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Handwriting Tips
You’ve decided you want to improve your handwriting and you’re probably
hoping a fountain pen will do the trick -- maybe a friend told you it
would. Maybe you’re just adventurous and you want to try your hand at
calligraphy (or you might, once your handwriting improves). Good for
you!
A fountain pen may make your writing look a bit better, but if your
writing looks as if frenzied chickens got loose on the page, chances are
this won’t be enough. Most likely, you’ll need to retrain your arm and
hand.
After coaching handwriting and teaching calligraphy over the years, I’ve
learned to see the characteristics of those who’ll be able to pick up
the necessary motions quickly from those who’ll have to work a bit
harder.
People who inevitably have trouble with handwriting and calligraphy
write with their fingers. They "draw" the letters. A finger-writer puts
the full weight of his/her hand on the paper, his fingers form the
letters, and he picks his hand up repeatedly to move it across the paper
as he writes.
People for whom writing comes more easily may rest their hands fairly
heavily on the paper, but their forearms and shoulders move as they
write. Their writing has a cadence that shows they’re using at least
some of the right muscle groups. They don’t draw the letters with their
fingers; the fingers serve more as guides.
This exercise may help you determine which category is yours: Sit down
and write a paragraph. Doesn’t matter what. Pay attention to the muscles
you use to form your letters. Do you draw each letter with your fingers?
Pick your hand up repeatedly to move it? Have an unrecognizable scrawl?
Does your forearm move? Chances are, if you learned to write after
1955-60 (depending on where you went to grade school), you write with
your fingers.
My goal isn’t to make you into a model Palmer-method writer or a 14th
Century scribe. If you can compromise between the "right" methods and
the way you write now and improve your handwriting so you’re happier
with it, then I’m happy, too.
It will take time to re-train muscles and learn new habits.
Finger-writing isn’t fatal, but it is slow and often painful (if you
have to write much). The first thing you must have (beg, buy, borrow or
steal it) is patience and gentleness with yourself. The second
requirement is determination.
If you finger-write, that is the first, most important thing you must
un-learn: Do not draw your letters! Do not write with your fingers! Put
up signs everywhere to remind you. Write it in the butter, on the
shaving mirror, stick notes in the cereal boxes. But learn it!
I hesitate to include this, because it sounds much more difficult than
it is . . . but . . . let’s look at the most basic things: holding the
pen and positioning the hand. |