My son, who will turn 4 on Friday, has been obsessed with playing musical instruments since he was old enough to sit up on his own... So obsessed, I was not surprised when he received 3 ukuleles on his 1st birthday. To this day, he continues to play music with an extreme level of enthusiasm, interest, and obsession. I think he has a natural knack with rhythm and a keen ear for understanding advanced musical concepts, distinguishing tones/parts, and actually wanting to know who the bass player or drummer is on a particular track
, ha! As his dad, not sure if I'm being super biased or if I'm actually recognizing something special... or perhaps both? Either way, I'm super fascinated to see how this plays out and am excited about the possibility of sharing a common passion with my son!
I've done by best to not force music on him or put any restrictions/guidelines on the way he chooses to pick up an instrument, pluck it, bang it, etc... I've been inspired by Victor Wooten's philosophy on how to help children nurture a healthy and long lasting love affair with learning musical instruments, which includes not fearing/embracing mistakes and treating the instrument as more play than practice, not unlike the way a kid first learns to speak. I've tried my best to nurture this approach, but now I'm faced with what feels like to me, a moral conundrum...
I believe that he might be ready to start getting some ukulele lessons and before I start him on that path, it seems like I need to help him settle on his dominant playing hand? Thus, I'm wondering if any of my fellow lefties could weigh in from personal experience or could just provide sound advice?
99% of the time, he picks up an instrument like a lefty and he's been doing it this way for 2 years solid. He could be a natural lefty or he could just be copying the way he sees me hold my instruments? My wife and I are both left-handed, so part of me would be thrilled if I we could defy the odds and have a house full of lefties. The practical side of me, and the advice given by his future instructor (who’s a righty), says to go with the conventional norms and encourage him to play right-handed. He wouldn't have to roam the earth looking for a decent instrument and there are some apparent advantages with using your dominant hand to hold the notes. The militant-lefty part of me says, we need more lefties in this world and who am I to let a righty suggest switching the way my son has always held a stringed instrument.
I’m as lefty as they come, so I'm having a hard time separating my extreme lefty bias with what's actually best for my son long term. I don’t truly think that encouraging my son to switch would ruin him at his age, but it might delay the progress he’s already made or just pose an unnecessary obstacle? I think these are matters that a right-handed person often takes for granted, so I’m hoping a fellow lefty could understand the conflict I’m facing, which is what brings me here.
Ultimately, I just want to help set him up for success or perhaps I’m just contradicting Victor’s philosophy altogether by posing the question?
For those who are wondering, my son is still 50/50 on deciding his writing hand.
Thanks for taking the time to read and consider your thoughts and opinions on this matter.