Saturday, August 27, 2011

Mailbox

(Thought-Random)

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        You totally amuse me !  Should you really be serious asking me to analyze your handwriting, that would necessarily bring out an attractive profile of the person behind the pen.  And it would make your "fear for your life" simply unfounded.   My own fear is that should it trigger a turnabout - that you would  claim your turn to analyze my handwriting..... I am the one who dies!!!  But wait - I remember having come across a blog intimating that some people think doctors have bad handwriting... and that according to TIME, their handwriting actually kills 7,000 people annually!  Please take note that I'm not the one saying that, okay?   But then, the article adds this bit of comment - that handwriting with such significantly lower legibility is usually associated with being executive or being male!  What do you think of that!  Nice, huh?

        Really seriously,  though,  let me pick up on a strain we earlier shared,  namely;  'the demise of cursive'.  This is actually a commonplace topic at the moment, right?  Created polls ask if
there is value in possessing handwriting skills in a world of digital communication.

        A fact is that cursive writing is no longer mandatory in most public schools, did you know that?  No longer a part of the national education agenda.  But there are concerns and arguments forwarded both for and against it.  On one hand, it is said that cursive writing is outdated,  is time consuming and not as useful as keyboard skills which are the future.  It is not even on tests that rate schools.  On the other hand,  it is viewed that cursive is essential to education as it helps children develop fine motor skills.  It is maintained by neurological science that handwriting plays a large role in the visual recognition and learning of letters....that those who learn to write by hand learn  better.

       To strengthen the latter argument,  an experiment was further pointed out involving 2 groups that were taught a new foreign alphabet.  One group learned by  hand, the other to recognize them on a screen with a keyboard.  Apparently, as it turned out,  the former scored better on recognition tests.  Brain scans on the hands on group showed greater activity in the part of the brain that controls language comprehension, motor related processes and speech associated gestures.  That I find interesting! What do you think?

        Of course, I would also go with the comment of some that  'depth of thought is improved when pen is taken to paper as opposed to keyboarding'.  Now I wonder what might be on your mind too regarding all these......

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        Thanks, Frank!

Friday, August 26, 2011

Mailbox Fragment

(Thought-Random)

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        The internet is here to stay, yes, we could say that .  And as a side result, the slow dying out of post office service is apparently on the horizon.  But I'm with you on the hope that things turn out for the better, whichever way it goes. Now, drawing classes?   I really don't know.  I personally attribute my old 'writing techniques' to those classes but strangely, some classmates negate this probability. May I ask you what you think?   Sorry for the turn about but I'd really want to know!

        Carrying this to another vein of thought, I am curiously looking hard at your handwriting and I am ushered to the area of interpretation.   You are, of course, familiar with what is known as handwriting analysis and the fact that those who specialize in it believe that " your penmanship harbors more than the power of self-expression; they believe it bears the unique imprint of your personality!  If I may go on with the quote: " Handwriting reveals hundreds of elements of one's personality and character which includes glimpses into the subconscious mind, intellect, energy, fears, motivations, imagination, integrity, aptitudes, among others."  Interesting, don't you think?

        Well, having invaded that realm of handwriting, may I as well go on sharing with you these aspects of it that I have come across. It is said that it was a French monk named Jean Hippolyte Michon who coined the phrase 'graphology' (the study of handwriting and handwriting analysis)  and who believed the brain, and not the hand, controlled handwriting. He broke handwriting down into a series of strokes, assigning a personality trait to each stroke.  So now let me pick up the rest of the information:

        "Graphologists examine strokes, pressure, slants, heights, loops, letter spacing, dotted "i's" and crossed "t's," etc.  (Were you interested in) analyzing writing style, (they would suggest that you) first look at the handwriting in general, much like you would a painting. Make mental notes of the most outstanding traits and try to get a general feeling of the writer. Then, determine the emotional energy of the writer. This is the most important factor of the personality of the writer. The emotional energy has a direct impact on every other trait displayed in the handwriting. 

        The stroke depicts life force, energy flow. The stroke's pressure  represents intellectual vitality, physiological energy, sexual passion, and emotional intensity. Pressure is defined by how much force one applies to the writing surface with the writing instrument and not the hand grip pressure. Pressure is how hard he presses down on the paper.  Pressure indicates the capacity for vigorous activities.
Writers with heavy pressure are usually highly successful. They have a lot of vitality and their emotional experiences last for a long time. Writers who write with average pressure are usually moderately successful and usually have enough energy to make it through the day. Those with light pressure try to avoid energy draining situations. 

        The slant is the second indicator to look for. The slant indicates the writer's emotional response to external forces. A right slant (////) signals one who responds strongly to emotional situations. He would be caring, warm and outgoing - his heart rules his  mind.   With the vertical slant (llll), the writer tries to keep his emotions in check - the mind rules his heart. A left slant writer (\\\\) will conceal his emotions and is observed as cold and indifferent. 

        The baseline is a real or imagined line where the small letters rest. It is best determined if the writing is on unlined paper to ensure that the writer does not follow the pre-printed lines. For best results, handwriting analysts always prefer samples written on unlined paper. The baseline can be straight, wavy, erratic or sloped. A normal baseline would  be slightly wavy. A person with a straight baseline is tense and over disciplined. A very wavy baseline signals a person who is on an emotional roller coaster. 
 
        An ascending baseline means optimism.  A descending baseline means pessimism, tiredness or depression.  A level baseline indicates a healthy balance between optimism and pessimism.   The size of the writing determines the writer's ability to concentrate, thus, small writing points to someone who has the ability to concentrate on minor details for long periods of time.  Most of us apparently fall under the average size category, indicating an average ability to concentrate. 

        Handwriting analysis neither foretells the future, nor reveals the past. However , it provides a map to your inner self, your level of satisfaction with your present situation, and your future level of achievement.  It can also help you to gain an understanding and insight into the personality of other people, especially those close to you."

      
So there you are.  Now what do you think of my handwriting?  Should I fear your analysis will strangle me to death?

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Thanks, Frank!

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Mailbox Fragmenting

(Thought-Random)


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        I know I have a most notorious penmanship but see what you got me doing - enjoying letting my pen glide through nonetheless! Since I have not done this cursive writing in a long time as you can see, - my pen goes aimlessly.  I need to do this more often.

        But you are right.  The onslaught of the internet has diminished the art of letter  writing.  Together with this will be the demise of the postal service.  I just saw in the news that several post offices may close because of the losses that continue to rise.  And it is all because of the internet.

        In high school, I dreaded writing down notes in a spring note book which would later be inspected by my teachers.  Actually it started in the grade school where our notebooks were graded for neatness and legibility.  So you can see I never fared well.  Sometimes I had a hard time reading my own notes.  With that said, I hope you don't think that I am doing this to torture you.... so how are those eyes doing?

        You know who's got one of the best penmanship? Bernie!  His notes were always neat and legible  I remember though when we were in our sophomore year in high school, he dislocated, maybe even broke, his right wrist on a roller skating accident.  He had a cast on for about six weeks.  Since he could not write down his notes, he borrowed our notes and had his mom decipher our scribbles and transcribe them for him.  Yup, those were the most beautiful notes I've ever seen... even better than Bernie's.  They looked like calligraphy.  Since then,  I set it as my goal to write as aesthetically as that.  I almost reached that goal through several decades.  And when I thought I had, that was when this internet thing started to come in.  Needless to say, I am back to square one!
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         You speak of notoriety in your camp but you should delight at how my own writing competes with yours!  If you must know, my hand trembles as I do this. The feeling of not having done this in ages rubs in too even as you surely see through my ploy of using ruled paper to control my lines from going up or down.   I, too, need to do more of this!

        But for one in the medical world who normally is accused of scribbling his prescriptions like chicken scratches,  believe me, you certainly do a good job passing high where I fail.  Truth is, I even dread having to go back to blackboard writing again. Which reminds me of how we in the  Engineering faculty room, way back at the University,  used to watch how the penmanship of our students go from a 'nice!' to a 'wow!' in the five years' span of time they spent there. It was phenomenal how they developed in this particular area from their freshmen to their graduating years. Must have been the discipline they acquired from their Drawing classes, don't you think?

        Then you mention Bernie's and his mom's handwriting.  It's interesting because I'd say the same of Rey!  Imagine him to be the ideal in my aspiration for a better penmanship myself.... but his was the best in the family!  North and South now here trading places. To compound it, - the onslaught of the internet!  Ah well, the internet is here to stay - that's for sure.  Let's just hope that the Post Office problem somehow comes to some minimizing, if not a total insignificance.  Still,  I guess we do have to do more of the old  traditional letter-writing.   Might not be exactly easy but we could  smile it off.  Would make people wonder what we're up to!
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Thanks, Frank!