This is exactly the kind of discussion I was hoping would be generated by this thread. One of the the most encouraging things I found in this forum were dissenting opinions that were posted without hesitation but also without malicious intent. Too many forums are filled with either mindless ditto-heads or assholes looking to pick a fight.
Basshappi wrote:
What seems interesting to me that when I was new to the instrument playing a left handed instrument as a right handed person made much more sense to me as it put my strongest, most dexterous hand on the fretboard. I couldn't understand why all right handers didn't play lefthanded instruments and vice versa. Many make their case for "handedness" by claiming that the "strong" hand is needed for the complex function of strumming/plucking but in my experience this is a fallacy, either hand can be trained for whatever function is necessary. If this were not so then explain pianists or for that matter typists in which both hands must perform independantly complex, rhythmic functions.
I would mostly agree with this statement. I don't particularly feel like I play left-handed because it's somehow more important for my dominant hand to be striking the strings while my recessive hand forms the notes. It could very well be that way, but for me the best answer I can give for why I play left-handed is that it felt natural for me to play that way at the very beginning. When I was handed an instrument even before I became a musician, I always naturally played it left-handed. It just felt right. Playing bass came very naturally to me left-handed. I learned fast and improved exponentially in the first year. I don't believe that if I had been forced to play right-handed I would have learned and improved so fast. It would have taken some time for it to feel natural to play that way before I could begin to improve at any significant rate. But, just to play devil's advocate, I have a left-handed friend named Chaz (the same guy who owns the CT bass from my other thread) who made the conscious decision to play right-handed when he started playing, and he is a great musician. It came to him right-handed just as naturally as it came to me left-handed. All I can say in response to this is that everybody is different, and we will all respond differently to the decisions we have to make.
Basshappi wrote:
I personally I think that an instructor does as much disservice to a lefthanded student by NOT determining if he is able to use a right handed instrument as one who insists that a student who shows a clear advantage to playing left handed learn the instrument right handed irregardless.
I also agree with this statement, but I have to point out that this is a tacit admission on your part that playing left-handed has serious drawbacks. Otherwise, why would it be a disservice?
Basshappi wrote:
But I have also noticed a tendency of some lefties to wear their left handedness as a badge. "I am lefthanded, I am special" or more often "Poor me, the world just dosen't understand" (I see this often in people with disabilities too) niether of which is true lefthandedness is not a disability nor a disadvantage and does not convey any particular social status.
Lefthandedness is certainly not a disability but it is a disadvantage. Virtually every product ever designed that isn't symmetrical is made to be easily used by people who are right-handed. That puts lefties at a disadvantage at virtually every turn. The point of this thread is not necessarily to whine about being mistreated. It is more of an opportunity to reflect on our experiences and ask if we made the right choice. Ultimately every one of us (except for you of course) knows that we could have learned to play right-handed, and it is a necessary step in our musical development to come to terms with the choice we made. We do not deserve pity, and we are not asking for it. We made our choices and we live with them. By sharing our individual experiences with playing left-handed, we are provided an opportunity to strengthen our collective bonds and I think that would be good for the forum.
Basshappi wrote:
This is not a conspiracy nor even callus disregard, it's just economics.
I would argue that a lack of left-handed products being a result of economics by virtue
is a callous disregard for our needs. They don't care about us because economically we don't matter.
Basshappi wrote:
All this is not to say that I don't have a few pet peeves about instrument manufacturers, I do, but in the final anaylsis these issues are completely irrelevent to my music making and the joy and satisfaction I derive from being a musician. So if any of you, my forum brothers (or sisters) are struggling with "coming to terms" with being a lefthanded musician I trully hope that you can do so as quickly and painlessly as possible so that this stumbling block will be behind you and no longer impede your journey as a bassist and musician.
Again, I don't think coming to terms with the way we play is an impediment to our journey as musicians; rather I think of it as a necessary step. We as pragmatic beings have to come to terms with every major decision we make in our lives, and determining which way we play our instruments certainly qualifies as a major decision. And I don't mean any offense, but you may not be qualified to assess the value of our coming to terms with playing lefty. You did not choose to play left-handed, you had left-handedness thrust upon you. You have nothing to come to terms with, no regrets to harbor, because you had no choice. You share all of our frustrations over playing left-handed but you never have to reassess whether it was all worth it. For you there is no "it".