustn't forget that there is a whole raft of etiquette built up regarding this. It differs from Europe to America. Is it important ? Up to a point I think it is.
Right handed with illegible hand writing and very left footed. At racket sports, much stronger on back hand and can play table tennis with either hand. I think I was brought up in the days when you were told off if you tried to pick up a pen or pencil in your left hand.
Being right handed and footed, I have always eaten with the most useful implement, the fork, in my right hand not the left, which seems to be the standard, yet illogical way for most right handed people.
Are you a veggie Seth? I find veggies don't need the knife so much so relegate it to the weaker hand (or promote the fork to the stronger hand).
Comments
Perhaps the deluge of foreign players in the English game held him back too.
Funnily enough I am left-handed for using a knife ordinarily (such as peeling potatoes, chopping vegetables, opening letters, sawing wood (with a saw, not a knife but still it's a bladed instrument), carving meat etc.) but I eat with the fork in the left hand and the knife in the right hand. So I'm the illogical one here. As I mentioned before, I am ambisinistrous, or cross-dominant, so to be honest it is always a bit of a lottery how I decide to approach an activity.
You can take the boy out of Sethtown but cannot take Sethtown out of the boy ;0)
God, I bore myself sometimes.