The most likely problem is that the position of you wrists may be putting pressure on the nerves that control feeling in your hands. Try the exercise again but do it with your palms facing you. Or do it with one palm facing you while the other faces away. See if these different positions help.
Some woodpecker species have three toes, two pointing forward and one backward. Some have four toes, with two pointing forward and two pointing backward.
The fly extends its forward legs over its head as he approaches the ceiling and hoists the its body to the ceiling.
They have zygodactyl feet meaning they have two toes pointing forward and two toes pointing back. :)
A mouse bird
You click the "forward" button (it may be an arrow pointing to the right) and put the address in the "To:" field.
you should move the other fingers forward and keep that finger forward and then tape it
See the arrow keys on your keyboard? The one pointing up moves you forward, the one pointing down moves you backwards, the one pointing right makes you turn right, and the one pointing left makes you go left.
the downward dog
To sign "wave" in American Sign Language, you would make a flat hand with fingers together and facing outward, then move your hand back and forth slightly from your wrist while keeping your fingers pointing forward. This motion mimics the movement of a wave.
Um, perfectly normal toes, but if you want to know which direction they're going, then three toes are pointing forward AND Anne is pointing back.
In American Sign Language, you can sign "I like it" by using the sign for "I" (pointing to yourself), followed by the sign for "like" (thumbs up moving in a circular motion), and then pointing at the thing you like.
Late Renaissance style, pointing forward to Baroque.