The answer to the blog post title is: terrible!!!! I was in elementary
school when we still learned to write in cursive. We even received
grades for "penmanship"! We had books where we had to trace the letters
with our fingers, then with pencils, and then practice over and over
again on the beige paper with the blue lined grids. I would try over and
over and never really could make my letters right, loops in the wrong
places, uneven heights of my letters, tails too long. And what is with a
capital cursive Q? Can anyone actually make one of those correctly?
Handwriting has NEVER been my strong point.
Even though I'm a
teacher I never seemed to achieve the "perfect teacher writing." You
know that perfect writing with all the correct loops and such. I write
in a dutchy mix of cursive and printing, interspersing capitals and
lowercase at weird spots. Also, my students always hated it when I
would have to put notes on the board because i would write big and
small, and usually uphill. Thank goodness for the advent of PowerPoint,
projectors and Smart-boards!
And now that I spend most of my
days in front of a computer, my handwriting has gotten even worse. To
stay in practice, I hand-write a daily journal and of course my writing
is loopy and big, or small and cramped, an ugly mix of cursive and
printing, capitals and lowercase, all in the wrong places-- yes, still
sprinkled with my writing idiosyncrasies. I also hand write letters.
Lots of letters. I try really hard to print and write neatly. But my
mind starts whirling and I write (scribble?) faster and faster, trying
to get my thoughts on paper as quickly as I can, my writing unable to
keep up with my mind and my writing looks a jumble.
Do I dare
even mention that I have arthritis in certain fingers and parts of my
hands so add those aches to the writing process and... well, I could end
up teaching "How to write like a Doctor 101"...
So, without further ado... handwriting from me to you:
1 comment:
I think your writing is just fine. At least I can read it, which is more than I can say for the teens that come in my work place and we have them fill out paperwork. Had to ask the same kid twice what he had written.
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