The stronger your left hand becomes, the easier it will be to hold a pen/pencil. You’ll be able to focus on writing well if you’re left hand is stronger. This is because it won’t get fatigued as you attempt to write. Flexibility is just as important as strength. Keep your hand flexible to keep it from cramping when you start writing.
Eat and drink with your left hand. Cutting your food the opposite way and pouring drinks with your left hand will engage your brain as well as continue to strengthen your left hand. This is a good place to start because it won’t interfere with your daily schedule. Open and close with your left hand. Doors, buttons, bags, and drawers are all great places to start using your left hand. Remember that buttons and doorknobs that twist will be more awkward than drawers that simply slide open.
Enter “mouse” in your Start menu search and select the first entry. Check the “Switch primary and secondary buttons” box. You can either use your mouse with your left hand from here, or you can download left-handed mouse pointers to make the process easier. Download left handed cursors off of the internet. In your “Mouse Properties”, select the “Pointers” tab. Browse to the folder with your newly downloaded cursors. Click “Open”. Change all 6 cursors (Normal Select, Help Select, Working in Background, Busy, Handwriting, and Link Select) Click “Save As…”, type Lefty, and click “OK”.
Learning to write with your left hand benefits your brain because it helps engage both hemispheres of your brain, start catching (and maybe throwing) with your right hand to start this early. Learning to engage both sides of your brain before you begin writing lefty will make the process less frustrating.
Write in the mirror. Place a mirror facing your paper and write with your right hand. This mirror image will help your brain imagine the same action for your left hand. Buy a writing book. Trace the dotted lines to form letters and get the form correct on your letters. Repeat as necessary. Some letters will be more difficult than others for you. Repeat the difficult ones as many times as necessary to get it right.
Continue using guide sentences as necessary. Just as you did with the alphabet, write these sentences with your right hand and copy them beneath with your left hand. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. This sentence has every letter in the alphabet; therefore, it is a great sentence to practice.
Write out your planner (if you have one) with your left hand. These short sentences through the day will help you advance the skills of your left hand. Take your time. Without having examples to compare your writing to, you’ll be engaging your brain more than before. Be patient and get each letter right.
Come up with a topic to write about. It can be as random, realistic, or significant as you wish. Give yourself an allotted amount of time and begin a timer. Start. Using your left hand, let your mind take control. Write as much as you can about your topic in the allotted amount of time. Do this consistently and you’ll be completely relaxed and comfortable writing with your left hand in no time. The content in freewriting is not meant to be criticized—only analyze your handwriting. [3] X Research source
Allot left handed writing. Perhaps you always write on a calendar, or constantly update a grocery list—assign small tasks like this to your left hand to keep it in use. Practicing your left handed writing daily will keep your cognitive performance at a high level.
Begin with very basic shapes: squares, triangles, and circles. Work your way up to more difficult drawings. The more your movements become directed but natural with your left hand, the easier it will be to maintain your left handed writing.
If you switch entirely to your writing with your left hand, you will lose writing skills in your right hand. Creativity and abstract thinking have been said to improve when you use both your left and right hand interchangeably. [5] X Research source