- Joined
- Mar 27, 2012
- Messages
- 3,098
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- Location
- Suffolk
- Hive Type
- National
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- 5
We got to Nice airport with two hours to spare so sat in a caff. A man on a nearby table was intermittently jiggling either one or both legs at a rate too rapid to count - maybe about 4/second. If he made arm movements, eg raising a cup, the movements might stop but speaking to his companion made no difference. SWMBO and I both agreed that this phenomenon is quite commonly seen in males but we couldn't recollect seeing it in females - a gender difference which is not recorded in my Google search for 'leg jiggling' (my dwindling knowledge as a retired medic suggests that leg jiggling is not a recognised 'disease' unless one invokes the label 'psychogenic tic').
Being retired expands the opportunities to people-watch. Our previous study, conducted from a park bench in Malaga, investigated the gender-occurrence of abnormal gaits: a small preponderance of men.
Being retired expands the opportunities to people-watch. Our previous study, conducted from a park bench in Malaga, investigated the gender-occurrence of abnormal gaits: a small preponderance of men.