Also known as a duplicata incompleta, you have a
complete twin attached to you at the head,
but your own development was stunted in the womb.

You see the world differently than those around you. Specifically, you
habitually flip objects to view them from the reverse side or from
underneath; you do the same thing with ideas, making you an original
thinker, but one who has trouble making himself understood. Though your
picture of the world is as accurate as anyone’s, it is always hung
upside down in the gallery. Fortunately, it looks right that way. You
have trouble speaking aloud, and often say words back-to-front. To read
the newspaper often makes you feel dizzy, as if you belong in a
different world, with a different sort of gravity, a different sun and
moon. You sometimes seem to be dreaming your way through life; it is as
though someone else more determined and capable than you is walking,
going to the bank, turning the pages, while you think about other
things. Often you wonder why exactly you are doing what you are doing.
When you do make an effort to take conscious part in things, rather
than drifting, something often goes wrong. Tools twist in your hands,
people misunderstand your simplest requests, you offer friendship and
people recoil in fear. Your literary form is the palindrome.
You are related to...
The superior portion of
the Two-headed Boy of Bengal, born in 1783 in Mundul Gait, Bengal