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Q&A Handedness for t'fillin: nature or nurture?

I know that t'fillin are placed on the weaker arm, which for most people is the left, so that the stronger hand is the one doing the binding. I have heard, but don't remember where, that someone w...

0 answers  ·  posted 3y ago by Monica Cellio‭  ·  edited 3y ago by Monica Cellio‭

Question tefillin
#2: Post edited by user avatar Monica Cellio‭ · 2021-04-29T03:46:47Z (over 3 years ago)
clarification
  • I know that *t'fillin* are placed on the weaker arm, which for most people is the left, so that the stronger hand is the one doing the binding. I have heard, but don't remember where, that someone who is ambidextrous uses the left as well, since the right isn't *weaker* and the left is more common.
  • What about someone who was born left-handed but then was "trained" to be right-handed? While *t'fillin* doesn't apply to me (and so I ask this just out of curiosity), I'm one of those people -- by nature I am left-handed, but due to some superstitious adults in my early life, I was taught everything right-handed instead. My left arm is *stronger*, but my right hand is more *dextrous*. I know several other people like this. (None of them are Jewish men, though, so I can't ask what they do.)
  • Would someone like this proceed as a right-hander, because that's how that person functions now? Or would that person instead proceed as a left-hander, because that is the way God made that person? (We apply the same principle in modern gender matters, as I understand it.)
  • I know that *t'fillin* are placed on the weaker arm, which for most people is the left, so that the stronger hand is the one doing the binding. I have heard, but don't remember where, that someone who is ambidextrous uses the left as well, since the right isn't *weaker* and the left is more common.
  • What about someone who was born left-handed but then was "trained" to be right-handed? While *t'fillin* doesn't apply to me (and so I ask this just out of curiosity), I'm one of those people -- by nature I am left-handed, but due to some superstitious adults in my early life, I was taught everything right-handed instead. My left arm is *stronger*, but my right hand is more *dextrous*. I know several other people like this. (None of them are Jewish men, though, so I can't ask what they do.)
  • Would someone like this proceed as a right-hander, because that's how that person functions now? Or would that person instead proceed as a left-hander, because that is the way God made that person? (We apply the latter principle in modern gender matters, as I understand it.)
#1: Initial revision by user avatar Monica Cellio‭ · 2021-04-29T00:04:16Z (over 3 years ago)
Handedness for t'fillin: nature or nurture?
I know that *t'fillin* are placed on the weaker arm, which for most people is the left, so that the stronger hand is the one doing the binding.  I have heard, but don't remember where, that someone who is ambidextrous uses the left as well, since the right isn't *weaker* and the left is more common.

What about someone who was born left-handed but then was "trained" to be right-handed?  While *t'fillin* doesn't apply to me (and so I ask this just out of curiosity), I'm one of those people -- by nature I am left-handed, but due to some superstitious adults in my early life, I was taught everything right-handed instead.  My left arm is *stronger*, but my right hand is more *dextrous*.  I know several other people like this.  (None of them are Jewish men, though, so I can't ask what they do.)

Would someone like this proceed as a right-hander, because that's how that person functions now?  Or would that person instead proceed as a left-hander, because that is the way God made that person?  (We apply the same principle in modern gender matters, as I understand it.)