Handwriting Analysis Interview: Arthur K.
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You are currently browsing comments. If you would like to return to the full story, you can read the full entry here: “Handwriting Analysis Interview: Arthur K.”.
Love the new format, very helpful, more streamlined with tighter editing ( still could be a bit shorter overall ). I especially like you showing the handwriting examples while the subject reveals the answer. Although the questions should be in the order of the interview reveal. Possibly more questions which would relate to each other is needed. I also appreciated asking bonus questions during the interview, showing the handwriting traits and then listing all the areas that imply. The ending seminar recap is also surprisingly full of tiny tidbits that are very helpful, especially different ways to explain or compassionate wording to use. There are so many wonderful things that a live discussion gives as compared to books. The part explaining ways we should look at certain stacking and how it leads to future behavior, needs to be covered more extensively in a future lesson. Keep up the good work. I’m glad the samples are more spaced out, for those of us with busy schedules, it can be hard to keep up sometimes.
I’m sorry to say I’m a bit of a rebel, or maybe have a lazy streak, which means I did not take the time to analyze the writing sample before watching the videos. I have been interested in graphology for so many years, maybe I was thinking I didn’t need that step, but by not taking the time, I did not learn as much as I could have. I did take a quick look at the writing sample when I checked email on my iPhone and thought Arthur would be aggressive and even a bit closed-minded and maybe pathological in some way. I thought I say low t-bars and noted he could have low self-esteem and be unsure of himself. The main thing I thought was that I would not like him, yet I did!
I liked him so much in the interview that I seriously doubted I had learned anything in my years of dabbling rather than taking this study seriously. Thanks for this, and I am sorry not to have taken your expert (and obvious) advice.