Lately I’ve been getting these strange episodes where my left hand just feels like it isn’t entirely mine for a minute or two, like it’s a foreign object. It’s happened three times now while I was just sitting reading. I’m not sure if this is a weird migraine thing or something neurological I should actually get checked out. Has anyone else experienced something like this?
That does sound unsettling. Three episodes with your left hand feeling foreign while you’re sitting and reading isn’t something to ignore. I’m not a doctor, but it’s worth getting checked, especially since it involves a limb acting on its own. If you can, keep a diary about when it happened, how long it lasted, and whether you had any numbness weakness speech changes or a headache before or after. A visit to your primary care doctor or a neurologist could help rule out anything serious.
Could be a few things overlaid here. A migraine aura, a transient ischemic attack, a focal seizure, or something like alien hand syndrome, which is when a limb feels like it has its own will. Most of those need a clinician’s look, even if the answer isn’t scary. The key is details timing duration triggers and any other symptoms.
Maybe it’s just a quirk of posture or overthinking what your body is doing while you read. Have you been tense or slouched. Caffeine or dehydration can nudge nerves in odd ways. Still, since it’s repeated and involves a limb, you’ll want a medical check to be safe.
What if the frame here isn’t about the hand at all but about how you talk yourself into a sense of control while reading. The sensation could be tapping into expectations about your body, not a possession issue. It’s a strange signal whatever it is. What do you think
If this comes back, consider getting evaluated sooner rather than later, especially if you notice new weakness, trouble speaking, facial weakness, confusion, or a sudden severe headache. Document what you were doing and what happened so the clinician has something to go on. That way you can decide next steps together.
As a writer I hear the line and it feels like a haunted scene, a left hand with its own agency. You could use that vibe to explore a character who feels divided between desire and duty, without explaining the science right away letting the reader notice the ambiguity first.