Monday, May 3, 2010

Handwriting - a lost communication art form, almost!

I'm doing something lately that is surprisingly difficult and rewarding: writing by hand.

What!

You know, that strange thing we used to do all the time, taking a pen, or pencil on a pad of paper and writing a letter to a relative, friend, business associate or whomever. Remember those days of not so long ago? Seems like ages when handwriting was it, before technology flew in.
And lest we forget, two of the greatest documents known to man ever created were originally written by hand: the U.S. Constitution, and The Bible.

Now with computers, keyboards and texting - don't let me go there, texters can't or don't spell or construct intelligent sentences. Well anyway, handwriting requires a thought process, the act of the brain message flowing to the pen/pencil onto the writing tablet.

Where's the spell check in handwriting? How about the "delete" or "backspace" key to start over? Is it okay to scribble out a misspelled word or incomplete sentence, or cross out a sentence that is not saying what you want it to say?

I've quickly discovered that as I do more handwriting wads of paper pile up. I've become a pretty good shot in the trash can - the destination for my balled-up, scribbled-on and numerous rewrites.

Man, your hand gets tired, too.

Handwriting requires you to think, to ponder your thoughts, to not ramble on and on and on and on because you just don't want to do all that writing. Forget about writing on un-lined paper - see how un-straight it is?

But when you do hand write a note or a letter, the recipient has to feel obligated to read it, especially if the envelope is in your handwriting, too. A heartfelt letter, written to me makes me feel important. The mere fact that someone took the time out of their busy stuff-doing to spend a few precious minutes composing a letter addressed to me is, well, touching. I like it.
I'll be handwriting more. It'll keep my fingers in shape and my mind sharp. I'm not going to toss my keyboard out the window, but pen and paper will be in hand more. I enjoy using a pencil to write, too, because it has an eraser.



2 comments:

  1. You really get to the heart of the issue. Without question, handwriting is becoming a lost art, and that is too bad.

    That said, I've become one of those people whose brain is in her keyboard. I can type a lot faster than I can write by longhand. I'm over 40, so it doesn't take long for me to lose a thought!

    But don't give up on me yet. I'll try to do better -- tomorrow. ;-)

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  2. Alright, Deb S. Thanks for the interaction. Tomorrow is today. (My mom told me that one day back when I was a kid)

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