View Single Post
Old 12-09-2010, 11:59 AM   #69
OakIris
Addict
OakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a TexanOakIris might easily be mistaken for a Texan
 
OakIris's Avatar
 
Posts: 310
Karma: 18487
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Colorado
Device: Kindle 3 WiFi; Kindle Paperwhite
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vandy View Post
When I was in the 5th grade (let's see, that would have been 1960...), I had a pretty bad "back-handed left slant thing going on with my printing let alone trying to learn cursive. I was given a device that looked like an upside down basket with a cylindrical hole in the middle where your pencil was placed. The only way you could hold the pencil was by wrapping your hand around the basket and then printing straight up and down on the paper.

Today, I still write pretty much straight up and down but I must confess to turning my paper to the right in order to compensate for my left handedness.

Finally, I can't tell you the last time that I purposely used cursive writing for anything serious other than my signature. I block print everything and have for years. When I do cursively write, I have to sometimes stop and remember how to form the letter... That's a bit embarrassing, let me tell you.

Regards,

Vandy (Left Handed and Loving It!)
Another torture device to make people conform to the "majority" in the way they write. (j/k) Of course, the whole point of writing is to be able to communicate with others so if this "basket device" helped with that I guess it served a good purpose. If your writing is so eccentric that it can't be read by others then it is not communication.

I know what you mean about writing in cursive. I, too, have printed for so long that I really have to think about it before writing something in cursive. I can write my signature in cursive (sort of - the last name is pretty much a curve and a line with no discernible letters! ) but that is about it.

Holly
OakIris is offline   Reply With Quote