what's the deal with shaking hands?

My hands are unremarkable, but I recently did business with a man who lost his right hand years ago and now wears a hook-type prosthesis. When we were ready to part company, he just stuck out his left hand and I reflexively grabbed it with my left.

Fair enough. This seems strange behaviour to me, but I would of course respect your wishes and obviously this is a personal choice for you that does no-one else any harm.

It’s just that your comments earlier about men being jerks for reaching out their hand – I seriously doubt that guys are trying to annoy you or consider a handshake arousing or whatever. It just sounded a little misandrist.

I try; I’m aware of the calendar and I throw in the occasional “shukran”. FWIW.

But I get discounts and assistance just about everywhere because I’m quite polite and friendly :slight_smile:

And customers are more likely to patronize your shop if you respect their culture, as well. There has been an ongoing problem in some cities where Asians have moved into historically Black neighborhoods and set up shop. Some Asian cultures do not like to hand change directly to their customers, which of course is perfectly reasonable. However, it’s a common insult historically for Blacks that white people would not touch them, drink out of the same drinking fountain, sit next to them, or swim in the same pool. Naturally, with this discrimination in the back of their minds, they find themselves feeling equally as insulted that someone would not wish to touch them as the Asians may be by being touched. So…stalemate, I suppose? Or should we sit here and try to pick apart whose cultural more is more reasonable, who’s been more oppressed, who has more right to be insulted?

Didn’t Denny’s go through a huge lawsuit over this very thing?

Ooh, I hate that. It’s usually middle-management types who do that to me. I’m a small person with small hands, and there’s no need to crush my bones to a fine powder.

When I was a car salesman, we were taught to shake hands thus. It was part of a deliberate scheme to establish dominance.