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The Handshake- A Ritual Whose Time Has Come… And Gone

Posted on 15 November 2009 by Dan Cohen


Cartoons from the Issue of November 16, 2009 _ The New Yorker-1.jpg

I see dozens, even hundreds, of people every day.

I have a compromised immune system.

It is flu season.

Handshaking is not my friend.

“The handshake is thought by some to have originated as a gesture of peace by demonstrating that the hand holds no weapon.”
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yes, the handshake likely originated as a way for soldiers to see that the person they were facing was not carrying a weapon. It is an old social convention and one that really needs to go. Now there are a growing number of people trying to help its demise and it isn’t just “The Donald” who refuses to shake hands.

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You can help! As Michael Arrington posted on TechCrunch, there is a growing No Handshake Movement and now they even have their own colored band. A ten-pack will run you $20. You can grab them HERE.

via TechCrunch

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This post was written by:

Dan Cohen - who has written 1268 posts on Gear Diary.

Having a father who was heavily involved in early laser and fiber-optical research, Dan grew up surrounded by technology and gadgets. Dan’s father brought home one of the very first video games when he was young and Dan remembers seeing a “pre-release” touchtone phone. (When he asked his father what the “#” and “*” buttons were his dad said, “Some day, far in the future, we’ll have some use for them.”) Technology seemed to be in Dan’s blood but at some point he took a different path and ended up in the clergy. His passion for technology and gadgets never left him.

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6 Responses to “The Handshake- A Ritual Whose Time Has Come… And Gone”

  1. runningman says:

    Use hand sanitizer; keep the peace.

    Bill

  2. I honestly don’t think this would ever fly in Texas — not that I don’t think it’s a good idea, but people actually judge others on the firmness of their shake here, and how you look them in the eye when you do it.
    Furthermore, it would be seen as an insult of the highest order to not accept an extended hand; it would cause the person offering it to distrust the one who refused. It would be seen by the one offering as the other not being willing to “shake on it” (whatever “it” happened to be), meaning they were being deceitful.

    It may seem like something out of a western, and may happen in varying degrees (depending upon which part of the state you live in), but that’s Texas for you.

    I agree with Bill – hand sanitizer is the only way to go down here.

  3. Of course, all of that anti-bacterial crap is worse than not washing your hands … because all you are doing is training bacteria to become resistant to stuff.

    Dilbert has a great one on this today – http://www.dilbert.com/dyn/str.....sunday.gif

  4. Michael, I totally agree about the antibacteria/building resistance issue. It’s a total lose/lose no matter how you look at this.

    Side note – I offered my hand to an Orthodox Jewish business man I met in New York while I was there, not realizing that according to his religious beliefs the only woman he could touch was his wife. I felt totally snubbed when he shook his head and drew his hand back — before the reason dawned on me. Oddly, I didn’t feel insulted at all when I realized *that* was his reason, but if it had been because he had thought I might be “catchy” with something, I would have thought him a wuss. Go figure. ;-)

  5. AgapeMan says:

    There is an alternative. Some of us are “huggers.” But I don’t see that catching on – especially here in the south .

  6. DavidB says:

    If you were Euro you’d be double cheek kissing…I’ll take a handshake over cheek kisses any day.


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