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View Full Version : Ready to quit playing the fear game? A technique that could help.



happyexpat
28th May 2011, 01:53
You can change your personality by changing your handwriting. If you feel overwhelmed by all the fear mongering nonsense, here is one way you can help yourself. It's certainly easy enough to find things to be fearful about anywhere, including here (hint, hint, layoff the fear mongering peoples! we can go to Alex Jones for that if we want all the doom and gloom and threats of concentration camps!). Excuse the brief rant. Anyhow...

You can stop being fearful just by writing the name you use and putting a couple of heavy underscores under it 30 times each night before you go to bed. See if you don't notice a significant change in a couple of weeks.

The following story is a quote from the website linked below. This gentleman tried to make two changes at once, and it is actually recommended you make one change at a time to your handwriting. It's a great story. He went from suicidal to self-reliant and courageous. I also really like how the author says not to trust anything you read. See for yourself.


Take an ordinary scratch pad and a soft lead pencil that will not cut through the paper when you press hard in writing.

Then write this sentence crossing the t-bars heavily, as you make the "t" or as you complete the word in which the "t" is in the body of the word. After you have completed the sentence sign your name just as you ordinarily do, and make two, three or more heavy cross-bars under the signature. You have an illustration of the principle as I gave it to Bill Bradley.

Repeat this exercise thirty times each night, just before you go to sleep. Do not skip one night, and then try to make up for it the next. "Do it every night," I told Bill. He promised he would.

A week later he dropped into the office and reported. "You know it made me sick at my stomach about the third night," he said, "I had to get up and get a drink of ice water. One or two nights I had to take an aspirin. It was doing something to me, but I've stuck to it now for ten days, and it is doing something to me."

http://www.comparisonhandwriting.com/images/comparisonhandwriting08_clip_image006.jpg

Plate 73. A tested exercise for building up your self-esteem.

Bill was correct. He attempted too much of a change at one time. He was trying to build two traits of character, and one was enough. How­ever, he did not suffer seriously, and he is a success today. No more suicide in the picture, no more feeling that he is a failure. However, a graduate grapho analyst would take the program slowly, adjusting the changes to fit the individual writer's needs. My experience with Bill was under the pressure of realizing that something had to be done.

If you believe that all of this is just a phantasy, and that changing handwriting will change the writer, discuss with any competent psychiatrist, and he will explain the principle. He may say that you might find it difficult to get results, but when you have tried it, and found that it is effective, you will have proved the truth of the principle for yourself.

Indeed, you will be using the same principle that I wrote into the first textbooks I ever prepared: I pass it on to you. Do not believe a principle just because you see it in print. A great many false theories find their way into type. Take every grapho analysis rule, learn it, use it, test, and prove it. Then it will not matter what becomes of this book. You will know.

http://www.comparisonhandwriting.com/comparisonhandwriting08.php

nearing
28th May 2011, 02:04
Thirty times in one sitting seems like it could really take a lot of time!

Dorok
28th May 2011, 03:00
A lot of time to think about what you are doing and why? ;)

happyexpat
28th May 2011, 11:21
Well, I suppose in that regard, it would boil down to whether or not One considers themselves valuable enough to take the time? :)