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CrowdScience

Was I born clumsy?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 18 December 2020

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

CrowdScience listener Simon has a problem. He’s always bumping into things, dropping tools and knocking stuff over. And he’s sick of it. He wants to know what is going on. Was he born like this? Or is it contagious? And most importantly, can he do anything about it, or is he going to be the proverbial ‘bull in a china shop’ for the rest of his life?

Host Anand Jagatia gets on the case, investigating the complex coordination needed for the simplest movements, like throwing a ball and catching it. With help from Dr Andrew Green, an exercise physiologist from Johannesburg University, he delves into our secret “sixth sense”, proprioception, which helps us locate our limbs without looking. Anand discovers that an easy task, like kicking a football, needs multiple parts of the brain to coordinate in order to work smoothly. Assistant Professor Jessica Bernard from Texas AMU studies the brain, particularly the cerebellum, a part that controls smooth movements. Dr Bernard explains how tiny glitches and larger lesions in different parts of the brain can make us clumsy in different ways. And how we use our thinking powers to stay balanced; a reason why, as your memory goes with old age, you’re more prone to falling over.

Our listener is not alone. Around the world, there is an under- diagnosed condition that affects millions of us. Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD), also known as dyspraxia is a motor coordination condition that affects 5% of the global population. As Professor Amanda Kirby from the University of South Wales and CEO of Do-It solutions explains, if you can’t tie shoelaces, catch a ball and your handwriting is awful, there’s a chance that you have DCD. There’s a large genetic component, so you are likely to come from a clumsy family.

There’s no cure for DCD/Dyspraxia but all of us are capable of becoming better at a chosen task, and there’s a common pathway to mastery, whether that’s bike mechanics or open heart surgery. Professor Roger Kneebone is the author of Becoming Expert, and he talks to Simon about possible solutions to clumsiness, including accepting and living with it.

[Image: Man slipping on banana. Credit: Getty Images]

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Take some time for yourself with soothing classical music from the mindful mix, the Science of

0:07.0

Happiness Podcast.

0:08.0

For the last 20 years I've dedicated my career to exploring the science of living a happier more meaningful life and I want

0:14.4

to share that science with you.

0:16.1

And just one thing, deep calm with Michael Mosley.

0:19.4

I want to help you tap in to your hidden relaxation response system and open the door to that

0:25.4

calmer place within. Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:30.3

We We parked the car outside the supermarket.

0:37.0

I got out of the car.

0:41.0

I got out of the car and my wife said something to me and I

0:44.5

leant back in and then slammed the door on my head because I forgot to get it out of

0:50.5

the way that hurt a lot but um...

0:53.6

Ouch. Yes yes they caught me right on the ear.

0:59.6

That's probably my best one yet. This is crowd science from the BBC World Service. I'm

1:08.5

Annan Jagatier and this is one of our listeners Simon from Haifa in Israel, who's possibly the clumsiest person I've ever spoken to.

1:18.0

Simon's life seems to be a series of painful accidents which happened to him all the time, even on a holiday. of and straight into the pole which I should know was there.

1:36.0

You are sort of making me want to laugh which I'm sorry for because it sounds like it was very painful.

1:41.0

I eventually do see the funny side of it.

1:46.0

It just takes a while.

1:48.0

I'm a bicycle mechanic as well. That's my job and I've taken to wearing a baseball cap because when I was working on the bicycles when they were on the stand and spinning the wheels and everything like that.

2:04.4

I quite often would sort of lean over and get tire marks on my forehead.

2:09.4

So I now wear a peaked cap and surprisingly it really helps I hardly ever touch the

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