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Finger Dexterity, The Number 3 and What is Wrong?

Both hands, opening and and closing, while hopping on one foot and rubbing my belly and patting my head.

I tend towards the ASL way these days ever since I took a semester of it. I count on my fingers the ASL way too when the occasion calls on it.
 
Yes, you have. It's called hypochondria.

No, hypochondria is believing you have a serious medical condition even though the facts show otherwise. Other than the medical conditions I DO have I don't believe myself to have a serious medical condition.
 
Well, I don't want to look like a jerk (too late, I know), but this sounds like you kinda do believe that:

Ugh, stuff like this makes me all freaked out and antsy like I have some sort of odd condition and medical problem.

(...)

but for my own mental security it worries me that my fingers can't be dexterous enough
 
Well, I don't want to look like a jerk (too late, I know), but this sounds like you kinda do believe that:

Ugh, stuff like this makes me all freaked out and antsy like I have some sort of odd condition and medical problem.

(...)

but for my own mental security it worries me that my fingers can't be dexterous enough

It's more of a back of the mind think though than it is me making a bunch of appointments and spending hundreds of dollars doing tests and such. It's more of a "dammit! why don't my fingers work right!"
 
Here's a tough one. How many here can bend their pinky finger without the ring finger trying to follow? No cheating using your thumb to hold down the pinky!

It's funny, because I can move my ring finger without my pinky following, but if I try to move the pinky, the ring finger is slaved to it. I can do the "girlscout salute" though by holding my pinky down with my thumb and straightening the ring finger.
 
Concentrating a bit I can move the ring finger without the other fingers moving as well but I can't move my pinky without the ring finger wanting to move with it, can't even concentrate to move it on its own.
 
I can move my ring finger on my right hand by itself, but not on my left hand. Both of my pinkies also bring my ring finger with them.
 
Here's a tough one. How many here can bend their pinky finger without the ring finger trying to follow? No cheating using your thumb to hold down the pinky!

It's funny, because I can move my ring finger without my pinky following, but if I try to move the pinky, the ring finger is slaved to it. I can do the "girlscout salute" though by holding my pinky down with my thumb and straightening the ring finger.
Yeah, apparently I'm the same. I can bend the ring finger all the way down without affecting (did I use "affect" right? :rommie: ) the others, but the pinky drags the ring finger with it. I can force the ring finger back up, but only if the pinky bends at the middle and not at the base.
 
1. Both hands, but my pinky had to be trained to not stick out. And my hand had to be trained to stay flat instead of bending.

2. Usually index-middle-ring, but it hurts a bit especially if I have to hold it a while. So I sometimes use middle-ring-pinky?

If I bend ANY of my fingers down, at least one adjoining finger at least starts to bend. If I make a finger touch my palm, adjoining fingers are halfway bent.

All except my thumbs--they're independent. I like that about them. Maybe because there's a (I'm told) unusual amount of muscle and tension in the "web" area.
 
I can sort of do the Vulcan salute on both hands. Meaning, I can't just do it naturally (my pinky and ring finger won't stay together) but I can use my other hand to position my fingers and then I can keep them in that position with no pain.

I show the number three using my three middle fingers. Using my thumb, index, and middle finger (or the German/ASL way as you called it) is actually a bit painful and I cannot hold it long.
 
well, at our age we hardly have a need for a girl scout salute :D
^that's the way I signal 3, btw. Only I spread the fingers. Such a 3 is easily visible from afar and hence quite useful for military, scouts/brownies and others who work outdoors.

I fail to understand how someone can *not* do that without bending their forefingers. Even I can, in spite of the tendeon injury and the scars. Can a little bit of training really make such a difference?
 
well, at our age we hardly have a need for a girl scout salute :D
^that's the way I signal 3, btw. Only I spread the fingers. Such a 3 is easily visible from afar and hence quite useful for military, scouts/brownies and others who work outdoors.

I fail to understand how someone can *not* do that without bending their forefingers. Even I can, in spite of the tendeon injury and the scars. Can a little bit of training really make such a difference?
I suspect the tendon in my right forefinger is just not long enough. I can do the salute with my left hand. With my right hand my forefinger stubbornly stays bent at the top two joints, and if I try to force it straight it feels like it will break. It hardly matters, though, as the only effect it has ever had on my life is a wonky Girl Scout salute. :)
 
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