Saturday, November 25, 2006

Speak to the Hand

     



 

Speak to the Hand

Give your Left Hand a helping hand. Matthew 6:3 When you help someone out, don't think about how it looks. Just do it—quietly and unobtrusively. That is the way your God, who conceived you in love, working behind the scenes, helps you out. 

The Right Hand and Left hand must work together. A recent study found that right-handers use the right-side of the brain to focus on an entire image, but the left-side of the brain to focus on details within an image. Playing with the left hand is a mirror image of what the right hand does

Speak to the sub-dominate Hand. Give the sub-dominate Hand a name. The sub-dominate hand is not the tail but the head! Prophesy to the Sub-dominate hand as if it were dominant.  Command your sub-dominate Hand to inform your body and bring balance to the right hand. piano keyboard on a staffPlaying with the left hand is a mirror image of what the right hand does. But the Left knows details that the right hand doesn't know. 

Their are secrets in the Sub-Dominate hand that the Right Dominate hand has not perceived. Playing with the left hand is a mirror image of what the right hand does. Playing with the Sub-Dominate hand is a mirror image of what the Dominate hand does.

The adversity in the Sub-Dominate hand is always proportional to the potential influence of the Sub-Dominate hand. There are details and Sub-Dominate hand discoveries to be added to your keyboard acumen. The strength in your dominant hand are masking and compensating for your keyboard weakness. Adversity in the Sub-Dominate hand is always proportional to the potential influence of the Sub-Dominate hand.

Prophesy to the sub-dominate hand and command it to perform as God had intended. take time to exercise the Sub-dominate hand to mirror the dominate hand. Give the sub-dominate hand opportunity to inform your dominate hand and body.

 

Prophetically, There are styles, turns, directions, twist that the sub-dominate hand knows... Yet to be revealed...

One who is right-handed is more dextrous with one's right hand than with one's left hand: one will write with their right hand, and probably also use this hand for tasks such as personal care, cooking, and so on. According to different studies, 85% to 90%[1] of the population is right-handed, while most of the remaining are left-handed. A very small percentage of the population can use both hands equally well; a person with this ability is deemed to be ambidextrous.

It is not known with any degree of certainty why the population is right-hand dominant.

According to scientific theory, the right-side of the body is controlled by the left hemisphere of the brain, and vice-versa. In right-handed people, the left hemisphere of the brain is the dominant hemisphere.

A recent study found that right-handers use the right-side of the brain to focus on an entire image, but the left-side of the brain to focus on details within an image.

Being right-handed does not always mean that the favored foot is also on the right side. When playing soccer for instance, many people prefer using their left foot rather than the right, despite being right-handed[4]

 

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