Sunday, September 13, 2009

graphotherapy




There are many types of therapy that would be appropriate for me, dear reader, but this September I am embarking on the great graphotherapy project.

Graphotherapy, the behavioral science that invites the writer to take pen in hand and change self-defeating aspects of the personality by altering specific strokes in the handwriting. Graphotherapists are trained in graphology and have additional training in psychology. Their expertise is to guide the client in altering handwriting patterns as a means of removing negative thought habits and replacing them with positive, self-supportive ones. By changing writing patterns we simultaneously reconfigure the neuropathways in the brain that record our self-image.

I write in the kind of printing we all learned in elementary school. Uppercase letters occur at the beginning of sentences and in other appropriate places; there are also lowercase letters. This is called upper-and lowercase printing. u &lc for short. My writing looks very much like the lines you are reading. Guess what the graphotherapist has to say about this, "Printing is a shield usually put in place by a sensitive soul who has been betrayed in one way or another and isn't about to let that happen again. Printing keeps people at a distance by creating a boundary. The u&lc printer has erected a wire fence around himself... If you want to tap into your creativity in a big way, begin now and again to connect a letter or two within your words." *

What about you? Are you a dedicated pencil user, or do you prefer a felt-tip pen? Does your writing slant back, vertical, or forward? Do you have zonal balance? Angles and curves? Or are you a printer like me?

*Your handwriting can change your life by Vimala Rodgers

Image here

6 comments:

  1. If I prefer a pencil, what does it say about me?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Well, I'm sorry to say that it means you have a strong fear of commitment. You might be able to fix this by using a ball point pen.

    ReplyDelete
  3. How very interesting, I've never heard of it. Hmm, I think I'll read more on this subject, thanks.

    I love a pen on paper without lines... I mix upper case and lower case and not necessarily in the proper spaces and people always comment on how unique my font is, it's somewhat like an architect writes mixed in with how graffiti artists tag, if you can imagine that lol, :)....

    ReplyDelete
  4. Monk, the graphotherapists would say that your preference for unlined paper indicates that you are comfortable working outside of the prevailing structure. You are also comfortable with making waves, rocking the boat, and being wrong. I wonder if you prefer to write in portrait or landscape direction?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Monk,try turning your unlined paper in the landscape direction when you write, every time you write, even if it's only a shopping list or memo. Think of it as a step toward installing a good habit that can profoundly affect the direction the rest of your life will be taking.

    ReplyDelete

Have your say: