l like to make researchs about personality .I hope that you will like this subject
English or any ******** in the word used to communicate, it is not
enough to speak good English, but one must also express himself in a written form. A lot of secrets are hidden between lines. Secrets which reveal the character, strength, and weaknesses of the person who has written the lines.
Even with the computer boom, handwriting is still a day to day necessity. And it should come as no surprise that handwriting analysis can reveal a lot about someone's personality. We write the way we think. "It's really brain writing," says Bill Howatt, PhD, a psychologist and author of 'Teacher's Survival Guide for the 21st Century.' "Our thoughts reflect our neurological patterns. When we alter the way we write, we alter the way we think".
Handwriting analysis is known as graphology. It is useful for understanding health issues, morality and past experience, hidden talent, mental problems, honesty, persistence, good skills and other numerous things. It may show signs of leadership, intelligence, analytical skills and attention to detail, or it may reveals a lack of these traits. In her book, the complete idiot’s guide to handwriting analysis, Sheila Lowe a graphologist, who has practiced handwriting analysis for more than 30 years, says: ”The study of personality is as a hall of mirrors, just when you think you’ve got it figured out”. And of course, there are the handwriting analysts who are document examiners. They are the ones who examine signatures and recognize forgeries.
Although handwriting is a conscious act, the unconscious is revealed by the letter formations and writing style, and thus a trained handwriting analyst is able to get a very clear picture of the writer’s attitudes and motivations. The greatest benefit of having your handwriting analyzed is that not only can the analyst tell what you do, but he/she can also tell you why you act that way. Thus the analyst can offer a perspective of your personality that permits you to see yourself more clearly and yet more sympathetically, Sheila says also: ”it is as if guiding the pen across the page the writer is drawing the observer a picture of what is going on inside him from moment to moment”.